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Ruth Ferguson Hooke

1927 - 2017

Ruth Ferguson Hooke obituary, 1927-2017, Amherst, MA

BORN

1927

DIED

2017

Ruth Hooke Obituary

AMHERST – Ruth Ferguson Hooke – teacher, mentor, activist, traveler - passed away Saturday, May 20, 2017, in Chelsea, Vermont, in the loving arms of her daughter, son, and caregiver.

Ruth was born March 12, 1927, in Ardmore, Pennsylvania, to Joseph C. and Marguerite (Brinton) Ferguson. She attended the Westtown School and Wellesley College, then worked in Europe helping with refugee resettlement. She earned a masters of divinity at Yale Divinity School, one of ten women in her class. She worked in religious education at the Friends Meeting in Cambridge.

She met Richard Hooke while working in Cambridge. They were married on October 22, 1960, in Boston. They soon moved to Henniker, New Hampshire, where Richard taught art at New England College.

While on Richard's sabbatical year in St. Paul, Minnesota in 1969-70, she found a job providing adult education to welfare recipients, which she found highly rewarding. This led to her co-founding of Project Second Start in Concord, New Hampshire, a program for undereducated women, which taught literacy skills and readiness for employment; the program is still highly successful. In 1974 she began working at the University Without Walls (UWW) at the University of Massachusetts Amherst. In this degree program for working adults, she was an instructor, advisor, and program coordinator. In 1990 she won an award for outstanding advising from the National Council of Academic Advisors. Upon her retirement in 1995, her colleagues at UWW described her as "the soul of the program."

Ruth was a member of the Amherst Town Meeting, especially pressing the Town Meeting to address human rights issues. She was active in Amherst Writers and Artists, and taught creative writing for many years at Grace House, a residence for recovering addicts. She was also involved in the Alternatives to Violence Project, which taught prison inmates conflict resolution skills. She founded the local chapter of the Raging Grannies, and sang and demonstrated with them at numerous protests at nuclear power plants, the School of the Americas in Georgia, and in front of the White House to call for the closing of Guantanamo. Every Sunday for years, she and Richard stood with a group on the Amherst Town Common to draw attention to the issues of the day.

She was an inveterate traveler, visiting over 40 countries. She went to Haiti with Witness for Peace in 1995, to Israel/Palestine and South Africa with the Fellowship for Reconciliation, and to Vietnam with Winds for Peace, (through the Madison, Wisconsin, Quaker Meeting) an organization that helps Vietnamese women achieve economic self-sufficiency. Ruth sponsored the purchase of 50 cows, one for each woman in a small town.

Ruth was a member of Grace Episcopal Church in Amherst, where she served on the Vestry, and sang in the church choir. She also sang in the Hampshire Choral Society, and hosted in her home "Hookes' Regular Sing," a gathering of Sacred Harp singers. She was a docent at the Emily Dickinson House, a Fellow in the Society for Values in Higher Education, and a Companion in the Society of Companions of the Holy Cross, an organization of Episcopal women devoted to linking prayer and social action. After Richard's death in 2001, Ruth lived for 11 years at Applewood in Amherst. In 2013, Ruth was awarded the Standing On Her Shoulders Award from the Women's Fund of Western Massachusetts, to honor her lifetime of activism for social justice.

In 2013, she moved to her son's house in Vershire, Vermont. With the help of some wonderful caregivers, she became a regular member of the Bach Study group in Hanover, sang in the Juneberry Music classes in Thetford, had a weekly sing with children in the Westshire Elementary School, and took numerous study courses. She attended the First Congregational Church in Thetford (Hill), and St. Thomas's Episcopal Church in Hanover, New Hampshire.

Late in 2016 she was diagnosed with liver cancer, and was taken under Hospice care and moved to the home of her caregiver Eve DesJardins in Chelsea. She attended church on Mothers' Day and a concert that evening and died less than six days later.

She loved and treasured a few things fiercely. She loved supporting the poor and oppressed. She loved music; she treasured times singing with family. She loved the coast of Maine, in particular the family camp in Castine; she found peace in sitting on the deck in the sunshine and watching the tide. She loved swimming, and in her last summers swam nearly every day at the Treasure Island beach; our memories of her tottering down to the shore when she could barely walk, and then finding the peace of floating in that cool embrace, are ones we will treasure.

She is survived by her son David daughter-in-law Kathy and their son Benjamin of Vershire; her daughter Ruthanna, her partner Judy Adkins, and their son Silas of Alexandria, Virginia; by her brother Brinton Ferguson; by her brothers-and sisters-in-law and by numerous cousins, nieces and nephews.

A Service of Story and Music will be held in her memory June 17, 2017 at 4 p.m. at the Thetford Hill Church. There will also be a memorial service at Grace Church in Amherst on July 23, 2017, at 3 p.m.

In lieu of flowers, gifts in her memory may be made to:

Episcopal Relief and Development, P.O. Box 7058 Merrifield, VA 22116-7058 or Madison Quakers (Vietnam projects) P.O. Box 1461, Madison, WI  53701-1461.

To sign a Guest Book, express condolences, share memories and read other obituaries, go to legacy.com/obituaries/gazettenet.

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

Published by Daily Hampshire Gazette on May 24, 2017.

Memories and Condolences
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5 Entries

Kate Koski

June 5, 2017

Ruth was my mentor. I was her student at UWW and she encouraged me to teach. Later, I interned for my master's program, co-teaching classes with her. Later I was hired by UWW as advisor/instructor and held her as a friend and my teaching model. I loved her. She taught me so much.

Tom Roeper

May 30, 2017

Ruth was an exemplary citizen, who with Richard, sponsored
every form of community and humane value---through singing,
travel, adventures, and discussion groups at their house.
Our family worked together with them on the project of bringing two Bosnian girls to Amherst----and they were hosts to Helena from Zgreb,
working tirelessly for her. She was always an inspiration---her
plain goodwill in every situation was an education in the powerful example of her own self-respect and persistence in fighting for
good causes. Old age never overcame her youth.
Tom Roeper

Gay Harter

May 30, 2017

Ruth was my hero! She was so courageous. I first met her through SVHE, but she was also my roommate on a memorable trip to Palestine-Israel in 2009 for the Sabeel International Conference. When others spontaneously proposed that a group try to get into Gaza, she volunteered immediately. They didn't get in, but they made themselves heard.

michaelann bewsee

May 26, 2017

I am so glad and honored that I had a chance to know Ruth. She leaves a gap that will not be easily filled.

Don Ogden

May 25, 2017

Ruth was one of a kind. They must have thrown away the mold when she was born. She showed up everywhere we demonstrated against injustice for decades. Ruth Hooke, presente!

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