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Tufts’ First Woman Provost Dies

The physicist Kathryn McCarthy also served as the first female dean of the Graduate School

Kathryn A. McCarthy, J44, G46, a physicist who served as Tufts’ first woman provost in the mid-1970s, died on December 24, 2014, at Brookhaven in Lexington, Massachusetts. She was associated with Tufts for more than sixty years, as a student, physics professor, dean of the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, university provost, and senior vice president. She received her undergraduate degree in mathematics and an M.S. in physics, both from Tufts, and was the fourth member of her family to have attended the university.

McCarthy began teaching at Tufts in 1946 as a lecturer in physics. At age twenty-two, she was the youngest faculty member in Tufts history. She earned her Ph.D. in applied physics from Radcliffe College in 1957, and continued to teach at Tufts, as an assistant professor, while she completed her doctorate. She was promoted to full professor in 1962.

She focused her research on the physical, optical, and thermal properties of optical crystalline materials, and in the mid-1960s hosted the television show Mechanics and Heat on WGBH-TV in Boston. During the Cold War, the Soviets were so interested in the thermal conductivity equipment that McCarthy used in her research that they quoted from American journal abstracts about her work.

Though most women of her time never considered a career in science, McCarthy said she was a tinkerer from early on. “I had a sewing machine to make clothes for my dolls, but I was as likely to take the machine apart as to sew on it,” she told the Hartford Courant in 1974. An advocate of women in science, she told the Courant: “Once you’re in the lab, no one asks whether you’re a man or a woman.” She was a fellow of the Optical Society of America and of the American Physical Society.

In 1969, McCarthy was appointed the first woman dean of the Graduate School, and in 1973, Tufts President Burton C. Hallowell named her provost and senior vice president, a post she held until 1979.

Sol Gittleman, who served as provost from 1981 to 2002, said McCarthy, who drove a rare Avanti sports car, had a style all her own. “When I arrived at Tufts in 1964 from Mount Holyoke, I expected to find the usual all-male dominated faculty,” he said. “I was surprised to discover that there was a cadre of dynamic women leaders. There was Dorothea Crook, Zella Luria, and Lucille Palubinskas in Psychology; Betty Burch in Political Science; Betty Twarog and Nancy Milburn in Biology. But they all looked up to one in particular: a diminutive physicist with a big brain, a quietly commanding style, and the ability to silence any windbag in Ballou Hall. That was Kathryn McCarthy. She gave sixty years of her life to Tufts, and we were an infinitely better place for her being on this Hill.”

On her retirement in 1994, her former students and friends established the Kathryn A. McCarthy Lectureship in Physics in recognition of her roles as a mentor, friend, and advisor to a generation of students.

 
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