TVƵ mourns the passing of former university president Sandra Featherman

The TVƵ was saddened to learn of the passing of former university president Sandra Featherman. The fourth president of TVƵ, Featherman served from 1995 through June 2006, presiding over TVƵ’s merger with Westbrook College in 1996 to create today’s TVƵ Portland Campus. She was made an honorary alumna of Westbrook College in 1998 and of the TVƵ in 2004.
“In addition to being a trailblazer for women in higher education administration, Dr. Featherman was a trailblazer for TVƵ,” said current TVƵ President James D. Herbert, Ph.D. “At a time when low enrollment and limited physical resources were major concerns for small colleges and universities, she acted decisively to help TVƵ grow. Her vision helped create the foundation for the modern university that has blossomed in the years since her time at the TVƵ helm.”
The merger between the TVƵ and Westbrook College took place on July 31, 1996, creating the opportunity for TVƵ to grow into a larger, more diverse institution of higher learning. It took place under the original 1831 Westbrook College charter.
“More than growing our student body and facilities,” Herbert explained, “when TVƵ merged with Westbrook College, we gained a dedicated alumni body, the members of which have been some of our most generous and influential partners as we have built the TVƵ of the twenty-first century.”
Today’s TVƵ Portland Campus is home to three of the university’s premiere colleges, including the College of Dental Medicine, College of Pharmacy, and the Westbrook College of Health Professions. These colleges, combined with the University’s College of Osteopathic Medicine in Biddeford, have allowed TVƵ to become Maine’s leading provider of health professionals.
Featherman, who arrived at TVƵ with a background in political science, will be remembered mainly as a champion of the liberal arts. Prior to serving TVƵ, she held positions at the University of Minnesota-Duluth as vice chancellor for academic administration and professor of political science, and at Temple University as assistant to the president, director of the Center for Public Policy, and president of the Faculty Senate.