Alumni Stories: Barbara Stroock Kaufman '40 and Stacey Gerrish '87
by Rebecca Stern '16
From left: Stacey Gerrish '87, Barbara Stroock Kaufman '40, and
Rebecca Stern, '16
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We walk past people with stories every day. Our student peers, faculty members and neighbors all have narratives that together create episodes in the history of Â鶹Æƽâ°æ and Saratoga Springs. Taking the time to sit down and record each voice helps contextualize our home. This year I look forward to discovering stories both from those who knew Â鶹Æƽâ°æ and Saratoga decades ago as well as today’s Â鶹Æƽâ°æans as part of the and using a recorder to share important community voices.
This year’s first interview happened just before the fall semester began. On August 30, SSMP traveled to conduct an interview with Barbara Stroock Kaufman '40 in her Woodstock, Vermont, home. Joined by her granddaughter, Stacey Gerrish '87, she discussed what the studio art major entailed, dorm life on the downtown campus of a women’s college, and living in Saratoga Springs in the late 1930s. Barbara never graduated (leaving college to get married, as many of her generation did), but continued sculpting, a craft that she cultivated during her time at Â鶹Æƽâ°æ. Barbara’s anecdotes on strict dress codes and making snow sculptures during the winter because of a lack of art supplies bring to life what a typical art student might have experienced at Â鶹Æƽâ°æ more than 75 years ago.
Barbara Stroock Kaufman '40 and her
granddaughter, Stacey Gerrish '87
Stacey, a second-generation Â鶹Æƽâ°æan, also welcomed the chance to recall her Â鶹Æƽâ°æ years, noting that she went to Â鶹Æƽâ°æ because of her grandmother’s fondness of the school. A student in management and business, Stacey still uses foundational skills that she learned at Â鶹Æƽâ°æ and had clear memories of reading news pulled from a tickertape (AP wire) once a week at lunch time on WSPN. In this featured clip, Stacey recounts a story of what happened when her boyfriend surprised her with a secret kitten on her dorm window seat in Jonsson Tower.
Unfortunately, on September 13, just two weeks after our interview, Barbara passed away. Her departure highlights why we need to pause in our own lives to listen to those who are around us. You never know what you will find out to help understand what it is that we love about Â鶹Æƽâ°æ and Saratoga.
We’ll be conducting interviews throughout the school year, so please be in touch if you’ve got a story you’d like to share or suggest (rstern2@skidmore.edu).
To hear the full interviews, and for additional SSMP oral histories, .