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Frances Fenton Bernard Park

American college dean From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Frances Fenton Bernard Park
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Frances Fenton Bernard Park (December 4, 1880 – July 21, 1953) was an American college professor and dean. She succeeded Ada Louise Comstock as dean of Smith College, an office she held from 1924 to 1928.

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Early life and education

Fenton was born in Washington, D.C., the daughter of Ernest A. Fenton and Mary S. Welsh Fenton.[1] She graduated from Vassar College in 1902, and served as a trustee of the Vassar Alumnae Association.[2] She earned her Ph.D. in sociology from the University of Chicago in 1910.[3]

Career

Bernard taught at a normal school in Minnesota, and at Mount Holyoke College, as a young woman.[4] She became an assistant professor of economics at Wellesley College in 1920. She was educational secretary of the American Association of University Women (AAUW) from 1922 to 1924.[5] She succeeded Ada Louise Comstock as dean of Smith College in 1924.[6][7] In 1932, she was secretary of the Sixth World Conference of the New Education Fellowship, held in France.[8]

Later in life, Park was assistant to the president of Bennington College in 1940, in charge of public relations and fundraising.[9] As the college president's assistant, she accompanied him to Washington, D.C. to meet President Franklin D. Roosevelt on matters related to World War II in 1940.[10] She taught at the William Alanson White Institute from 1947 to 1951, and became a psychoanalyst in her later years.[11][12]

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Publications

In addition to her own work, Bernard wrote more than two dozen book reviews for the American Journal of Sociology, between 1912 and 1917.[13] She also wrote reviews for the journal Social Forces in the 1920s.[14][15] In 1946, she wrote the entry on Belva Ann Lockwood for the Dictionary of American Biography.[16]

  • "The Tenure of Office of Trustees" (1922)[17]
  • "The Educational Program of the American Association of University Women" (1924)[18]

Personal life and legacy

Fenton married fellow sociologist Luther Lee Bernard.[4] They had a daughter, and divorced in 1922.[19] She married again in 1928, to Edwin Avery Park, a Yale University professor about ten years her junior.[1][20] She died in 1953, at the age of 72, in Boston.[11][12] After her death, some of her poetry was set to music by Yale professor and composer Richard Frank Donovan.[21][22][23]

References

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