Josephine Young Case
Born Josephine Young
(1907-02-16 ) February 16, 1907Died January 8, 1990(1990-01-08) (aged 82)Waterville, New York
Alma mater Known for educator, academic administrator, and writer Father Owen D. Young
Josephine Young Case (February 16, 1907- January 8, 1990) was an educator, academic administrator, and writer.
Early life
Josephine Young was born on February 16, 1907, in Lexington, Massachusetts , to Owen D. and Josephine Edmonds Young.[ 1] [ 2] Owen Young was the chairman of the General Electric Company and founded the Radio Corporation of America .[ 2]
Young attended Brearley School and then Bryn Mawr College (1928).[ 2] [ 3] [ 4] She earned her master's degree in American literature at Radcliffe College (1931). She published her first book, "A Midnight on the 31st of March" in 1938.[ 2] The book was republished in 1990, and inspired Under the Dome (novel) .[ 5]
Career
While her husband was president of Colgate University , Case taught a literature course there. During this time, she continued to publish literature.[ 2]
In 1961, Case became the first female director of the RCA . She remained in that position until 1972.[ 2] Other board memberships included Bryn Mawr, the Colgate University Board of Trustees, the Fund for the Advancement of Education, NBC, National Merit Scholarship Corporation , the Girl Scouts , and the Saratoga Performing Arts Center .[ 2] [ 6]
Case joined the board of trustees of Skidmore College in 1938 and was its chair from 1960 to 1971. During her tenure as chair, the campus of Skidmore was redesigned.[ 7] In 1964, when President Val Wilson suddenly died, Case served as the college's interim president for fifteen months.[ 8] In 1974, the Case College Center was named in her honor.
Personal life
Case married Everett Needham Case and had four children. She died on January 8, 1990, in Waterville, New York .[ 1]
Works
Source:[ 1]
Case, Josephine Young (1938). At Midnight on the 31st of March . Houghton.
Case, Josephine Young (1945). Written in Sand . Houghton.
Case, Josephine Young (1946). Freedom's Farm . Houghton.
Case, Josephine Young (1969). This Very Tree . Houghton.
Case, Josephine Young; Case, Everett Needham (1982). Owen D. Young and American Enterprise: A Biography . Boston, M.A.: D.R. Godine.
Case, Josephine Young (1992). New and Selected Poems of Josephine Young Case . Lititz, PA: Sutter House.
Awards
1946: Litt.D., Elmira College[ 1]
1957: Litt.D., Skidmore College[ 1]
1959: Litt.D., St. Lawrence University[ 1]
1962: L.H.D., Colgate University[ 1]
1981: The Frances Riker Davis 1915 Award[ 9]
Bryn Mawr Alumnae Award[ 1]
References
^ a b c d e f g h "Josephine Young Case." Gale Literature: Contemporary Authors , Gale, 2003. Gale In Context: Biography. June 30, 2024.
^ a b c d e f g By, J. C. (1990/01/10/, 1990 Jan 10). Josephine case, 82, RCA board member and poet and writer. New York Times (1923-).
^ Riesman, David; Mcbride, Katharine E.; Case, Josephine E.; Congdon, Marcella H.; Moses, Hannah K.; Richards, Elizabeth A. (2019-03-04). Miller, Ann (ed.). A College in Dispersion: Women of Bryn Mawr 1896–1975 (1 ed.). Routledge. doi :10.4324/9780429050480 . ISBN 978-0-429-05048-0 .
^ Bryn Mawr College. Alumnae Association (1934-01-01). "Bryn Mawr Alumnae Bulletin, 1934" . Alumnae Association Publications .
^ "SFE: Case, Josephine Young" . sf-encyclopedia.com . Retrieved 2024-06-30 .
^ "Collection: Josephine Young Case papers, A1339 |" . archives.colgate.edu . Retrieved 2024-06-30 .
^ O’Rourk, Kathryn E. (2019-12-31), O’Rourke, Kathryn (ed.), "Introduction The Language of O'Neil Ford" , O'Neil Ford on Architecture , University of Texas Press, pp. 1– 46, doi :10.7560/316382-001 , ISBN 978-1-4773-1860-7 , retrieved 2024-06-30
^ "Josephine Young Case" . www.skidmore.edu . Retrieved 2024-06-30 .
^ "Alumnae Awards" . The Brearley School . Retrieved 2024-06-30 .