Background
Bunting was born in Brooklyn, New York, to Henry A. and Mary Shotwell Ingraham. She was known as "Polly" to distinguish her from her mother. Her father was an attorney.
Her mother was the head of the national Young Women’s Christian Association and helped found the United States.O. during World World War World War II
Education
Bunting graduated from Vassar College in 1931, and earned master"s (1932) and doctoral degrees (1934) from the University of Wisconsin–Madison in agricultural bacteriology.
Career
She became Radcliffe College"s fifth president in 1960 and was responsible for fully integrating women into Harvard University. Bunting, a microbiologist, taught and conducted research at Bennington College, Goucher College, Yale University, and Wellesley College before becoming dean, in 1955, of Douglass College, the women"s school at Rutgers University in New Jersey. She was named president of Radcliffe in 1960.
Once at Radcliffe, Bunting gained national attention for identifying a societal problem she called a "climate of unexpectation” for girls, which resulted in “the waste of highly talented educated womanpower.” She told Time: "Adults ask little boys what they want to do when they grow up.
They ask little girls where they got that pretty dress. We don"t care what women do with their education." Bunting brought change to Radcliffe.
She also founded the Radcliffe Institute for Independent Study, a multidisciplinary postgraduate center of advanced studies for women. lieutenant was later renamed the Bunting Institute in her honor.
In 1964, Bunting took a leave of absence from Radcliffe to serve on the United States. Atomic Energy Commission.
She was the first woman to ever do southern Smith College, Southern Methodist University, and the University of Vermont are a few of the schools to have honored her. She left Radcliffe in 1972, and became special assistant to the president of Princeton University, where she remained until 1975.
She retired to Cambridge, Massachusetts, and then to New Hampshire, where she died in 1998.
Membership
American Academy of Arts and Sciences]
Bunting was a member of the American Academy of Arts & Sciences, and was awarded over a dozen honorary degrees.