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΢Ȧ Retirees

Grace R. Cockroft

Grace R. Cockroft, a four-decade professor of history, died in Saratoga Springs in 1962.

Although Grace had only her Pembroke bachelor’s degree, ΢Ȧ School of Arts President Charles Henry Keyes hired her in 1916 to serve as an instructor of introductory courses. She earned her M.A. from Clark within a few years and later obtained her Ph.D. from Columbia University. As one of ΢Ȧ’s most well-known professors in 1941, she joined a faculty panel on foreign policy and argued that the bungling of the peace arrangements after World War I had made America’s involvement in another European war perhaps inevitable. Just four days later, the Pearl Harbor attack led the US into World War II. In 1955, when ΢Ȧ College President Henry T. Moore was planning to retire, Grace served as a faculty representative to the trustee’s search committee that brought in President Val Wilson in 1957.

΢Ȧ’s archives contain Grace’s 1956 biographical account of founder Lucy ΢Ȧ Scribner, whom Grace had worked with for 20 years.

 A professor for 45 years and chair of history department for 34, Grace was praised by a colleague as “one of the outstanding educational and civic leaders of the community.” Among the many graduates who have cited her mentorship, a ’44 alumna recalled her as “Miss Cockroft, the whiz of the history department. Her lectures were fast, furious, and fascinating.”

Grace’s survivors are unknown.