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Selma Keenan's Gift to the School
In December of 2002 the Columbia University School of Social
Work received $2,000,000, from the Selma Keenan Trust, for
the creation the D'Elbert and Selma Keenan Professorship,
an endowed chair. Selma Keenan had remained an active and
involved alumna of the School of Social Work since her graduation.
She was a member of the Mary Richmond Society and had established
the D'Elbert Keenan Scholarship in memory of her husband.
Selma M. Keenan
July 16, 1908-August 24, 2002
Selma M. Keenan died Saturday, August 24th, at Dartmouth-Hitchcock
Medical Center, Hanover, NH, after a brief illness. She was
94.
Mrs. Keenan was born in New York City on July 16th, 1908,
the daughter of Adele and Henry Meisels. When she was a young
child her family moved to Cracow (which was then part of Austria).
Her family fled Austria at the time of World War I and returned
to New York City where Mrs. Keenan finished her undergraduate
schooling. She was a graduate of Cornell University Class
of 1930. She completed a Master's Degree in social work at
Columbia University in 1945.
After receiving her Master's Degree Mrs. Keenan worked as
a social worker for the Board of Education of New York City
in the Bureau of Child Guidance until she retired in 1975.
After her retirement from the Bureau of Child Guidance, she
moved to Topsham, Vermont, with her husband. After his death
she went to work for the Orange County Mental Health Service,
Inc. as a Social Work Consultant/Supervisor and was later
promoted to Director of Clinical Services. She held this position
until she retired for the second time in 1988 at the age of
80. She then began a second Master's program at the Boston
Graduate School of Psychoanalysis, which she completed in
2000. She was working on her doctoral thesis in psychoanalysis,
and was also a practicing psychotherapist, at the time of
her death.
Her husband, D'Elbert Keenan, Ph.D., died in 1975. He had
been a professor of French at New York University until his
retirement. Her stepson, Michael Keenan, died in 1986.
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