We are Trailblazers
We are trailblazers. Throughout the history of Cornell Human Ecology, our community of faculty, staff and students have consistently dared to be different. Challenged the status quo. Made an impact by innovating. Where there are established expectations, we’ve pioneered unconventional paths to improve human lives.
As we mark a century of Cornell Human Ecology, we’re celebrating our long line of trailblazers by telling their stories. From human health visionaries to pioneers of interdisciplinary study, each story in this series is as unique as it is uplifting. Yet they all exemplify one undeniable quality that characterizes all of Cornell Human Ecology: we are trailblazers, and we always have been.
Beulah Blackmore
Blackmore came to Cornell in 1915 as the first full time clothing instructor in what was then the Department of Home Economics. Over a career of 36 years, she led the College’s textile and clothing program as the curriculum expanded from a focus on clothing construction to more advanced study of design, psychology, chemistry and consumer selection
Urie Bronfenbrenner
Bronfenbrenner was a developmental psychologist who transformed the study of human development and connected research and theory to public policy to improve the lives of children and families.
Joyce Brothers
In a career spanning five decades, Joyce Brothers ’47 – better known to millions as Dr. Joyce Brothers – normalized therapy and brought psychological concepts from the psychoanalyst’s couch to the living room, earning her the nickname “the mother of TV psychology.”
Henrietta Hoag Guilfoyle '40
Guilfoyle (Onöndowa’ga:’/Seneca, Beaver Clan) was one of five Hodinǫ̱hsǫ́:nih women who came to Cornell between 1929 and 1942 through a scholarship and the only one to graduate.
Flemmie Kittrell
Over a career of more than 40 years — which included leading the home economics department at Howard University, making vital contributions to the Head Start program and traveling to more than 15 countries — Flemmie Kittrell, M.S. ’30, Ph.D. ’36 demonstrated that the study of home economics was never limited to the home.
Martha Van Rensselaer
Van Rensselaer was a tireless advocate for educating women and helping them improve their own lives by applying scientific rigor to the everyday responsibilities of family and home.