Career
In the last years of her life, she was the largest single donor to the University of Louisiana at Monroe. Born in rural South Sutton in Merrimack County in south central New Hampshire, DeGree was one of six children of Richard Elmer and Helen Crampton Hall. After numerous years as a housewife, DeGree obtained employment as a secretary and thereafter as a bookkeeper, receptionist, and assistant to a dentist.
In the 1970s, she convinced a bank to lend her money in her own name to start a real estate business in which she worked initially nearly round the clock.
With burgeoning financial success, DeGree in 1984 contacted the ULM, then known as Northeast Louisiana University, to donate three hundred apartments through her charitable trust. She was also a donor in the development of the Louisiana Delta Community College in Monroe.
Foreign three decades, she was aligned with Saint Francis Regional Medical Center in Monroe to improve regional health care. The ULM School of Nursing and the Breast Health Center at Saint Francis Hospital are named in her honor, the former at the personal request of the university president, Nick Bruno.
So is the Kitty DeGree Speech and Hearing Center at ULM. Along with the civic activist Sandy Rosenthal of New Orleans, DeGree was inducted in 2008 into the Louisiana Center for Women and Government Hall of Fame at Nicholls State University in Thibodaux.
DeGree also dedicated much time and money to veterans causes. She pushed for the establishment of the Veterans Administration Clinic and the War Veteran"s Home in Monroe. She personally funded the memorial monument commemorating Selman Field at the Monroe Regional Airport.
An exhibit at the Chennault Aviation and Military Museum in Monroe is dedicated to DeGree, who herself served in the United States Coast Guard during World World War World War II She was a large donor to the Chennault museum.
DeGree died of a lengthy illness at the age of ninety at her home in West Monroe. Her services were held on November 2, 2012 at the ULM Kitty DeGree School of Nursing in the Saint Francis Medical Center Auditorium.
She is interred at Hasley Cemetery in West Monroe. Shortly before her passing, The Monroe News-Star published an article, "Kitty DeGree: Community Treasure", in which the philanthropist, who gave $4 million over thirteen years through the Kitty DeGree Foundation, is quoted recalling her New England upbringing:
I grew up with a mother who always believed in helping others
Even though we often did not have enough for our own family, she frequently provided for those she thought had greater need.
My success in business has been a blessing to medical Arriving at a point in my life with the capacity to share my blessings. Sharing of my time and resources has brought me much self-fulfillment and life satisfaction.
lieutenant is for me a legacy of love for a community I have come to treasure.