New Hampshire Business
Review
Q&A with: Daniel
Webster College President Hannah McCarthy

After 25 years at the helm of Daniel Webster
College, Hannah McCarthy says she has found
‘almost everything’ rewarding about her long
career in college administration.
(Photo by Jack Kenny) |
By
Jack Kenny
Published: Friday,
Jun. 10, 2005
When Hannah McCarthy
was an undergraduate at Simmons College in Boston, she
gave no thought to a career in education. At the end of
June, McCarthy, 58, will retire after 25 years as
president of Daniel Webster College in Nashua.
McCarthy, who has been at Daniel Webster since 1976 –
when she joined the school as dean of admissions and
institutional outreach – also has worked as dean of
admissions at Rivier College in Nashua. Before that, she
was a social worker for Child and Family Services.
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Q.
Did you like being in a women’s rather than co-ed
college?
A. Well, it was the only thing I knew when I left
it. Simmons was a wonderful school. I have seven
brothers, so my thinking at that time was that going to
a women’s college was OK with me.
Q. Seven brothers! Any sisters?
A. I have seven brothers and five sisters. My
biological parents died when I was 10. I have two
brothers and a sister, and we were adopted by my aunt
and uncle and integrated into their family. It was an
extraordinary gift and privilege that I had my aunt and
uncle. They were absolutely extraordinary people.
Q. You were a social sciences and government
major at Simmons, and after graduation you became a
social worker.
A. I was a caseworker at Child and Family
Services, and I burned out fast because I was working
with abused and neglected children and families in great
distress. I was young and inexperienced, but I had my
own baggage, and I often knew that there but for the
grace of God is where I would have been. That probably
made me a spectacularly good caseworker, but one subject
to extreme burnout.
So I drifted around to do some things, and ultimately
had the opportunity to work for Rivier College as dean
of admissions.
Q. Daniel Webster College is most famous for
its aviation program, but in addition to aviation it’s a
liberal arts college, isn’t it?
A. No, we would not define it that way. We would
say we’re leaders in technology and management. We’ve
just introduced a bachelor’s degree in engineering. We
have a very strong and reputable science degree program.
We have management programs and introduced the MBA two
years ago, and we now have over 100 graduate students
here.
We’re still a very focused college that’s really
committed to aviation and management, aviation and
business and technology and business. Clearly, we’re
known around the world for what we do in aviation, but
now we’re going to change the profile dramatically with
the introduction of a baccalaureate in aeronautical
engineering.
Q. How has the college grown in terms of
numbers?
A. Since I first got here as dean of admissions,
we’ve gone from 265 students to just about 1,200
students. So we’re still a very small college, but we’ve
grown and developed.
At my first graduation here, we had just made the
transition to being a baccalaureate college, and we
declared ourselves a baccalaureate college in 1978. It
was my job to handle the transition. The first year, I
awarded 14 bachelor’s degrees, and last year I think we
awarded 240 bachelor’s degrees.
Q. Have you ever flown a plane?
A. I’ve flown straight and level. Have I ever
been a pilot? No, and I never took flight lessons. I’ve
taken the controls in mid-air.
Q. It’s not quite your field, but what do you
think about what’s being done in airport security. Are
we really more secure by making everyone take their
shoes off?
A. I am not a judge. I couldn’t be a judge. One
of the things we’re doing and will be doing over the
next several years is work in our curriculum on some of
those security issues. But I think on that one I’m going
to defer to the government.
Q. Did you ever envision becoming a college
president?
A. Never. You have to remember I was on the final
edge of women who were given the opportunity of going to
college and weren’t necessarily expected to work. I was
on that cusp. In high school, I always assumed that I
would work, but I had no idea what education
administration was.
Q. What did you think you’d be doing?
A. When I first went to college, I thought I
would be a physical therapist. Then I decided that I
didn’t want to study that much science, so I took a
different route. And I think I responded to the Kennedy
clarion call to service and I really believed that I
would go to work in government and would serve in some
capacity there. Education wasn’t on my mind. And that
changed and I’m thankful that it did.
Q. What do you find rewarding about education
administration now that you’ve been doing it for a
while?
A. Almost everything. We have so many great
opportunities. First of all, the job is diverse. Every
day, you have an opportunity at a teaching college like
Daniel Webster to truly shape the education and
therefore ultimately the future of young people. And
you’re working with faculty and administrators to
develop the best opportunities you can.
One of the passions throughout my career is trying to
create opportunities for students from families in the
lowest financial quartile to be able to actually engage
in and succeed at higher education. One of the most
rewarding things is when I help in any number of ways to
make that happen.
I’ve talked to every governor of New Hampshire for the
past 25 years about this — including those who tell me
to stop whining. The state grant program is fully 50th
in the nation. As a state we provide the least support
in financial aid for students. We also have one of the
highest-priced public higher education systems in the
country — at the public colleges, the university, right
to the community technical colleges. And the private
educational system is about average.
We don’t provide, on the front end, the (financial)
support for young people. And we’re looking to find ways
to do that, because they’re just good public
investments. Young people who are educated will earn
more, they’re less likely to go to jail, to need
welfare, less likely to have any special social service
needs, more likely to have good jobs to contribute to
their community and its tax base. All of that is just
good social and economic policy.
Q. What are you going to do after you retire?
A. Boating, kayaking. We’re going to spend six
months on having fun, my husband and I. And then I will
really start to look for where I might be able to
contribute after January.
Q. Where are you going to be after January?
A. Our home is in Amherst and we’ll be there.
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