Pioneering Teacher Leaves $1.2 Million Legacy

Pioneering Teacher Leaves $1.2 Million Legacy

04/17/2017 

Nancy A. Johnson ’48, M ’56 was the first female physical education teacher in the history of the Holland Central School District in Erie County, N.Y. During her 35 years with the district she created many of its athletic programs for girls and coached basketball, field hockey, softball and volleyball. Johnson was inducted into Holland’s athletic hall of fame.

Her legacy, however, will reach well beyond Holland Center. A $1.2 million bequest —received by the Cortland College Foundation after Johnson’s passing at the age of 88 in 2015 — will help transform lives for years to come. It was the largest unrestricted gift received by the foundation on behalf of the College.

"It was truly humbling to learn Ms. Johnson chose her alma mater for this wonderful and generous estate gift,” said Peter C. Perkins, vice president for institutional advancement. “Its impact will be far reaching, as it will allow the College to carry out strategic initiatives that serve important needs of faculty, staff and students that might otherwise be impossible to support, given the ever-competing demands for limited state support."

A native of Westfield, Chautauqua County, Johnson earned a bachelor’s degree in education in 1948. She continued her education over the next eight years, also taking courses at Canisius College, the University at Buffalo and Buffalo State Teachers College before getting her master’s at SUNY Cortland in 1956.

Her methods were strict and traditional, but Johnson was admired by her students. The yearbook staff dedicated its 1981 edition to her.

Nancy A. Johnson ’48, M ’56
Nancy A. Johnson ’48, M ’56

“She always had a clean pair of white sneakers,” said John Meader, a neighbor and friend who taught at Holland with Johnson. “If they ever got dirty, she’d get a new pair. She was very, very rigid in her philosophy that kids ought to listen when she talked. But she was very caring.”

Her contribution to the Holland community was felt more than three decades after she retired from teaching. Johnson made a lasting impact in the lives of countless students in her teaching career.

“I conducted her funeral. I did the eulogy,” Meader said. “We had a church full of people. When you teach for as long as she did, nearly 40 years, you touch a lot of people.”

Animals, music and travel were among Johnson’s other passions. She was adept at the coronet, trumpet and piano and enjoyed trips to Alaska, California and Hawaii.

Johnson was predeceased by her devoted friend Elizabeth Fisher, also a Holland teacher. Johnson inherited Fisher’s assets and also invested heavily in mutual funds and savings bonds to build her eventual gift to Cortland.

“Nancy was, to put it bluntly, frugal,” Meader said. “In my early years as a teacher, I did odd jobs and I remember painting the house for her. She’d come out with a lawn chair and supervise and sit and watch and make sure I didn’t waste paint.”

Johnson’s friends can laugh about her thrifty habits when they look back on her life. Yet the greater campus community will benefit from Johnson’s generosity in countless ways in the years ahead.

"Through Ms. Johnson’s support, our world-class faculty and staff and our bright and talented students will be able to continue to strengthen and enrich a culture of engaged learning that changes lives on campus, in our local community and beyond," Perkins said.


More News

SUNY Chancellor spends Earth Day at SUNY Cortland

SUNY Chancellor spends Earth Day at SUNY Cortland

State University of New York Chancellor John B. King praised Cortland for being a leader in making campuses more sustainable.


Ending plastic pollution is topic

Ending plastic pollution is topic

Biology educator, researcher will speak as part of Earth Day week.


Student Select 2024 lists winners

Student Select 2024 lists winners

Exhibition showcases best studio work of 50 Art and Art History majors.


Cortland Challenge 2024 is April 17

Cortland Challenge 2024 is April 17

Supporters get even more gift match opportunities this year to help their favorite Cortland cause.


Dowd Gallery presents Student Select 2024

Dowd Gallery presents Student Select 2024

Fifty art students compete for the top prize, to be announced Wednesday, in this annual, juried exhibition.


SUNY Cortland recognized for election encouragement

SUNY Cortland recognized for election encouragement

For a second time, the university is honored for its voter education, registration and turnout efforts.


Transfer students inducted into honor society

Transfer students inducted into honor society

Forty-five SUNY Cortland transfer students were inducted into Tau Sigma National Honor Society.


Student research showcased at Transformations

Student research showcased at Transformations

The annual spring conference is a chance to highlight academic excellence on campus.


SUNY Cortland senior earns EOP’s highest honor

SUNY Cortland senior earns EOP’s highest honor

Katelyn Thompson will receive a Norman R. McConney Jr. Award for Student Excellence.


The Big Event Returns April 21

The Big Event Returns April 21

The SGA will follow up on the campus-wide activity during Cortland’s spring administrative meeting on April 22.