It was called the “Experiment”—an early 1970s
exercise in
co-educational housing that involved the exchange of female students
from Harvard’s faraway Radcliffe Quadrangle dormitories with residents
from the traditionally all-male houses between the Charles River and
the Yard. It was a temporary arrangement—a trial—and, like most
experiments, it was supposed to come to an end.
But when the time came, Zeph Stewart, the legendary Harvard
classics professor and former Lowell House master who passed away at 86
this Saturday [Dec. 1, 2007], wasn’t ready to give up the new members of his House’s
community.
When the Experiment came to an end, and Harvard decided to
adopt coeducational housing more generally, the administration planned
to redistribute all the female students among Harvard’s Houses, with no
regard for where they had stayed during the Experiment.
But Stewart’s view, recalls former Lowell tutor Michael S.
Novey ’65, was that “the Radcliffe students had become part of the
Lowell community.”
“That sensitivity informed his approach to being a House
master,” Novey said yesterday. “He valued human relationships and
fostered them. The result was a vibrant community of tremendous
diversity.”
By all accounts, Stewart’s sense of community did not stop at the walls
of the House that he led for more than a decade.
Following his summa cum laude graduation from Yale in 1942,
Stewart’s decades in academia saw him garner a litany of
accomplishments. The achievements ranged from his published work on
ancient religion, literature, and philosophy to his review and revival
of Harvard University Press’s Loeb Classical Library, which publishes
English translations of Greek and Latin texts.
But away from his study, the younger brother of former Supreme
Court Justice Potter Stewart was actively engaged in making the parts
of Cambridge that he knew more inclusive and welcoming.
According to engineering professor Frederick H. Abernathy, it
was Stewart’s leadership that helped make the Experiment’s male-female
exchange a reality in the first place.
“The first ones that volunteered to cooperate were Zeph and
[his wife] Diana,” Abernathy said. “And that leadership, that first
step when people said, ‘This is the camel’s nose under the tent’...that
was the first step to cause the gender integration of Harvard.”
Classics professor Richard F. Thomas—who joined the Harvard
faculty in 1977, the same year that Stewart assumed the helm of the
Classics Department—said he remembered his colleague as a man “who
cared about people who were not necessarily in high positions.”
According to Thomas, Stewart would mentor the Latin teachers
at the high-schools in the Cambridge area, and he would routinely read
and comment on his junior colleagues’ drafts.
Stewart’s wife, Diana, recalled that her husband was one of
the last House masters to write recommendations for most of the seniors
under his residential watch.
Long after he retired from active academic work, Diana would
drive Stewart to the departmental student-faculty lunches that he had
instituted during his time as classics chair.
“He had been at Yale a very outgoing person in his class, and
he found being a graduate student extremely lonely his first year,”
Diana Stewart said. “He always said, ‘If you’re in the humanities,
you’re on your own. If you’re in the sciences, you’re in a laboratory
working with other people.’ And I think that’s one of the things he
worked out, was to have the humanities people work together.”
—Staff writer Christian B. Flow can
be reached at cflow@fas.harvard.edu.
