10.17613/QN0Y-M547
Faulkenbury, Evan
Evan
Faulkenbury
Faulkenbury, Evan
Evan
Faulkenbury
Henry Steck, oral history audio, 10/5/2018
Humanities Commons
2019
Interview
Oral history
Enright, Tyler
Tyler
Enright
Enright, Tyler
Tyler
Enright
Nowak, William
William
Nowak
2019-01-14T20:08:04Z
2019-01-14T20:08:04Z
en
Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike
Interviewee: Henry Steck
Interviewers: Tyler Enright and William Nowak
Date: October 5, 2018
Location: Old Main, SUNY Cortland, Cortland, NY
Length: 02:01:52
Henry Steck was born in Washington, DC on September 22, 1935. He lived in Washington, DC until he went to college, except for a few years when he lived in Germany. After returning from Germany, he graduated from Woodrow Wilson High School in Washington, DC. He attended Kenyon College, a small liberal arts college in Ohio. He attended graduate school at Cornell University in Ithaca, NY for political science. After a short stint teaching at Vassar College, Steck took a job at SUNY Cortland in 1963, and he stayed until he retired in 2014. He taught at SUNY Cortland for over 50 years. Due to his service as a political science professor, Steck was awarded the Distinguished Service Professorship. In this interview, Professor Steck talks about the history of SUNY and his involvement in the progression of SUNY Cortland. He also talks about memorable events that occurred during his tenure at Cortland, including the student strike in 1970 over the involvement of the United States in the Vietnam War. He also talks about the future of the college and tells what SUNY Cortland means to him.