Sigma Phi Epsilon - University of Tennessee
TN Alpha Chapter
Sig Ep - UTK
TN Alpha

Tennessee Alpha Alumnus, TN Alpha Hall of Fame member, and Sigma Phi Epsilon Citation recipient Jim Clayton was selected as one of the University of Tennessee’s “Centennial Alumni” and featured in the University’s “Tennessee Alumnus” magazine. Brother Clayton joins fellow Citation recipient Alan Wilson (’80) in this honor.  

Brother Clayton has also contributed to the Sigma Phi Epsilon experience. He endowed the “Clayton-Doud Scholarship“, awarded at the Grand Chapter Conclave. This award recognizes brothers who come to one another’s aid in times of trouble. He is also a Lifetime Trustee of the Sigma Phi Epsilon Educational Foundation.


James “Jim” Clayton Sr.

BUSINESS LEADER
UT Knoxville, ’57, ’64

Jim Clayton ('57, '64)
Jim Clayton (’57, ’64)

The Clayton name is literally a household word in East Tennessee.

Clayton Homes founder Jim Clayton Sr. was born in 1934 on a sharecropper farm in a log cabin lacking plumbing or electricity in Finger, Tennessee. As a boy, he earned 25 cents a day driving farm mules in cotton fields.

Clayton started college in Memphis while trying to pursue a singing career. He eventually transferred to UT Knoxville, where he graduated from what is now the Tickle College of Engineering in 1957. He returned to earn a UT law degree in 1964.

“I had—and continue to have—a great relationship with UT,” Clayton says. “The experiences I had and the friends I made in the college of engineering, the college of law and Sigma Phi Epsilon fraternity have served me well in business and life.”

Clayton founded Clayton Homes in 1956 and built it into the country’s largest producer and seller of manufactured housing. Now headquartered in Maryville, Tennessee, Clayton Homes includes subsidiaries Vanderbilt Mortgage, 21st Mortgage and insurance company HomeFirst Agency.

In 2002—one year before selling his company to Warren Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway—Clayton published an autobiography, First a Dream.

Clayton founded and serves as director and chairman of Clayton Bancorp, a $706 million multi-bank holding company in Knoxville. He has been included on the Forbes 400 list of wealthiest Americans 10 times since 1991. Clayton was inducted into the Horatio Alger Organization of Distinguished Americans in 1991.

Clayton’s donation to UT’s College of Law helped establish the Clayton Center for Entrepreneurial Law. He also serves on the UT Alumni Board of Directors.