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Dr.
Robert E. Bergmark, 81, a dynamic teacher, provocative civil rights advocate,
and emeritus professor of philosophy at Millsaps College, died Monday,
March 17, 2003, in hospice care at home with his family. A memorial service
will be held Sunday, March 30, at 2:30 P.M. in the Gertrude C. Ford Academic
Complex Recital Hall on the Millsaps College campus. The family will greet
friends in the Lewis Art Gallery following the service.
"Bob Bergmark
was one of the most renowned professors in the history of the College,"
stated Millsaps President Frances Lucas-Tauchar. "During his 34-year
career, he challenged his students and fellow faculty members to think
creatively, to act upon their values, and to live authentic lives. He
was an important voice for social change in Mississippi for more than
four decades, and many of his students continue that tradition today in
his honor. We will miss him, but we will also celebrate his life and what
he stood for in our community."
Bergmark came to Millsaps
College in 1953, after having spent nine years as a Methodist pastor in
churches in Massachusetts and Texas.
For Bergmark, teaching
was a ministry in and of itself. "I think of life as an opportunity
for service. My particular role in being of assistance is to be a teacher,"
he once said.
Bergmark taught philosophy
at Millsaps for 34 years, before retiring in 1987. During his distinguished
career at Millsaps, he served as chairman of the philosophy department
from 1962 until 1987; chairman of the humanities division from 1964 to
1973; member of the academic council from 1967 until 1973; and director
of the two-year Consortium for the Advancement of Private Higher Education
project, which encouraged computer literacy among Millsaps faculty. In
1974, he was named Millsaps' Distinguished Professor.
But Bergmark didn't
mention these honors when asked what had been most significant about his
career. "Rather than one thing, it's more the day-to-day experience
with students," he said. "It simply is worth something, this
kind of work-to see students over four years developing themselves, discovering
their minds and their abilities to make distinctions."
"Dr. Bergmark's
social conscience, his commitment to reasoned and informed thought, his
keen analysis of domestic and world issues, his impatience with mediocrity
and appreciation of excellence, and his warmth and wit made all of life
seem so important and full of meaning," recalled Millsaps Chaplain
Don Fortenberry. "He always made me want to be a better person and
to bring some measure of grace to the world."
Bergmark was a mentor and friend to numerous students over the decades.
Two of them honored him by establishing a lectureship and a scholarship
fund in his honor. In 1986, Millsaps alumnus Jack F. Dunbar and his wife
Wylene F. Dunbar of Oxford endowed the annual Dunbar Lecture in Philosophy
honoring Robert E. Bergmark. In 1993, Millsaps alumnus and trustee Robert
N. Leggett, Jr., and his wife Dee Leggett of Great Falls, Virginia, established
the Dr. Robert E. Bergmark Endowed Scholarship Fund.
Bergmark was an enthusiastic
supporter of local cultural and fine arts endeavors. He was also a world
traveler having made extended trips through Western Europe, the Far East
and the Middle East. He led three study tours to mainland China in 1976,
1980 and 1988.
A native of Charlton,
Mass., Bergmark graduated from Emory University in 1943 with an A.B. in
philosophy. He earned his bachelor of sacred theology at Boston University
in 1946, and his Ph.D. in philosophy from Boston University in 1961.
Bergmark is survived
by his wife of 56 years, Carol Comstock Bergmark, of Jackson; daughter
Martha Bergmark and her husband Elliott Andalman of Takoma Park, Maryland;
son R. Edward Bergmark, Jr., and his wife Sally Kroon of Mendota Heights,
Minnesota; grandsons Aaron and David Andalman of Boston, Massachusetts,
and David and Brian Bergmark of Mendota Heights, Minnesota; brothers David
and George Bergmark of Atlanta, Georgia; and sister Florence Ley of Honolulu,
Hawaii. He was preceded in death by a daughter Christina Bergmark and
an infant grandson Christopher Edward Bergmark.
Memorial contributions
may be made to the Bergmark Endowed Scholarship Fund at Millsaps College,
c/o Director of Donor Relations, Michele Bunch, P.O. Box 151191, Jackson,
MS 39210-1191. The scholarship fund was created by Bob and Carol Bergmark
at the time of their daughter Christina's death in 1986.
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