Thomas Arthur Gorton was born March 12, 1910 in Oneida, NY. He received his bachelors degree in music in 1932 and his masters degree in music in 1939, both from the Eastman School of Music at the University of Rochester, NY. Gorton was a lieutenant in the US Navy during World War II. After the war he returned to the University of Rochester, where he earned a doctorate in composition in 1948. Before coming to KU, Gorton was director of the School of Music at Ohio University, Athens. In 1950 he joined the KU faculty as the Dean of the School of Fine Arts, a position he held until 1975. He continued to teach until 1978, when he retired from KU as dean emeritus. While at KU, Gorton participated in the planning of the new music and dramatic arts building, now known as Murphy Hall. Under his guidance, KU added a number of undergraduate majors in music and the visual arts to its curriculum, a masters of fine arts in art and a doctoral program in music. He was instrumental in the school's development of its music library collection, which was named for him in 1975. Gorton also developed the Chamber Music Series; started the KU Symposium of Contemporary American Music, which drew leading composers from all over the country; founded and conducted the KU Little Symphony; started the opera program and conducted a number of operas at KU; and served as the KU concert manager. After his retirement, Gorton developed a second career as a writer and genealogist. He wrote and published three volumes about his family. Gorton died in 1997.
From the guide to the Personal Papers of Thomas A. Gorton, 1949-1997, (University of Kansas Kenneth Spencer Research Library University Archives)