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Mary Ellen Padin Papers, 1943-(present) (bulk 1943-1947)Finding AidFinding aid prepared by .© 2005
Biographical NoteMary Ellen Padin was born on April 29, 1925 in New York City. Her parents were Manuel Padin, an exporter, and Mary Elizabeth Lindsay Padin. She attended the Ursuline School in New Rochelle, New York, and graduated in 1943. In September 1943, she entered Mount Holyoke College, where she majored in physics. While at Mount Holyoke College, she played volleyball and sang in the choir and Glee Club. She was also involved in the Physics Club and founded and led the Camera Club. After graduating from Mount Holyoke in 1947, she enrolled in the Columbia School of Library Science at Columbia University. She received her B.S. in Library Science in 1948 and received a M.S. in Library Science in 1954 from Columbia University. She worked as a librarian at the New York Public Library (1948-1940), at Sam Tour and Co. in New York, the U.S. Naval Ordinance Test Station in China Lake, California (1954-1944), at Dunlap and Associates, Inc. in Stamford, Connecticut, and at IBM. She has been an avid traveler throughout her life. She toured Europe extensively for business and pleasure, and visited family in Spain numerous times. She has been active in the local Embroiderer's Guild during her retirement in New Milford, Connecticut. Return to the Table of Contents Scope and Contents of the CollectionThe Mary Ellen Padin Papers consist of correspondence, scrapbooks, reminiscences, publications, and photographs. The material primarily relates to her experiences as a student at Mount Holyoke College from 1943-1947. Her letters provide detailed descriptions of her daily activities, academic work, her social life, college traditions, and current events. She was interested in physics, music, Spanish, and history, and discusses many of her professors, including Ruth Sedgwick (Spanish), Rogers D. Rusk (physics), John Kirkpatrick (music), and Frank E. Bailey, Jr. (history). She was an enthusiastic participant in college social activities and often mentions traditions including Mountain Day, Freshman Hazing, Convocation, Junior Show, and events where music was a component. Outings with friends to picnic near the Connecticut River and trips to Holyoke, Massachusetts to shop are described. Her letters also reflect the impact of World War II on Mount Holyoke. For example, she mentions furniture shortages, changes to meals, and the presence of the Women Accepted for Volunteer Emergency Service (WAVES) training on campus. Several of the letters are pasted in her scrapbooks. Four volumes of scrapbooks include photographs of friends participating in Mount Holyoke traditions, newspaper clippings, ticket stubs, and programs from various events. Each item in the scrapbooks has extensive captions. Included in the scrapbooks are her "Notes and Observations on Freshman Hazing Day" (1946) and pictures from the event. In 2002, Padin began compiling her recollections of life at Mount Holyoke and also started collecting those of some of her classmates. These recollections provide detailed descriptions of meals, dorm life, music, student employment, physical education requirements, mail procedures, attire, and hobbies. They also present a picture of Mount Holyoke life during and immediately following World War II. Publications consist of annotated copies of Mount Holyoke hymnbook, the 1947 "Llamarada," and "A Memory Book: Mount Holyoke College 1837-1987" by Anne C. Edmonds. Photographs include several of Padin and of some of her classmates. Return to the Table of Contents Search TermsReturn to the Table of Contents Organization of the CollectionThis collection is organized into five series: Return to the Table of Contents |