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Susan Groag Bell
Jan. 25, 1926-June 24, 2015
Palo Alto, California

Susan Bell, whose work as a scholar broke new ground not once but several times, and whose gift for friendship means that many hundreds mourn her both in the United States and abroad, died at her Palo Alto residence on June 24.

Susan spent her childhood years in the town of Troppau, in the Sudetenland near the northern border of Czechoslovakia, where her father practiced law. Her parents, both of Jewish descent, numbered among the many Austrian German speakers in this area. Hitler's annexation of the Sudetenland on Oct. 1, 1938, brought fear and uncertainty into the Groags' life. Susan was informed that she could no longer attend school, and even being seen on the street became dangerous. England offered asylum to Jews, on the condition that adults be willing to perform domestic labor. Susan's mother felt that she could accept those terms, while her father decided to ensure the safety of his wife and daughter but to remain himself in Czechoslovakia. They never saw him again after he brought them to the Prague train station in January 1939. He was among the more than 33,000 who died in Theresienstadt concentration camp.

In England Susan received both care and understanding from the headmistress, staff and students of a girls' boarding school in Haywards Heath, and in 1943 she accepted an invitation from the Czechoslovakian government-in-exile to join other young Czechs at a high school in Wales, where they were given the knowledge and skills needed to rebuild their shattered country once the war was over. As at the Haywards Heath school, Susan's gift for friendship and her academic prowess made for happy years in Wales, and in 1945 she returned, as planned, with her schoolmates to her homeland. But to her distress, she found herself a stranger there, not only because England now seemed like home to her but because, as she explains in her memoir, the Czechs, having suffered German domination for years, tended to view a German-speaker as an oppressor, forgetting that she was one among the most oppressed.

Through her mother's efforts, Susan after a year made her way back to England. There her mother surprised her on arrival by bringing her to a charming flat in a building on Chelsea Manor Street called Meriden Court. It was to be her mother's comfortable home for the 40 years until she died, and when Susan inherited it, #18 Meriden Court was a London base not only for her but also for the many friends and tenants who had the joy of staying there.

A further severe trial awaited her, however: Soon after return, Susan was diagnosed as having osseous tuberculosis in her foot. She was put on total bed rest in a hospital for a year, followed by a prolonged period of convalescence, and fully regained her health only in 1950. A marriage shortly thereafter ended a few years later in divorce, and in 1959 she married the physicist Ronald Bell, who worked at Varian and whose home was in Woodside.

Proximity to Stanford made possible the fulfillment of her long-held desire for university education. Although now in her mid-30s and so a generation older than her classmates, she immersed herself joyfully in her studies, became a history major, and attained her A.B. in 1964. Then came a setback: When she applied to the History Department's Ph.D. program in 1965, she was informed that entrance into the program after the age of 35 was not allowed under any circumstances. Although the term "consciousness raising" had not yet been coined, Susan as a consequence was in the vanguard of those becoming actively aware of the difficulties endured by older students and particularly by older women students. She joined a group of faculty wives led by Yvette Gurley and Jing Lyman who were seeking to liberalize Stanford's policies; when Santa Clara University accepted her into its M.A. program, she chose as her topic four women who had made major contributions to learning and letters despite their late start and without the benefit of academic institutions: Caroline Herschel, Mary Somerville, Frances Trollope and Elizabeth Gaskell.

Susan steadily extended the range and increased the depth of her knowledge in the field of women's history that she was helping to create. She became a sought-after lecturer in the Bay Area, and in 1971 gave a course at Cañada College. Since there were no textbooks on women's history, Susan put together a reader for the course; revised and enlarged, it was published in 1973 (re-published in 1980) under the title "Women, from the Greeks to the French Revolution" and was a milestone in the growing feminist movement.

Meanwhile Karen Offen, a recent history Ph.D. from Stanford, invited her to present the findings of her research to the Western Association of Women Historians and suggested also that the two of them, along with Stanford's early modern historian, Carolyn Lougee, present a panel at the 1973 American Historical Association. Susan's topic, Christine de Pizan's ideas on education, was to engage her for decades to come. Thus when Marilyn Yalom, as associate director of Stanford's newly established Center for Research on Women, created a program within the Center for independent women scholars, Susan became one of the first to be appointed as an affiliated scholar, and in recognition of her signal contributions she would in time become a permanently appointed senior scholar.

Important among those contributions was the two-volume "Women, the Family, and Freedom: The Debate in the Documents: 1750-1950," co-edited with Karen Offen and published in 1983. This monumental work presented, explicated and in many cases translated documents related to the debate on "the Woman Question" that engaged and often enraged participants in Europe, England and the United States. It was a tour de force of scholarship, and on the strength of it, she and Karen received two NEH grants in the early 1980s to co-direct Summer Seminars for College Teachers at Stanford. Also in 1986 Susan and Barbara Gelpi team-taught a summer program at Stanford-in-Oxford created and led by Diane Middlebrook: three related courses, each from a different academic field, on the topic of "Gender in Britain."

Following the 1986 conference on "Autobiography and Biography" sponsored by the Institute for Research on Women and Gender (since renamed the Clayman Institute for Gender Research), Susan and Marilyn Yalom edited a collection of essays published in 1990 under the title "Revealing Lives: Autobiography, Biography, and Gender." In the 1990s, Susan and Marilyn also taught courses together on autobiography under the auspices of Stanford's Continuing Studies program.

Along with all these projects, Susan never ceased to work personally on the one closest to her heart, one that turned upon her early and ongoing work on Christine de Pizan's "City of Ladies." In the inventory of Elizabeth I's possessions drawn up after the queen's death, Susan found a set of tapestries described, and on the hunch that each one in the series was drawn from a different scene in "The City of Ladies," Susan began a scholarly sleuthing that took her to libraries and museums in the United Kingdom, France, Belgium and areas once part of the Austro-Hungarian Empire. She needed all her fluency in four languages, all her knowledge of scholarly method and all her wide-ranging knowledge of history, particularly women's history, to produce in 2004 "The Lost Tapestries of the City of Ladies." The book itself is as elegant, intricate and finely spun as any product from the looms of Aubusson. Susan's biographical roots, her scholarly career and interests, and her joyful appreciation of the fine arts are all enshrined in it.

Susan is survived by her stepson and stepdaughter-in-law, Robert and Yvonne Bell; their sons, Matthew and Michael; her stepdaughter, Clare Bell; and her close friend, Peter Stansky.

Remembrances
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From Bill Tucker
Dec. 2, 2015
I had the pleasure of attending a Continuing Studies class in Autobiography, co-taught by Susan Groag Bell. Our main text was her own marvelously inspiring autobiography, "Between Worlds: In Czechoslovakia, England, and America." I also heard her l...
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Memorial service
A program to celebrate her life and work will be presented at the Clayman Institute for Gender Research on what would have been her 90th birthday: Jan. 25, 2016.

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