UW News

January 19, 2000

Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist with a classical passion leaves $2.9 million to UW classics department

Meg Greenfield’s lifelong passion for classical languages and literature did not end when the former Washington Post editorial page editor and Pulitzer Prize winner died last May. The journalist has left a bequest valued at about $2.9 million to the University of Washington’s department of classics.

Greenfield’s bequest includes approximately $1.7 million for an endowed scholarship fund named for her late brother, Jim Greenfield, who died in 1973. In addition, she left her waterfront summer home on Bainbridge Island to the department as a place of retreat and study, as well as a $500,000 endowment to maintain it. She attracted prominent national and regional leaders and thinkers to Bainbridge Island to exchange ideas. The home is valued at about $650,000.

The bequest is one of the largest gifts ever received within the UW’s College of Arts and Sciences.

“In an academic field like ours, a gift on this scale is transformative,” said Stephen Hinds, classics department chairman. “Meg’s generosity will enable us to offer full undergraduate scholarships and graduate fellowships to students who share her love for the ancient world and the Greek and Latin languages.”

Greenfield was a Seattle native who spent her professional life in the other Washington, the nation’s capital. There she worked for the Washington Post for more than three decades as an editorial writer, deputy editorial page editor and editorial page editor. In 1974 she also began writing a biweekly column in Newsweek. She was awarded the Pulitzer Prize for editorial writing in 1978 for pieces about international affairs, civil rights and the press.

A graduate of Smith College, Greenfield had no formal ties to the University of Washington. Her friendship with former UW president William Gerberding, however, led her to meet University of Washington classics faculty, and in 1989 she began making annual gifts of about $10,000 to the department for scholarships named for her brother. Jim Greenfield attended the UW in the 1940s, and later became a nationally known antiques and art dealer.

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For more information, Hinds at (206) 543-2266 or shinds@u.washington.edu