Maryly Van Leer Peck Explained

Maryly Van Leer Peck
President of
Polk Community College
Term Start:1982
Term End:1997
Predecessor:Fred Lenfestey
Successor:J. Larry Durrence
Title1:Dean Guam Community College
Term Start1:1977
Term End1:1982
Title2:Dean of Engineering University of Guam
Term Start2:1970
Term End2:1977
Title3:Aerospace Engineer at United States Naval Research Laboratory
Term Start3:1963
Term End3:1970
Birth Name:Maryly Van Leer
Birth Date:June 29, 1930
Birth Place:Washington, D.C.
Death Date:[1]
Death Place:West Palm Beach, Florida
Alma Mater:Vanderbilt University
University of Florida
Profession:Community college president
Relatives:Blake R. Van Leer (father)
Ella Lillian Wall Van Leer (mother)
Blake Wayne Van Leer (brother)
Spouse:Edwin L. Carey
Children:Jordan Brown Peck, III, Blake Peck, James Peck, Elaine Peck

Maryly Van Leer Peck (June 29, 1930  - November 3, 2011) was an American academic and college administrator. She founded numerous programs in Guam, one of them being the Community Career College at the University of Guam[1] (which merged into Guam Community College in November 1977). She was the first female president of a public institution of higher learning in Florida, the first female president of a Florida community college while president of Polk Community College aka Polk State College. She was one of the first female graduates of the School of Engineering at Vanderbilt University and the first woman to graduate with a degree in chemical engineering. She was also the first woman to receive an M.S. and a Ph.D. in engineering from the University of Florida. She also founded Society of Women Engineers chapters, and was an active board member. [2] [3] [1] [4] [5]

Early life and education

Maryly Van Leer Peck was born on June 29, 1930, in Washington, D.C. She was the second child, and only daughter, of Blake Ragsdale Van Leer and Ella Lillian Wall Van Leer.[6] She was a member of the influential Van Leer family.[7]

Peck's parents both had strong academic backgrounds and were close friends with renowned intellectuals of their time, including Frank Bunker Gilbreth Sr. and Lillian Moller Gilbreth, which not only exposed Peck very early to engineering, but it also showed her the possibility that she could be one herself. Peck became the valedictorian of her high school class in Georgia, granting her a state-sponsored scholarship. However, at that time, the male-only Georgia Institute of Technology was the only school offering engineering, and even though her father filed a case on her behalf, she didn't have an option but to spend a year at Duke, before transferring to Vanderbilt University in her sophomore year, so that she could major in chemical engineering. She was the first woman to receive a chemical engineering degree from Vanderbilt in 1951,[8] while also graduating with highest honors and becoming the first woman initiated into Tau Beta Pi, the honorary engineering fraternity.[9] Four years later, she became one of the first female graduates in engineering from Vanderbilt and the first woman with an engineering master's degree from the University of Florida, where she also received her doctorate in 1963.

Career

While working on her master's degree, Peck started tutoring older students in math-related subjects. This caught the eye of a professor at Florida University, who asked her to substitute for him, while he was away presenting a paper. This was the first of many teaching jobs Peck would have during the following decades.

Peck maintained close ties with the Society of Women Engineers throughout her career and was the National Chair of Student Affairs. After her parents successfully lobbied to admit the first women into Georgia Tech, Peck complimented this victory with setting up a SWE chapter and support network on campus.[10] By 1962 she was named national vice president of the organization.[11] Later In 1962, as she was finishing her doctoral dissertation, Peck found a job as a propellant and aerospace engineer for Rocketdyne Corporation and United States Naval Research Laboratory in Washington, D.C. She developed solid fuel and engines which are still used in the space program today. Since she was already a mother of four children by that time, this attracted the interest of journalists and resulted in a 1962 interview for Life magazine.

Soon after their marriage, her husband, Jordan Brown Peck, Jr., became an Episcopal priest. She followed him when he decided to do some missionary work in Guam. They would remain there for eleven years. During this period, she would become the first woman dean of the College of Business and Applied Technology at the University of Guam, and would help them create numerous 4-year programs.[12] She was also a chairman on its board.[13] She then became the founder of the Community Career College at the University of Guam.[14] This was the 2-year associate degrees program of the university, which otherwise offered 4-year degrees at the undergraduate level in its other undergraduate departments. This school was moved to Guam Community College under Peck's leadership in November 1977, just after that school was established; making up the higher education component of that newly created institution.[15] [16]

In 1982 Peck was selected to be the president of Polk Community College, now Polk State College, and she served in this position until 1997, which made her the first female president of a public institution of higher learning in Florida.[17] Peck was the first woman to be named president of any of Florida's 26 community colleges. In 2005, Peck received the National Community Service Award from the Daughters of the American Revolution organization.[18]

During Peck's tenure, Polk Community College added the Lakeland campus and established a foundation which, by the time she retired, had $5.5 million for scholarships and college equipment. In 1995 Peck was awarded the "She Knows Where She's Going" award by Girls, Inc. and later joined their national board.[19]

After her retirement in 1997, Peck served as the headmaster of the Episcopal All Saints' Academy and later joined the board for the Vanguard School.

Peck was honored as a Distinguished Alumnus of the University of Florida in 1991, and in 2007, she was selected by the Governor of Florida to be inducted into the Florida Women's Hall of Fame.[20]

Personal life

Peck married Jordan Brown Peck, Jr. in 1951, the year she received her B.A. The couple had four children.

In 1982, Peck became the first woman to be admitted into membership of the Winter Haven Rotary Club; afterwards, she also became the first woman to be elected president of the same club. In 2003, she was interviewed by Society of Women Engineers (SWE) for a profile on about her life as a pioneer.[1] [4] She died in West Palm Beach, in 2011, at the age of 81, and was interred at St. Mark's Episcopal Church in Palm Gardens.[21]

See also

Notes and References

  1. News: Chambliss. John. Maryly Van Leer Peck, Former PCC President, Dies at 81. The Ledger. November 4, 2011.
  2. News: Toothman . Mary . Graham says state projects could improve unemployment . 27 March 2020 . Tampa Tribune . Tampa, Florida. October 19, 1982 . 60. Newspapers.com.
  3. Web site: Name .
  4. Van Leer Peck . Maryly . Lauren Kata . Oral-History: Maryly Van Leer Peck . Profiles of SWE Pioneers Oral History Project. . Winter Haven, Florida . 13 June 2003. 26 March 2018.
  5. Book: Hatch, Sybil E.. Changing Our World: True Stories of Women Engineers. January 2006. 195. ASCE Publications. 9780784408353.
  6. 14 September 1962 . Mother's an Engineer . . 102–106. 29 March 2018.
  7. Web site: Generation 11.8 - Eight Child of Wayne Van Leer . www.vanleerarchives.org . Van Leer Archives . 29 August 2022.
  8. Web site: The Personal is Archival: Researching and Teaching With Stories of Women Engineers, Scientists, and Doctors. dr.lib.iastate.edu . 2023-10-01 .
  9. Web site: Van Leer Family Papers (MS458). Finding Aid. Archives, Library and Learning Excellence, Georgia Tech Library. 29 March 2018.
  10. Book: Girls Coming to Tech. January 14, 2014. January 14, 2014. mitpress.mit.edu. MIT Press. 9780262320276.
  11. Web site: The Bonham Daily Favorite (Bonham, Tex.), ed. 1 Sunday, September 16, 1962 . 16 September 1962 .
  12. Web site: Kata . Laura . Maryly Peck Oral History . Michigan Oral History Database . Wayne State University.
  13. Book: A Retrospective of the University of Guam: Its Leaders and Mentors . University of Guam . 2004.
  14. News: Stegall . Sarah . Polk Pioneers Receive Honors . 2 July 2022 . Lakeland Ledger . March 14, 2007.
  15. Book: The Overall Economic Development Plan for Guam: 1989-1993. William J. Fitzgerald. Guam Department of Commerce. 1989. 157.
  16. Web site: https://www.che.ufl.edu/PDF/Department_News_Prior_to_2013.pdf.
  17. Web site: Polk State Mourns Loss of Former President. 14 November 2011. 29 March 2018. Polk State College.
  18. Web site: Maryly VanLeer Peck. Florida Commission on the Status of Women. Florida Women's Hall of Fame. 29 March 2018.
  19. In Memoriam: Dr. Maryly VanLeer Peck. pdf. 34–35. Polk Community College. Taking Flight. Spring 2012. 2012. 9 January 2020.
  20. News: Ex-PCC leader honored . Orlando Sentinel . 28 January 2007.
  21. Web site: Chambliss . John . Funeral Service for Maryly Peck Set for Nov. 18 . www.theledger.com . The Ledger . 31 August 2022.