Background
COMSTOCK, Ada Louise was born on December 11, 1876 in Moorhead, Minnesota, United States. Daughter of Solomon G. and Sarah A. (Ball) Comstock.
COMSTOCK, Ada Louise was born on December 11, 1876 in Moorhead, Minnesota, United States. Daughter of Solomon G. and Sarah A. (Ball) Comstock.
University of Minnesota, 1892-1894. Smith College, Bachelor of Laws, 1897. Columbia University. Master of Arts, 1899.
Mountain. Holyoke College, Doctor of Letters. 1912; Smith College, L.H.D., 1922. Doctor of Laws, University of Michigan, Boston University, 1923, University of Rochester, 1924, University of Maine, 1925.
She served as the first dean of women at the University of Minnesota and later as the first full-time president of Radcliffe College. Early life and education After two years, she transferred to Smith College, graduating in 1897. She returned to Minnesota to complete a graduate course in teaching at Moorhead Normal School (now Minnesota State University, Moorhead), then went to Columbia University where she earned a master"s degree in 1899.
Comstock began her career at the University of Minnesota as an assistant in the rhetoric department under Maria L. Sanford.
She was promoted to the position of instructor in 1900 and assistant professor in 1904. She was appointed the school"s first dean of women in 1907 and a full professor in 1909.
In 1912 Comstock accepted an invitation to become the dean of Smith College, where she served as acting president for a period in 1917-1918. From 1921 to 1923, she served as president of American Association of University Women.
On October 20, 1923, Comstock was inaugurated as president of Radcliffe College.
She spent twenty years leading the school, strengthening its academic programs and, in 1943, persuaded Harvard to accept classroom coeducation. In addition to her academic career, Comstock was appointed to the National Committee on Law Observation and Enforcement, known as the Wickersham Commission, in 1929. After her retirement from Radcliffe, Comstock remained active in academia, serving on the Smith board of trustees, working on a graduate center for Radcliffe, and traveling extensively in support of her husband"s research.
Marriage A week after her retirement from Radcliffe, Comstock married Yale professor emeritus Wallace Notestein.
Death and afterward Ada Comstock Notestein died of congestive heart failure at her home in New Haven, Connecticut on December 12, 1973. The largest collection of her papers, the Ada Louise Comstock Papers, 1897-1950, are housed at the Smith College Archives.
Comstock"s name has been honored with buildings on college and university campuses, including Comstock Hall at the University of Minnesota, Comstock Hall in the Radcliffe Quad, and Comstock House residence hall at Smith College. Her full name has also been used for the title of Smith college"s program for non-traditional students, as well as a for a lecture series.
Her childhood home is maintained as a historic site by the City of Moorhead and the Minnesota Historical Society.
Member: American Association U. Women. Phi Beta Kappa. Clubs: College (Boston), Cosmopolitan (New York), National, (of American Association U. Women, Washington, District of Columbia).