
Published in ICView 2007-2.
Peggy R. Williams spent her childhood in Canada, where she began her education, earning a bachelor’s degree from St. Michael’s College of the University of Toronto. She also holds a master of education degree from the University of Vermont and a doctorate in administration, planning, and social policy from Harvard University. She is a citizen of both the U.S. and Canada, having lived in the United States since 1968.
Before entering the field of education, Williams was a social worker for the Medical Center Hospital of Vermont and the Monroe County Department of Social Services in New York. She went on to hold various positions within the Vermont State Colleges system and later joined Trinity College in Burlington, Vermont, as an associate professor, ultimately becoming chair of the business and economics department and associate academic dean. Prior to being named the seventh -- and first female -- president of Ithaca College in 1997, she was president of Lyndon State College in Lyndonville, Vermont, for eight years.
Her accomplishments at Ithaca are too numerous to list here, but include
Williams has been a leading proponent of sustainability, having signed the American College and University Presidents Climate Commitment, and she has set an example with regard to community service, having instituted the annual Celebration of Service. Additionally, she frequently presented a workshop on humor in the workplace for the College's LeaderShip program, and the College instituted the Peggy R. Williams Award for Academic and Community Leadership in her honor.
At Ithaca College she served as a member of the NCAA Division III Presidents Council as well as its Subcommittee on Gender and Diversity Issues, and she served on the boards of directors of the Canada-U.S. Foundation for Educational Exchange (Fulbright) and the American Council on Education, for whom she chaired the Commission on Women. She has also participated in Women Swimmin', a swim across Cayuga Lake to benefit Hospicare and Palliative Care Services, and the AIDS Ride for Life.
When Williams stepped down from the presidency of the College, the board of trustees presented her with an honorary degree and endowed a new discussion symposium in her honor. The Peggy R. Williams Difficult Dialogues Symposium will explore intellectual diversity and academic freedom through discussions by prominent global leaders who will present on important, far-reaching topics.
Williams's current service includes the board of St. Michael's College (VT) and the Tompkins Trust Company.
She is an accomplished athlete (she was once the girls' yo-yo champion of the west island of Montreal) who swims and bikes regularly and occasionally hikes, skis, golfs, sails, and plays tennis.
She has been our leader, our teacher, our guide, and our friend, and she will be sorely missed.