From Woody's Couch

Our Playbook on OSU History

Category: Women (page 4 of 8)

Twelve Days: As OSU’s First Lady, Audrey Enarson was a trailblazer

Audrey Enarson, 1970s

Audrey Enarson, 1970s

Until Audrey Enarson, the wives of OSU presidents mainly focused on the social side of the University’s presidency, such as hosting formal gatherings for dignitaries and donors, or arranging casual get-togethers of students and faculty. Their volunteer work was mostly of the fund-raising capacity. Enarson, though, approached her role as First Lady, well, a little differently. 

Audrey Enarson, wife of OSU’s ninth President, Harold Enarson, was born in New Mexico on August 22, 1920. She rode horseback to attend school at a one-room schoolhouse before attending the University of New Mexico, from which she received a degree in education in June 1942. Later that month, she married Harold Enarson.

Enarson talks with a group

Enarson talks with a group

She taught school for several years, eventually leaving the workplace to raise their three daughters. She also served on the school and library boards, and her daughters became involved in Girl Scouts, which led to many years of volunteering long after the girls were grown.

In 1966, Harold Enarson accepted the presidency of a then-new public university, Cleveland State University. Audrey Enarson said in a 2002 oral history interview with the Archives that while she performed the normal duties of a First Lady, like managing the house and organizing parties and other functions, she also volunteered with a group that worked with disabled residents of the city. (Her nephew was developmentally disabled.) It came to an end, though, when she was visiting “this gentleman, and he picked up the coffee table and threw it at me, and just barely missed me,” she recounted.

Top: Enarson walks blindfolded across the Oval with a blind student. Bottom: Woody Hayes is blindfolded for the walk across the Oval, 1973

Top: Enarson walks blindfolded across the Oval with a blind student. Bottom: Woody Hayes is blindfolded for the walk, 1973 (Photos courtesy of the Lantern)

Though she wasn’t able to do such community work anymore, Audrey Enarson continued to advocate for the disabled when her husband became President of OSU in 1972. She made it her mission to make higher education facilities, particularly on the OSU campus, more accessible for those with physical disabilities. In fact, one of her first experiences on campus was to accept the challenge from a student group to experience campus as a blind person. So, along with Coach Woody Hayes, she walked blind-folded with a cane from a certain point on campus to Bricker Hall.

Audrey Enarson approached her role as First Lady a little differently in other ways. During her husband’s presidency, women were often excluded from private lunch clubs and speaker groups. So Enarson and 12 other women created their own organization – the Columbus Metropolitan Club – and recruited members of all races, religions and ages to be members.

She also did things her own way on a much smaller scale: Once, her husband invited representatives of various student groups and their faculty advisors – from the main and regional campuses – to have lunch at the house. Audrey Enarson wasn’t sure what to serve, so she made something from one of her Girl Scout books. (Audrey Enarson had been a Girl Scout, and was an avid supporter of the organization her whole life.) She had decided on cole slaw, so she bought brand-new garbage cans, cleaned and sterilized them, threw all of the slaw ingredients into them and stirred everything – by hand.

Though she disliked the title and the lack of privacy, Audrey Enarson took her role as First Lady in stride. Having grown up on a ranch, Audrey Enarson said of her relationship with Harold at OSU: “… A husband and wife on the ranch worked together.  There is no husband over here and the wife there. And I took that job, as being the wife of a university president, in much the same fashion.  I was by his side as a partner.”

Harold and Audrey Enarson

Harold and Audrey Enarson

To thank her for her work for OSU, Audrey Enarson was awarded with the University’s Distinguished Service Award at Commencement in June 1981. After leaving Ohio State in 1981 the Enarsons retired to Colorado. President Enarson died in 2006 and Audrey Enarson died in 2008, after complications from Alzheimer’s disease.

You can read about Audrey Enarson in her own words, in a transcript of her 2002 oral history interview with the Archives.

– Filed by C.N.

Twelve Days: Bertha Lamme was first female engineering grad

Bertha Lamme at the drawing table, 1892

Bertha Lamme at the drawing table, 1892

Buckeyes who have attended the College of Engineering may already know the name Lamme, since an annual medal the College bestows for meritorious achievement in engineering bears its name. That honor is named after Benjamin Garver Lamme, who received a degree in 1888 in Mechanical Engineering. However, few may know about his sister, Bertha, who was the first woman to graduate from OSU with an engineering degree.

Bertha Aranelle Lamme was born on December 16, 1869, near Springfield, Ohio. She came to Ohio State to study engineering, possibly influenced by her brother. She received a degree in Mechanical Engineering from the Department of Electrical Engineering, in 1893.

Bertha Lamme, 1892

Lamme, 1892

At Westinghouse, she met Russell Feicht, another OSU graduate (’90) and engineer who displayed a 2000-horsepower motor at the 1904 World’s Fair in St. Louis. They married the next year, and Lamme – now Mrs. Feicht – left the company to become a wife and mother.

Though little is known of Bertha Lamme’s own achievements in engineering, she did inspire at least one other woman to enter the science field: Her daughter, Florence, eventually became a physicist with the U.S. Bureau of Mines. Bertha Lamme Feicht died in November 1943 in Pittsburgh. She was 74.

Twelve Days: Bradley took art to the world as the ‘paint-brush ambassador’

Carolyn Bradley, 1940

Carolyn Bradley, 1940

OSU can boast of a number of well-known artists who either studied or taught at the University: George Bellows, James Hopkins, and Roy Lichtenstein, for example. One artist – Carolyn Bradley – drew acclaim not only for her art but for her many travels to bring her artistic passion to the world.

Carolyn Gertrude Bradley was born on September 22, 1898, in Richmond, Indiana. She received her first bachelor’s degree in 1920 from Earlham College in Richmond. She went on to earn another B.A. from John Herron Art School in Indianapolis, as well as degrees from Columbia University, the Traphagen School of Fashion in New York, and a master’s degree in fine arts from Escuela Universitaria de Bellas Artes in San Miguel Allende, Mexico.

1930_bradley_carolyn

Bradley with her artwork, no date

Bradley also was an avid traveler and fluent in Spanish, which earned her a place as an educational ambassador with the U.S. State Department from 1946-1951. Her first state-sponsored trip was as a visiting professor at the University of Chile, the second was a three-month tour of Guatemala, Honduras and Costa Rica. In 1950 she took a part-time teaching position at the Centre d’Art in Haiti, and in 1951 she was a visiting professor at the University of Costa Rica.

On all of these trips she taught and lectured almost every day, to audiences that ranged from university students to primary school children. Due to the economic situation in many places she taught, materials were scarce. Bradley was known to take students up into the hills to dig their own clay to use for paint pigment; she also brought many art supplies with her to donate to her students.

A Christmas card designed by Bradley, 1949

A Christmas card designed by Bradley, 1949

During these sojourns, she found time and plenty of inspiration to work on her art, and she returned with more than 60 of her own paintings, as well as the nickname “the paint-brush ambassador.”

A renowned water color artist in her own right, she studied with many well-known painters, including Henry B. Snell, George Pearce Ennis, James Hopkins, and Carlos Merida. She won 58 awards for her work and authored three books on costume design.

Bradley died on December 8, 1954, after a sudden illness. She was 56. Bradley Hall was dedicated in her honor on December 13, 1954.

In 1994, the OSU Archives received a small collection of handmade holiday greeting cards Bradley sent to friends and family, from 1940 to 1953.

– Filed by C.N.

1940

1940

 

 

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