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JEAN SMITH Obituary

Smith, Jean Chapin Of Cambridge, MA, died on March 21, 2015 at age 84. She was surrounded by her children and friends, music and flowers. Jean Chapin was born in Boston, MA, to Beatrice Jones Hunter and Louis Clare Hunter. She grew up in Washington, DC, and Thetford, VT. She graduated with a BA from Oberlin College in 1952, and earned her Masters degree from the Smith College School of Social Work in 1954. In college Jean was an enthusiastic member of the Musical Union, performing major choral works and initiating a lifelong love of music. She was a founding member of the student housing cooperative movement at Oberlin. Meeting Eleanor Roosevelt was a high point of her college years.Jean moved to Cambridge with former husband Duncan Smith in 1957 and, with the exception of a decade in Lincoln, MA, lived there until her death.Her career in Social Work spanned six decades. Early decades were spent as a caseworker in various agency and educational settings around Boston and as a supervisor for graduate casework students in the Social Work programs at Smith and Boston University, among others. She began her private practice in 1982, receiving further training with Associates for Human Resources and the Kantor Family Institute. Her professional focus shifted towards family systems and work with the LGBT community. She loved her work, and only reluctantly retired from practice in her early 80's. She was a member of the NASW, BDC, ACSW, and AAMFT.Jean had many passions, which she explored tirelessly and shared enthusiastically with all she knew. These ranged from a lifelong commitment to social justice, to her love of music, dance, art, travel, reading, and good food. She was an adventurer, always exploring new avenues across the range of her cultural interests. She thrived amidst Boston's rich performance offerings in early music, opera and theater. One of her greatest sources of joy was the Mark Morris Dance Group's L'Allegro, which she traveled great distances to see on numerous occasions. She was eagerly awaiting the film version, airing on PBS this week. Her commitment to racial and social justice was a constant thread through her life. She worked with the NAACP Education Committee, Community Change, Inc., AIDS Action, PFLAG, and was on the boards of METCO and the Cambridge YWCA. Later in her life she was an active participant in her Agassiz-Baldwin neighborhood community, and an enthusiastic supporter of Maud Morgan Arts. Jean leaves her three daughters, Pi Smith, Cary Smith Mondschean, and Alexandra Smith Trusty; four granddaughters, Julia Mondschean, Anna Mondschean, Zia Smith, and Fiona Trusty; former husband Duncan Smith; sons-in-law Thomas Mondschean and Ryan Trusty; nieces Jennifer Chapin and Elizabeth Duffett; nephews Carl Bauer, Adam Bauer, and Maxwell Steinhardt. Her beloved sister, Grenelle Hunter Scott, died in August 2014.Memorial contributions in her name can be made to Community Change, Inc. (http://www.communitychangeinc.org/) or Maud Morgan Arts (http://www.maudmorgan.com/index.htm). Questions may be sent to [email protected]. For obituary or to send a condolence visit www.keefefuneralhome.com A private memorial gathering will be held in the spring.

To plant trees in memory, please visit the Sympathy Store.

Published by Boston Globe from Mar. 28 to Mar. 29, 2015.

Memories and Condolences
for JEAN SMITH

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Genis Piferrer

December 23, 2016

We prayer for you in the Peace of the Lord.

Sylvia Cowan

June 19, 2015

Terri Trafas

June 17, 2015

Spending time with Jean was always such a treat for me. Our friendship started when she invited me over for a "cup of something" accompanied by her amazing homemade bread and delicious apricot jam, of which I fortunately still have a small jar. She had a tremendous impact on my life over the past couple of decades. I will hold forever the memories of times with her, sitting in her garden, or on one of the "small adventures" she used to plan for us - a combination of an arts event and good food, a little bit of wine & copious amounts of chocolate. I miss the conversations we used to have and the friendship we shared. A light went out in my life the day she passed. I hope she is now on a not so small adventure. Rest in peace my dear, dear friend.

Mother Felicitas (Martha) Curti

June 16, 2015

I will miss Jean a lot, as I do Grenelle. I have known them all my life. Our families, the Hunters and the Curtis, were close friends. Jean and Grenelle were like cousins. We shared many adventures, joys and sorrows of childhood and adolescence. With our families we enjoyed countless picnics, hikes, and songs in our Vermont and New Hampshire summers. At Oberlin, where Jean was a year ahead of me, she was my mentor, introducing me to many of Oberlin's resources, and to Pyle Inn Co-op. Neither of us were good correspondents, but we were always dear friends. In 1996 Jean and Grenelle came to my father's memorial service in Madison, Wisconsin. That may well be the last time I saw Jean.
I was looking forward to seeing her again on my recent visit to my New Hampshire family, and was heartbroken to learn of her death.
Jean will live in the hearts of all who loved her, and all whom she helped professionally and personally. Her influence for the good of the world will live in all of us.

community change inc gala

terri trafas

April 19, 2015

museum of fine arts

terri trafas

April 19, 2015

picnic with classical music on the esplanade, summer 2014

terri trafas

April 19, 2015

Judy Spock

April 8, 2015

We once shared a playgroup in Cambridge, our husbands had collaborating museums in Boston, and as neighbors in Lincoln, we blended our kids and lives in an easy, sisterly way...she was a wise counsellor...an energetic explorer of arts and skills...(she made the computer work for her, really well, and early (!) We had wonderful times together, and we always enjoyed catching up when she came to visit Cary and her devoted family in Evanston. She loved what we love..... What can be more wonderful in a friendship..?.! We will always miss her, Judy Spock

Sisters: Grenelle Bauer Scott and Jean Chapin Smith

Alexandra Trusty

April 3, 2015

Roger Hecht

March 31, 2015

I knew Jean Chapin Smith through my work as a librarian at the Cambridge Public Library. She called regularly over many years to make reserves and learn more about the availability of recordings as well as books about music and the arts. When she discovered that I was also a performing musician and critic, we began talking at greater length on those subjects. We learned from each other. Her curiosity was wide ranging and stimulating, she had a delightful sense of humor, and she soon became my favorite reference caller. Jean was always discovering new works, new composers, and new things that she wanted to learn more about. Her interests were not always mainstream, and she was not reluctant to experiment.

Jean came to the library regularly to pick up materials, but I met her only once, and that was just a few months ago. She wanted to loan me a book about Virgil Thompson. I never had a chance to return it, and I'd like to keep it unless the family wants it back. Recently, Jean told me of the great loss that was the death of her sister. The last I heard from her was through a very recent phone message she left with a colleague. She wanted me to call her to "talk about music," as my colleague put it. I called and left a message, but she never got back to me. Now I guess I know why. My last service to Jean was to help introduce her to the music of Carl Nielsen. In an email she told me she liked it very much. That was our last communication other than that phone call.

I'll miss those phone calls and emails. Jean Chapin Smith was one of a kind among the many patrons I've met at the library, one of the people who make library service worthwhile, and I shall never forget her.

"Gamma" with Anna and Julia on Swan Boat c.1985

Alexandra Trusty

March 30, 2015

March 29, 2015

I will miss so many things about my dear friend Jean--her curiosity, her zest for life, her elegance, her ability to listen deeply, her clearly stated opinions, her love for dance and music, her commitment to social justice, her love for her family. Mostly I will miss her dauntless spirit and her caring friendship. Sylvia Cowan

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