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Robert Henry Brunell

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Robert Henry Brunell Veteran

Birth
Gardner, Worcester County, Massachusetts, USA
Death
22 Dec 2004 (aged 82)
Auburn, Cayuga County, New York, USA
Burial
Londonderry, Windham County, Vermont, USA Add to Map
Memorial ID
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Professor Robert H. Brunell of Auburn, who had just completed the first semester of his 50th year on the Cayuga Community College faculty, died unexpectedly this morning.

Brunell, the longest-serving teacher at Cayuga, was also one of the longest-serving in the State University system. With 57? years of service, his seniority in the state's Teacher Retirement System was exceeded by only one other active employee.

Recalling Brunell's signal contribution to the college's first half century, Cayuga Community College president Dennis Golladay said, "A respected, and even revered, figure on campus, Professor Brunell maintained through all his 50 years of teaching the vigor, insight, and intellectual depth for which he was noted. Students flocked to his classes, and he delivered to them not only value and rigor in the classroom, but also his wisdom and guidance as they planned their futures. We will miss him greatly."

Born June 5, 1922, in Gardner, Massachusetts, Brunell became a World War II veteran before completing college. A student at Colby College in Waterville, Maine, when the United States entered the war, Brunell was assigned to the U. S. Army intelligence for three years as a French interpreter. His war memories included teaching French to Army troops, participating in the D-Day invasion, action in the Battle of the Bulge, and reconstruction service in Paris.

Returning to Colby College after the war, Brunell obtained his bachelor's degree there in 1947 in Foreign Language/English. That same year, he received the French Consulate Award for scholastic ranking in language, and began his teaching career with the Little Falls (New York) Central School.

Brunell received his master's degree in Foreign Language/English from Middlebury College in Vermont in 1949. He went on to pursue postgraduate studies in the humanities at Syracuse University, and in the early 1950s, served as a language consultant for the World Language Dictionary.

From 1952 to 1954 Brunell taught at the State University College at Oswego. In 1954 he joined the English faculty of the year-old Auburn Community College (later to become Cayuga Community College). He remained a full-time member of the college faculty for the rest of his life, and also served as chair of the English department, professor of German, French, and Spanish, member and chair of countless committees, and dean of student personnel. In 1961, he authored the college's first self-study report required for initial accreditation from the Middle States Association of Colleges and Schools.

Among the Cayuga student organizations he advised were Phi Theta Kappa, the Collegian newspaper, Nainrubua yearbook, and student government. A mentor to many students, he organized study groups, research projects, and writing experiences to assist and challenge them.

Between academic years at the college, Brunell spent his summers in Arlington, Vermont, near his beloved Green Mountains. A favorite companion was his cherished golden retriever, Apollo, who died in 2003.

Brunell was predeceased in 1980 by his wife, Catherine Clark Brunell. He is survived by his son, Lee H. Brunell, and daughter-in-law, Martha Gay, of Virginia; his daughter, Rev. Martha Brunell, of Missouri; and his grandchildren, Nathan and Scott Brunell and Amanda and Molly Mehl. His passing is mourned by colleagues and close long-time friends including Dr. Linda Ann Townsend and family of Auburn, and Cayuga professor John Harty and his wife, Jane.
Professor Robert H. Brunell of Auburn, who had just completed the first semester of his 50th year on the Cayuga Community College faculty, died unexpectedly this morning.

Brunell, the longest-serving teacher at Cayuga, was also one of the longest-serving in the State University system. With 57? years of service, his seniority in the state's Teacher Retirement System was exceeded by only one other active employee.

Recalling Brunell's signal contribution to the college's first half century, Cayuga Community College president Dennis Golladay said, "A respected, and even revered, figure on campus, Professor Brunell maintained through all his 50 years of teaching the vigor, insight, and intellectual depth for which he was noted. Students flocked to his classes, and he delivered to them not only value and rigor in the classroom, but also his wisdom and guidance as they planned their futures. We will miss him greatly."

Born June 5, 1922, in Gardner, Massachusetts, Brunell became a World War II veteran before completing college. A student at Colby College in Waterville, Maine, when the United States entered the war, Brunell was assigned to the U. S. Army intelligence for three years as a French interpreter. His war memories included teaching French to Army troops, participating in the D-Day invasion, action in the Battle of the Bulge, and reconstruction service in Paris.

Returning to Colby College after the war, Brunell obtained his bachelor's degree there in 1947 in Foreign Language/English. That same year, he received the French Consulate Award for scholastic ranking in language, and began his teaching career with the Little Falls (New York) Central School.

Brunell received his master's degree in Foreign Language/English from Middlebury College in Vermont in 1949. He went on to pursue postgraduate studies in the humanities at Syracuse University, and in the early 1950s, served as a language consultant for the World Language Dictionary.

From 1952 to 1954 Brunell taught at the State University College at Oswego. In 1954 he joined the English faculty of the year-old Auburn Community College (later to become Cayuga Community College). He remained a full-time member of the college faculty for the rest of his life, and also served as chair of the English department, professor of German, French, and Spanish, member and chair of countless committees, and dean of student personnel. In 1961, he authored the college's first self-study report required for initial accreditation from the Middle States Association of Colleges and Schools.

Among the Cayuga student organizations he advised were Phi Theta Kappa, the Collegian newspaper, Nainrubua yearbook, and student government. A mentor to many students, he organized study groups, research projects, and writing experiences to assist and challenge them.

Between academic years at the college, Brunell spent his summers in Arlington, Vermont, near his beloved Green Mountains. A favorite companion was his cherished golden retriever, Apollo, who died in 2003.

Brunell was predeceased in 1980 by his wife, Catherine Clark Brunell. He is survived by his son, Lee H. Brunell, and daughter-in-law, Martha Gay, of Virginia; his daughter, Rev. Martha Brunell, of Missouri; and his grandchildren, Nathan and Scott Brunell and Amanda and Molly Mehl. His passing is mourned by colleagues and close long-time friends including Dr. Linda Ann Townsend and family of Auburn, and Cayuga professor John Harty and his wife, Jane.


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