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Emma Rogers Society provides lifelong links to MIT

Named for the widow of MIT's founder, group connecting widows and widowers of Institute faculty and alumni celebrates its 25th anniversary.
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Emma Rogers Society members participate in a public art tour on campus.
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Emma Rogers Society members participate in a public art tour on campus.
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Photo: Eric Keezer
Emma Savage Rogers, wife of MIT founder William Barton Rogers and namesake of the Emma Rogers Society
Caption:
Emma Savage Rogers, wife of MIT founder William Barton Rogers and namesake of the Emma Rogers Society

The 25th anniversary celebration of the Emma Rogers Society (ERS) on May 13 marks a quarter-century of the extraordinary connection between widows and widowers of faculty and alumni at MIT. 

The group is named for Emma Savage Rogers (1824-1911), the wife of MIT’s founder, William Barton Rogers. The daughter of a wealthy Boston banker and businessman, she married Rogers in 1849. Known for her intellect and vitality, she became a model of long-term engagement with the Institute. As President Rogers' health began to fail, Mrs. Rogers' unflagging support — including acting as an intermediary with faculty and colleagues — was a constant in their relationship and in his leadership of MIT.

After Rogers passed away during commencement ceremonies in 1882, Mrs. Rogers continued to be a valued advisor to four MIT presidents and generously opened up her home and her heart to students, teachers, and alumni until her death in 1911.

In 1989, inspired by Mrs. Rogers and many examples of highly engaged spouses, then-President Paul Gray and his wife, Priscilla, began working with Vice President and Treasurer Glenn Strehle to find a way that MIT could formally address the needs of such spouses.

“MIT has always been like a big family in so many ways and surviving spouses are just as important to that family as they were in earlier years,” Mrs. Gray says.

Strehle hired Betsy Millard, a senior director at MIT Resource Development, to gather alumni and faculty widows to discuss what this kind of outreach might look like. After a survey and much collaboration, ERS was launched in 1990 to be of service to widows of faculty and alumni, make them feel welcome on campus, and keep them connected to the Institute.

After Charles M. Vest succeeded Paul Gray as president of MIT in 1990, his wife Rebecca M. Vest was honorary chair of ERS for many years, often hosting ERS activities at Gray House. When President Vest passed away in 2013, she became a member herself.

Today, there are more than 5,000 members of the Emma Rogers Society around the globe. The group meets in the Boston area three to five times a year for events such as the ERS Insider Series. Similar lecture-and-luncheon events are scheduled during Tech Reunions and sometimes in other locations and times.

Besides keeping up with MIT research, group members also support one another. “The group does not formally talk about grieving and loss, but there is great comfort in knowing that everyone in the room knows what it is like to be missing a spouse, whether it’s been a few months or many years,” says Ann Allen, a long-time member of the group whose husband, Professor Jonathan Allen, passed away in 2000. “Many good and important conversations happen over lunch and often continue in the parking lot and beyond.”

Benefits of the program flow both ways: ERS members may participate fully in the life of the Institute community. Many travel with the MIT Alumni Travel Program and attend events open to alumni on campus. Though they are not actively solicited for donations, surviving spouses contribute millions of dollars to MIT each year. Others form relationships with faculty and academic departments by volunteering, attending lectures, and participating as subjects in studies about memory and aging.

For more information about the Emma Rogers Society or the 25th anniversary program on May 13 — which will honor President and Mrs. Gray — visit the Emma Rogers Society website, email ers@mit.edu, or call 617-253-8059.

Read more stories about MIT alumni and campus culture on Slice of MIT.

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