Gertrude F. Jacob Papers, 1880s-1989, n.d. | Oberlin College Archives
Gertrude Fisher Jacob, the daughter of Brent Cooke Jacob (d. 1949) and Gertrude Fisher Jacob (d. 1970), was born January 21, 1908, in Wilkinsburg, Pennsylvania, and grew up in Cleveland, Ohio. In 1925, she entered Oberlin College where she was active in the Sigma Gamma Literary Society, the Classical Club, and as a reporter for the Oberlin Review. Completing majors in both Greek and philosophy, she graduated magna cum laude and with Phi Beta Kappa honors in 1929. She then entered the Ohio State University where she earned her M.A. in 1930. While at Ohio State, she prepared bibliographies of Bertrand Russell for 1929 and 1930 issues of the quarterly Bulletin in Bibliography.
Returning to Cleveland, she spent seven years (1930-37) as an Aide in Case Work and Clerical Work for the Cuyahoga County Relief Administration (later Associated Charities). Then, following a few months in labor cost accounting for Industrial Brownhoist in Bay City, Michigan, she relocated to Oberlin to serve her college and her church for over fifty years—until her death on August 26, 1989.
After working as an assistant in the Secretary’s Office at Oberlin College during 1937-43, Gertrude Jacob became secretary to First Church (U.C.C.) in Oberlin. The next year, she left to assume the duties of Secretary and Recorder and then Registrar at the Oberlin Graduate School of Theology (1944-61). In 1961 she became the Executive Secretary, a position she held until the Graduate School of Theology moved to Vanderbilt University in 1966. At that time, she moved to the office of the Oberlin College Archives where she worked as an Administrative Assistant until her “official” retirement in 1974 when she became a part-time assistant. She continued to work there as a volunteer until 1989, becoming a legend in support of alumni records and earning the moniker “an archive in and by herself.”
However, Gertrude Jacob also maintained her activities on behalf of the Graduate School of Theology after it left Oberlin. In 1967, she was invited to attend the Cole lectures and Alumni Dinner at Vanderbilt Divinity School; the following year the Alumni Association asked her to serve as Committeeman for the Northern region. She took an active interest in the work of the Schauffler College for Religious and Social Work even after it transferred to Defiance College, Defiance, Ohio, regularly visiting the campus for special occasions. She became a Trustee of the Schauffler College in 1978.
Her service to Oberlin College and First Church extended far beyond her official responsibilities. She had an extraordinary memory for the names and faces and whereabouts not only of the countless students she encountered but also of their families. She corresponded faithfully with this network of her “boys and girls,” and she was regularly seen writing her letters before and during the intermissions of the recitals and concerts she unfailingly attended. At First Church, she was an active participant on various committees—Pastoral, Toddler, Greeter—and represented the church at state and district conferences. She was a diligent worker for the Community Chest Drives and a loyal supporter of A.A.U.W. study groups.
Although she never sought recognition, her kind and caring manner, her dedication to duty, her unswerving attention to detail, and her extraordinary memory garnered her deeply-felt appreciation. In 1963, she became an Honorary Alumna of the Oberlin Graduate School of Theology; in 1966, she received the Special Alumni Award in recognition of her 22 years of dedicated service; in 1970, she became a member of the Alumni Board as a representative of the Graduate School of Theology. At the banquet marking the tenth anniversary of its move to Vanderbilt, the Graduate School of Theology presented her a golden pin with the Oberlin College seal and announced the formation of a scholarship fund in her name. In 1979, she was presented the Alumni Award for Distinguished Services to Oberlin College, and in the same year was recognized at a dinner held in her honor as part of the Herbert G. May Memorial Lecture and Workshop.
In November 1987, the college archivist organized an event to recognize Gertrude Jacob’s fifty years of service to Oberlin College. Some 180 colleagues, friends, relatives, and former students from Oberlin College and the community attended the celebration held at First Church in Oberlin. Tributes came in many forms, including proclamations passed by the Oberlin City Council, The General Assembly of Ohio, The U.S. House of Representatives, and a tribute from the State of Michigan. In addition, she was recognized by the establishment of the “Gertrude F. Jacob Archival Publications Fund…to be used to support archival publications, ensuring greater access to its holdings.” During the festivities, Professor Geoffrey Blodgett recalled hearing Gertrude say many times: “I’ve never been trained for anything I’ve done, and I’ve never done anything I’ve been trained for.” “These are the words,” he commented, “of a truly liberally educated person.” To his words, her life bears witness.
Sources
Jacob, Gertrude Fisher. Oberlin College Biographical Form, n.d.
Oberlin College. Obituary, August 27, 1989.
“Service of Worship Celebrating the Life of Gertrude F. Jacob.” (First Church, Oberlin,
Ohio). August 29, 1989. n.p.
Smith, Dorothy. “Gertrude Jacob: Archives Volunteer, Bridge to the Past.” Oberlin
Alumni Magazine (Winter 1988): 37.
Van Dyke, Mary Louise. Personal Interview.
Author: Elizabeth BrinkmanThe Gertrude F. Jacob (class of 1929) Papers consists of six (6) record series. The scope and content of the historical material is relatively narrow and uneven, given that the content primarily covers Miss Jacob’s professional career at Oberlin’s Office of the Secretary, 1937-43, the Graduate School of Theology (GST), 1944-65, and the Oberlin College Archives, 1965-89. Of particular interest are Jacob’s comments regarding the closure of the GST and the details of her work at the Oberlin College Archives.
SERIES DESCRIPTION
Series I. Biographical File, 1929-89, n.d. (1 folder)
Consists of a number of individual documents that report on her life and times, including her employment at Oberlin College and the auto accident that ultimately led to her death in August 1989.
Series II. Correspondence Files, 1935-89 (54 folders)
Consisting of six subseries, the correspondence is mainly of letters sent (copies of) and letters received from Oberlin College Alumni, especially from graduates of the Graduate School of Theology (GST) where Miss Jacob was employed, friends, and acquaintances developed over the years while working at the College Archives. The outgoing letters are newsy and they report on events at GST and Oberlin College, they comment on the archival holdings (mostly genealogical in character) held by the College Archives. Key correspondents include Thomas Graham, Walter Horton, and William Morison (Archivist, University of Louisville).
This series is divided into six (6) subseries: 1. Personal Files, 8f (incls. comments regarding the closure of the GST); 2. Archival-Related Files, 9f; 3. Research-Related Files, 9f; 4. GST-VDS Related Files, 13f; 5. Missionary Correspondence, 1939-84, 14f; and, 6. Schauffler College, at Defiance College, 1f.
Series III. Diaries, 1936-70 (7 volumes)
Daily entries consist of three-to-four sentences that account for letters received and written and that comment on the weather and social activities.
Series IV. Genealogical Files, c.1880s(1960-1989)-1989, n.d. (alpha order, 28 folders)
Consists of two subsets—general genealogical information on sources and 25 name files. Some materials are photocopies.
Series V. Writings (by Jacob), 1929, 1985 (1 folder)
Consists of one abstract paper written by Jacob in 1929 as well as an article published in "The Spire" on Richard C. Wolf, a professor at the Oberlin Graduate School of Theology and Vanderbilt Divinity School.
Series VI. Non-Textual Files, c. 1881-1913, n.d. (3 folders)
A small lot of Oberlin related non-textual material, consisting of three painted items, numerous postcards and greeting cards, and miscellaneous printed matter such as decorative booklets, advertisements and prayer cards.