Elizabeth Eckhardt May (February 18, 1899 – October 24, 1996) was an American home economist, educator, and college administrator. She was dean of the School of Home Economics at the University of Connecticut from 1952 to 1964, and before that academic dean of Hood College in Maryland. Her research and writing involved rehabilitation and work supports for disabled women.
One of her sisters was Gertrude Eckhardt, an American public health nurse who worked in Germany with the US military government after World War II.[5][6] Their brother Jack L. Eckhardt was the longtime mayor of Folsom.[7][8]
In 1943, May became the academic dean at Hood College in Maryland.[10][11] She became dean of the School of Home Economics at the University of Connecticut in 1952, and retired from Connecticut in 1964.[4] She was a member of the President's Committee on the Employment of the Handicapped.[12] Her research involved studies of physically disabled women's domestic work, including childcare, and rehabilitation approaches aimed at that group.[13] "It is not a matter of gadgets," she said in a 1962 conference paper. "It is a matter of management."[14]
Publications
"Whom to Train for Recreational Leadership" (1941)[15]
"Expanding the Services of the Home Economist in Rehabilitation" (1960)[18]
"Work Simplification in the Area of Child Care for Physically Handicapped Women" (1961)[19]
"Work Simplification in Child Care: Teaching Materials for the Rehabilitation of Physically Handicapped Homemakers" (1962)[20]
Homemaking for the Handicapped (1966, with Neva R. Waggoner and Eleanor Boettke Hotte, with photographs by Jerauld Manter)[21]
Independent Living for the Handicapped and Elderly (1974, with Neva R. Waggoner and Eleanor Boettke Hotte)[22]
Personal life
Elizabeth Eckhardt married architect and magazine editor Charles C. May. They had a daughter, Margaret Gertrude May Kessel.[23] Her husband died in 1937,[24] and she died in 1996, at the age of 97, in Braddock Heights, Maryland.[25] There is a large collection of her papers at the University of Connecticut Library.[4]
^"Personals", Daily Journal, May 24, 1952. Accessed May 9, 2023, via Newspapers.com. "Mrs. Elizabeth Eckhardt May. a graduate of Folsom School and Hammonton High School, will become dean of the School of Home Economics, University of Connecticut, on June 16."
^"Mrs. Kramer Honored". Courier-Post. 1947-05-23. p. 12. Retrieved 2023-05-03 – via Newspapers.com.