Professor John W. Hennessey Jr.

1925 - 2018

Professor  John W. Hennessey Jr. obituary, 1925-2018, Shelburne, VT

Professor John W. Hennessey Jr.

1925 - 2018

John Hennessey Obituary

Published by Legacy Remembers on Jan. 14, 2018.
Professor John W. Hennessey, Jr.

Shelburne - Professor John W. Hennessey, Jr., age 92, of Shelburne, VT, and formerly of Hanover, NH, died of natural causes on January 11, 2018 at the Wake Robin Continuing Care Retirement Community. Hennessey was a much beloved and respected professor and administrator. He had a great love of teaching and was a mentor and advisor to his students, colleagues and friends, many of whom have said, "He changed my life." John Hennessey was a scholar, a feminist, a democrat, and an ethicist, with an exceptional academic career. Despite his

myriad commitments, he always made time for his family. He and his wife Jean took each of their three grandchildren on cross-country trips, which covered all fifty states, and the two spent 10 weeks with them in the Cotswolds of England. His family called him "Super," short for "Super Pal," an apt description of his special friendships with all children. More recently, he became the proud great-grandfather of five great-granddaughters, a new joy in his life. Hennessey was born on March 25, 1925 in Danville, Pennsylvania, to Martha Scott Braun and John W. Hennessey. He attended public schools in York, Pennsylvania, before entering Princeton University's Class of 1945, at the age of 16. His college education was interrupted in 1943, by World War II, when he enrolled in Officer Training School at the age of 18. By the age of 21, Hennessey achieved the rank of First Lieutenant in the United States Army and managed more than 200 men in

the Philippines Ordinance Department. He returned to Princeton in 1946, graduating Phi Beta Kappa in 1948, with a degree in economics and social institutions. The subject of his senior thesis at Princeton was Universal Health Care. Just after their graduations, John married Jean Marie Lande (of Seattle), at Vassar College. The couple moved to Cambridge, Massachusetts, where John entered Harvard Business School, receiving his M.B.A. in 1950. They then moved to Seattle, Washington, where Hennessey received his Ph.D. in Organizational Behavior from the College of Business Administration at

the University of Washington. While in Seattle, the couple had two children, John William Hennessey III (1952) and Martha Scott Hennessey (1954). Jean has been long admired as a leading environmental and Democratic activist; she died in 2004. In 1957, Hennessey accepted a full professorship, teaching organizational behavior at Dartmouth's Amos Tuck School of Business Administration. In 1959 he accepted a short-term faculty position at IMEDE (later IMD), a graduate management program in Lausanne, Switzerland. Later, he was an advisor for similar programs in Turkey, the USSR, and the People's

Republic of China. Soon after his return from Switzerland, Hennessey became Associate Dean of Tuck School and, in 1968, he was invited by Dartmouth President, John Sloan Dickey, to become the sixth Dean of Tuck. Hennessey accepted the Deanship with the conditions that he continue to teach organizational behavior and that the Trustees approve the admission of

women to the business school. They agreed; the first women were admitted to Tuck in September 1968, and Dartmouth College made the decision to accept undergraduate women three years later. During his tenure as Dean, among other

accomplishments, Hennessey inaugurated the Tuck Executive Program, the Tuck Education Loan Program and the alumni/ae magazine, Tuck Today. He was also founding chair of the Council on Opportunity in Graduate Management Education (COGME), to increase the flow of minority students into the five most selective MBA programs. Upon retiring as Dean in 1976, Hennessey was awarded Dartmouth's Third Century Professorship. He then co-founded the

Dartmouth Ethics Institute and taught business ethics classes to undergraduates, Tuck students, Dartmouth alumni/ae, and community members. Hennessey was a much beloved and respected college professor and administrator. He had a passion for teaching and was a mentor and advisor to many students, friends, and faculty, who frequently describe how he "changed their lives." In 1986, Hennessey was named Provost at the University of Vermont, by President Coor. In 1989, after Coor left UVM, Hennessey served as Interim President until 1990. He also served on more than thirty nonprofit and corporate boards (often

as chair), including the University of Vermont and Vermont Law School. Hennessey twice chaired the board of the Mary Hitchcock Memorial Hospital / DHMC. He was instrumental in the hospital's move from Hanover to Lebanon and oversaw the new hospital's expansion. He was chair of the Educational Testing Service, Connecticut Mutual Life Insurance, Encyclopedia Britannica Educational Corporation, and Kendal at Hanover, among many others. More recently, he served on the board of Americans for Campaign Reform and Patient Choices at End of Life.In 1981, Hennessey received an honorary Doctor of Humane Letters degree from the University of New Hampshire. On

the occasion of his 80th birthday, New Hampshire Governor John Lynch proclaimed March 25, 2005, "John W. Hennessey Jr. Day." In 2006, Hennessey married former Governor Madeleine May Kunin, and he moved with her to Vermont. At the 2008 commencement at Vermont Law School, he and Madeleine were awarded honorary Doctor of Laws degrees, while she was

the commencement speaker. Later, at the University of Vermont's 2012 commencement, Hennessey was also awarded an honorary LL.D. degree.

John Hennessey is survived by his wife, Gov. Madeleine May Kunin; his son, John W. Hennessey, III, of Weston, MA; his daughter Martha S. Hennessey and her husband, Stephen D. Severson, of Hanover, NH; his three grandchildren, Kristina Hennessey Hill (Greg Hill), Tucker Severson (Sarah Persing), Elizabeth Scott Hennessey (Tamara Iwanski); five great granddaughters; four step-children, Julia Kunin, Peter Kunin (Elizabeth), Adam Kunin (Jane), and Daniel Kunin, (Chantal Gauvin); as well as six step-grandchildren.

A Circle of Remembrance, open to the public, will be held on Saturday, January 27, 2018 at 2 pm, at Wake Robin in Shelburne. A service will also take place in Hanover, NH, at a later date.

In lieu of flowers, donations may be made to Patient Choices Vermont, P.O. Box 671, Shelburne, VT 05482 or Common Cause, 805 15th Street NW, 8th Floor, Washington, DC 20005.

Arrangements are by Boucher and Pritchard Funeral Directors.

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Sign John Hennessey's Guest Book

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January 28, 2018

Garrison Nelson posted to the memorial.

January 22, 2018

Kate Laud posted to the memorial.

January 17, 2018

J. Scott Cameron posted to the memorial.

4 Entries

Garrison Nelson

January 28, 2018

I was hired as a Political Science instructor at UVM in 1968 at the age of 25. Now 75 years old and in my last (and 100th) semester at UVM, I have thought long about the scores of senior administrators with whom I was obliged to deal, including more than a dozen UVM presidents.

A handful stand out as especially talented administrators and compassionate defenders of the UVM faculty. Three in particular earned my highest regards: Al Rollins who came to UVM from the SUNY system first as Arts College Dean and then as Academic Vice President -- the title now known as Provost; Arts College Dean Ellie Miller who joined us from the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee; and Provost and President ad interim John Hennessey from Dartmouth.

The Circle of Remembrance yesterday at Wake Robin was remarkable for its standing-room only audience with what appeared to be at least 300 people in the room. The eloquence of John's and Madeleine's family members was deeply moving and concrete evidence that John's was a life well lived.

How blessed Madeleine and John were to have the past twelve years together and to successfully blend their two extraordinary families.

it was not a sad occasion because John had 92 years of a wonderful life. It was an uplifting occasion realizing how many of us were enhanced by how John Hennessey had touched our lives. It is those shared memories of John that will continue to comfort and guide us for the rest of our own days on earth.
.
Rest in peace, dear John.

Garrison Nelson

Kate Laud

January 22, 2018

Professor Hennessey taught us understanding. He broadened our minds. He left us with deeper souls.

J. Scott Cameron

January 17, 2018

I am saddened by John's passing but extremely grateful for the life he lived. I will always remember John's wisdom and kindness during the period of time we served together on the Vermont Law School Board of Trustees. He was an invaluable mentor to me and a dear friend. Cathy and I extend our condolences to Gov. Madeleine Kunin and all of John's extended family. We were all blessed by his life.

January 16, 2018

Our hearts are saddened by your loss and our thoughts and prayers are with your family. May your precious memories of your time together help with the pain. May God comfort your hearts and give you peace. 2 Thessalonians 2:16-17

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Sign John Hennessey's Guest Book

Not sure what to say?

January 28, 2018

Garrison Nelson posted to the memorial.

January 22, 2018

Kate Laud posted to the memorial.

January 17, 2018

J. Scott Cameron posted to the memorial.