Posted on Mar 30, 2006

Harlow

One of Union's highest honors, the medal recognizes distiguished service to the College. The event was followed by a luncheon with members of the Alumni Council.
“H. Gilbert Harlow was a Renaissance man long before the term was coined. His diverse interests and wonderful teaching ability helped define what a liberal arts or engineering education should be and how the two could best be integrated,” said Thomas K. Jewell, the Carl B. Jansen Professor of Engineering, who presented the medal.
 Harlow, 91, arrived at Union in 1940 and taught until 1993, well after his “retirement” in 1984. He spent 29 years as chair of civil engineering, making him what is believed to be the longest-serving department chair. In five decades, he missed only five days of classes.
Harlow was lauded by many for his dedication to the College, his department and his students. As one colleague reported, “Gil was always one of Union’s pillars …a committed teacher and a fair, honorable colleague, always prepared to examine a proposal on its merits instead of on its political benefits. He was one of those who made the place a community.”
Harlow was a nationally known horticulturalist, the unofficial movie photographer for the football team and the person largely responsible for the initiative to replant the campus after Dutch Elm disease took its toll in the 1950s.
He was the first recipient of the Alumni Council Faculty Meritorious Service Award in 1958.