| Alumnae
Award Acceptance Address
by
Jane Marsh Dieckmann '55 Author of Wells College: A History
I am so very happy to be here. And, believe me, I am even happier to go
first. Whenever I am involved in a piano performance, I like to go first.
It pays to have your name begin with a "D." I am sure this has been said
before, but this is awesome. And humbling too. I am profoundly honored
by this award. Having served on the awards committee, I am fully aware
of the very high caliber - the talent, creativity, determination, dedication
- of candidates and of Wells graduates in general. I have been selected
from an exceptional group of women. My heartfelt thanks to all of you for
this honor, and my thanks too to the awards committee, especially to Kingsley
Briggs Eaton, Class of 1967, who conducted the research and wrote the citation.
I have been thinking for
some time about what I would say today, but life has a way of changing
things - it has been said that life is what happens when you have made
other plans. As my son-in-law, Malcolm Jamieson, said to me last Monday,
"This is quite a week for you." This particular week started Monday morning
at 9:10 with my witnessing the birth of my first grandchild, Caroline Hunter
Wallis, and now, just a few days later, I am here. Seeing this baby born,
seeing my daughter happy and fulfilled as a new mother has been deeply
moving - what more could a mother want? And now I look out and see my near
and dear, my husband, my daughter Judith and her husband, Malcolm, my brother,
Henry Marsh, my sister Ellie and her husband and family, my classmates
who have come to celebrate with me, dear friends from far and near. There
are some who are not here, of course - daughter Katherine, her husband
Brian Wallis, and baby Caroline, who wanted so very much to be here, especially
baby Caroline, who needs to have a look at her future alma mater (and by
the way, I do have pictures, just ask me) - and my late aunt Eleanor, Wells
Class of 1929, a kindred spirit who witnessed many important events in
my life, and - above all - my mother, Mary Hunter Marsh, Wells Class of
1917 (you note that we are all Odd Line, except my sister, who is strange).
As we were standing at the entrance this morning, the music being played
was my mother's favorite piece - it is by Brahms and she always wanted
me to play it for her. My mother loved Wells with all her heart and soul
and she would have been proud beyond words (and for my mother, that would
be something unusual) to see her youngest child so honored by her college.
People who get awards always
stand up and thank everyone who has played a role in their movie, or whatever.
Many have played a role in this particular event, too many to mention here,
but I did want to thank particularly two people whose aid has been invaluable.
Reference was made in the citation to the history book's coming out on
time. Just on time, this very weekend two years ago. It was on Thursday
of my 40th Reunion weekend, at noon, that I saw advanced copies of the
book. The person who moved heaven and earth so this could happen, and on
time, is my husband, Dick Rosenbaum, who produced the book and also designed
it and who deserves all the credit for the handsomeness of that volume
we can hold in our hand. I also want to thank Mary Beth Norton, who is
Mary Donlon Alger Professor of American History at Cornell University,
appropriately enough someone dedicated to feminist issues and the role
of women in history. I am not an academic and so I never acquired an academic
robe of my own. From time to time I need to borrow one - this year the
search turned out to be a bit difficult. One previous lender was unreachable,
another has moved away, and Professor Bruce Bennett (who lent me his the
last time) gave the opening address at Alumnae College and I knew he would
need his. So I asked around at Cornell and a friend of mine asked a friend
of hers in Chinese literature, whom she knew had a Harvard robe because
it was always hanging in full view in his office. He replied that he was
willing to lend it, but the robe was something of an heirloom, it had belonged
to his father, and would I put up my car (also red, I might add) as collateral?
He was joking, of course, at least I think he was, and I could just see
myself stepping out of the coach and putting the heel of my shoe through
the hem of this heirloom, or something even worse. So I did ride here in
the coach, but I have no ballgown nor glass slippers (where in heaven's
name would I find a pair of glass slippers in Ithaca?), but, thanks to
Mary Beth Norton - who had never met me before I accosted her while she
was sitting in the dentist's chair waiting to be drilled, and how could
she really say no, under the circumstances? - I am properly attired for
the occasion.
And although this is not
a fairy tale, this week has brought exceptional events in my life, causing
me to reflect upon the meaning of such happenings, upon history, and upon
this wonderful place we call Wells College.
In my book of quotations
I keep around to find pithy sayings when I need them, much is said about
history, as a concept and a discipline. Not everyone looks at history in
a positive way. We all have heard about the "dust heap of history," and
then there is that great sage Henry Ford, who in 1916 declared that "history
is more or less bunk." Probably the most thoughtful commentary for me comes
from Ralph Waldo Emerson, and I quote:
"We are always coming up
with emphatic facts of history in our private experience and verifying
them here. All history becomes subjective; in other words, there is properly
no history; only biography."
It's been a time to look
back on decisive moments in my life - to call them historic would be simply
pompous, but historical they are, part of my story, my biography. And by
the way that title is pronounced "Paradoxe sur le comédien."
In my brief chronicle today,
the first decisive event was my decision to attend Wells College. And this
was truly my own decision, because my mother, much as she loved the place,
did not deem it a good idea for my sister and me to be in school together.
But I really wanted to come here and so I did. My choice turned out to
be a very good one indeed, for not only did Wells form me and support me
in an admirable way, it helped my sister and me forge an especially close
and lasting bond. When I arrived, I learned my adviser would
be Else Fleissner - I wondered at the time why I, from the beginning a
declared French major, would be assigned someone in German. She turned
out to be a guiding light in my college career; she gave me individual
care and attention, her brilliant and creative mind was an inspiration,
and I ended up taking more courses with her than anyone else. And I still
refer back to the notes I took in her course on the European novel. I think
back on memorable moments: hearing W. H. Auden read his poetry, having
the chance to really talk to eminent French scholar Henri Peyre, and to
discuss current events over dinner with popular journalist "Scotty" Reston
of the New York Times. Then there was playing basketball in "the
game" and playing the piano in the recitals. On May Day we got to work
away on an enormous concert grand - much larger than the one we heard today
- on this very platform. There was the day I pulled the letter out of my
mailbox with a government seal on it. It was from the State Department,
saying I had been awarded a Fulbright grant for study in France. I remember
running to Robert Marshall (if I had known he would be here today, I probably
would not have told this story), my mentor who guided me through my French
studies, and someone who loved Yale almost as much as my mother had loved
Wells. I cried out, "Oh guess what, Mr. Marshall!" His response was, "Oh
you've been accepted at Yale." I remember singing on the steps of this
building as a senior and getting my degree, right here in this room.
I was in Paris when a letter
came with the announcement of acceptance to graduate school, which turned
out to be Harvard. It was signed by the then chairman of the department.
His name was Herbert Dieckmann. Along with graduate school came marriage
and family, and the role of young wife and mother. I remember the indescribable
joy of seeing my baby daughter Judith born, very close to my feelings of
last Monday morning. But at the same time Herbert's passionate interest
in 18th century manuscripts rubbed off on me. While pregnant with my older
daughter, the document resting on my rounded stomach, I compared manuscripts
with him for a publication he was doing. I then changed my field of specialization
from the 20th century to the 18th and became a "diderotiste" - this led
to my doctoral thesis, a role in the new Diderot edition, which was Herbert's
dream project, and extended to greater understanding and insights into
late 18th century music, one of my great loves.
A very important decisive
moment came one Sunday morning in the early 1980s when Raymond Van Houtte,
then president of the Tompkins County Trust Company, came up to me after
church and said he wanted me to meet him that week in his office. As part
of its sesquicentennial celebration, the bank wanted me to write a history
of Tompkins County. "But I am not a historian," I protested. "We don't
want a historian; we want a writer," was his reply. I soon found myself
deeply involved in researching and writing local history.
This work on history of the
region led to another decisive moment, in October 1992, this one closer
to home, on the porch of the newly renovated Pettibone House. President
Robert Plane pulled me aside and said he didn't suppose I had the time
or the inclination to write a history of Wells. I replied, "I have never
been asked, but if I were ever to write such a book, I would want it to
be on my college." And that is how the Wells College history project started.
Over two years I researched and wrote furiously. I could not have done
it without the help of many kind and helpful people at the college, and
certainly not without the college archive - a rich, valuable, indispensable
resource. It was a marvelous experience for me, and I feel privileged to
have been entrusted with the project.
By now you may be wondering
what is the point. The point of this chronicle is that history, like cotton,
is the fabric of our lives. History is you, all of you, all of us. We need
to be continually attentive and thoughtful about important events in our
lives. We should be aware of context, both broad and limited. We should
try to keep diaries - bothersome, perhaps, but important in helping to
reconstruct our past, and being able to read back on what has been written
is always revealing of continuity in our existence and thinking.
Last weekend I was standing
outside on the steps of Macmillan Hall watching the Commencement exercises.
I had come to see the ceremony, and to hear Kathryn Walker, Class of 1964,
who received this award in 1991. As I expected, she made insightful remarks
about the dizzying pace of change in today's society and reminded us of
the vital importance of cherishing the human sphere in our lives, of maintaining
content and connection in what she called "this mad rush to the future"
that is our age. She also spoke of keeping in mind what Wells women have
in common - the values and experiences we share, four precious years of
the best kind of education in this place of unspoiled beauty - not to mention
friendships to last a lifetime. I thought back to the vision of Henry Wells:
he believed that women were the most important part of society and for
them he wanted a small liberal arts school, with high intellectual standards,
in surroundings like home. Of course, there are many changes at the college
since its opening in 1868, many since the early 1950s when I was a student
- the ethnic diversity and variety of academic programs reflected in this
year's graduating class show some of them. But through the years of our
history this college has remained essentially true to Henry Wells's vision.
My friend Elise Unhoch Mock, Class of 1956, who is here today, said to
me last week, "I didn't really understand what my education meant until
I read your book." I could not have received a higher compliment than that,
except of course the honor of receiving this award today.
We must all remember our
founder's vision - that women are important, that a good education and
nurture of the human spirit are essential to our present and future. Let
us all be mindful that we must preserve what we have here - our special
history and this blessed place . . . Wells College.
Delivered Saturday, May
31, 1997 in Phipps Auditorium at Wells College
Last updated 1/23/2002
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