lockwood_theodore_d
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| ====== Theodore D. Lockwood ====== | ====== Theodore D. Lockwood ====== | ||
| - | Theodore Lockwood was the 15th President | + | Theodore |
| - | [{{ : | + | Lockwood |
| - | Theodore | + | [{{:: |
| - | After serving as a member of the [[board_of_fellows|Board of Fellows]] and an alumni [[trustees|trustee]] for some time, in January 1967 Lockwood was asked to serve as Trinity College’s president. During his decade-plus years as president, Lockwood sought to speak to the needs of students concerned about racial justice, social betterment, and generational change. In April 1968, he was one of the trustees locked in [[downes_clock_tower|Downes Memorial]] by the students demanding greater funding for Black scholarships. Nonetheless, | + | After serving as a member of the [[board_of_fellows|Board of Fellows]] and an alumni [[trustees|trustee]] for some time, in January 1967, Lockwood was asked to serve as Trinity College’s president. During his decade-plus years as president, Lockwood sought to speak to the needs of students concerned about racial justice, social betterment, and generational change. In April 1968, he was one of the trustees locked in [[downes_clock_tower|Downes Memorial]] by the students demanding greater funding for Black scholarships. Nonetheless, |
| While President, Lockwood helped ensure Trinity College became co-educational, | While President, Lockwood helped ensure Trinity College became co-educational, | ||
| - | In the mid-1970s, Lockwood served as director and later chairman of the Association of American Colleges, a group with 800 member institutions. In addition to thinking deeply about administrative leadership, Lockwood also diversified Trinity College’s faculty and administration. He increased the number of women and people of color within the College’s staff, thereby helping to ensure greater representation of gender and ethnic diversity at Trinity College. With the help of President Lockwood’s persistence to enact admission reforms, Trinity College was eventually to become a college where at least 50% of its students were female. | + | In the mid-1970s, Lockwood served as director and later chairman of the Association of American Colleges, a group with 800 member institutions. In addition to thinking deeply about administrative leadership, Lockwood also diversified Trinity College’s faculty and administration. He increased the number of women and people of color within the College’s staff, thereby helping to ensure greater representation of gender and ethnic diversity at Trinity College. With the help of President Lockwood’s persistence to enact admission reforms, Trinity College was eventually to become a college where at least 50 percent |
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| + | In 1977, President Lockwood created an Institutional Priorities Council composed of students, faculty, and administrators, | ||
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| + | Theodore Lockwood was awarded an [[honorary_degrees|honorary Doctor of Letters]] from Trinity in 1981. In January of 1982 he left Trinity and moved to New Mexico, where he became the founding president of United World College. On January 21, 2019, Lockwood died peacefully at his home in Stowe, Vermont, at the age of 94. | ||
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| + | ===== Preceded By ===== | ||
| + | |||
| + | [[jacobs_albert_c|Albert Charles Jacobs H’68]] | ||
| + | |||
| + | ===== Succeeded By ===== | ||
| + | |||
| + | [[english_james_fairfield_jr|James Fairfield English, Jr. H’89]] | ||
| - | In 1977, President Lockwood created an Institutional Priorities Council composed of students, faculty, and administrators, | ||
| - | Theodore Lockwood was awarded an honorary Doctor of Letters from Trinity in 1981. In January of 1982 he left Trinity and moved to New Mexico, where he became the founding president of United World College. On January 21, 2019, Lockwood died peacefully at his home in Stowe, Vermont, at the age of 94. | ||
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| ===== Sources ===== | ===== Sources ===== | ||
lockwood_theodore_d.1683642198.txt.gz · Last modified: by afitzgerald
