Promoting Excellence in Lab Instruction

Former UM biology professor pays tribute to late wife through gift

These days, Will St. Amand can be found working as a volunteer in the genealogy room of the Lafayette County and Oxford Public Library, helping patrons discover their roots. Photo by Bill Dabney/UM Foundation

OXFORD, Miss. – A recent major gift from Will St. Amand, University of Mississippi professor emeritus of biology, establishes an award designed to identify and provide support for higher education instruction in introductory-level biology.

Additionally, the Georgia St. Amand Laboratory Teaching Assistant Award in Biology Endowment pays tribute to the donor’s late wife.

“I am emphasizing teaching in this particular undertaking of mine, and I think Georgia Ann would agree with me,” said St. Amand. “If something is done well, then I think that individual deserves recognition.

“I am convinced that the most important part in any endeavor is the foundation that you have to build from. Where is the foundation in biology? To me, the foundation is in the laboratory.”

In 1970, St. Amand received the university’s outstanding teacher award, which he touts as one of his greatest honors and the inspiration for his gift.

“He was an outstanding teacher,” said Ed Keiser, then-chair of biology. “When I became chair, he was very helpful to me the whole time he was there. I would go to him with departmental questions, and he always knew how to help me with a situation.

“Will was a very dependable professor, and students had to earn their course grade in his classes. That was something I really liked about him. I knew if a student got an A or a B in his class, they did really well and earned it, and that is something I really admired.”

Gregg Roman, professor and current chair, is grateful for the opportunity St. Amand’s gift supports.

“Dr. St. Amand is passionate about the education of our students,” he said. “A gifted educator, he recognizes the importance of laboratory instruction and his gift will help us continue to strive for excellence in our delivery of introductory labs.”

As a first-year graduate student at the University of Tennessee, St. Amand met his future wife when they happened to be in a university administrative office at the same time. She became the love of his life, as well as his colleague.

“I say we taught for 50 years: 25 for me and 25 for her. That adds up,” St. Amand said, chuckling.

The St. Amands doted on their students. “Georgia Ann and I felt that our students were our children, and we had many of them,” St. Amand said.

One such former student is Sarah Lacy, of Lexington, who taught biology at Oxford High School for 39 years. As she furthered her UM education, she served as a teaching assistant for the longtime professor.

“Dr. St. Amand is just one of my heroes, and so is Mrs. St. Amand,” Lacy said. “Dr. St. Amand was tough, but you learned so well from him. He taught you how to think and how to study a situation.

“He wouldn’t tell you the answer; he would make you evaluate what you knew to determine the answer for yourself.”

Lacy recalls how she felt when she heard of the St. Amands’ retirement.

“It was tragic to me because they were such great professors and great mentors,” she said. “They were a little challenging and hard-core, but they made their graduate assistants better because of it.”

Georgia St. Amand’s student and later teaching assistant, William Davenport of Henderson, Nevada, grew close to both professors as well.

“Mrs. St. Amand ran an extremely well-organized, well-taught and interesting course,” said Davenport, who earned a bachelor’s and master’s degree from Ole Miss. “She knew every student by name and when she interacted with you in class or lab, she made you feel like you were important and that the interaction would take as long as needed.

“Her enthusiasm about what she was teaching; her precise, professional and engaging manner in the classroom; and her high expectations for her students lit the fire in me to pursue biology and, more importantly, to become an educator.”

Georgia St. Amand was active in the Ole Miss-Oxford community, where she served on the board of the Friends of the Museums and on the Walton-Young House Committee. She provided leadership as co-president of the Lafayette-Oxford-University Retired Teacher Association and was a 20-year volunteer with Meals on Wheels.

She also was co-vice president of the Skipwith Historical and Genealogical Society and a member of the Orangeburgh German-Swiss Genealogical Society.

Will St. Amand remains active as a volunteer in the genealogy room of the Lafayette County and Oxford Public Library.

“I like to think genealogy is more of a mark of maturity, and that’s one of the things that sparked my interest,” said St. Amand, who enjoys helping others explore their roots.

Individuals and organizations can make contributions to the Georgia St. Amand Laboratory Teaching Assistant Award in Biology Endowment. Send a check, with the award name noted in the memo line, to the University of Mississippi Foundation., 406 University Ave., Oxford, MS 38655 or give online at https://give.olemiss.edu.

For more information on providing support to strengthen educational opportunities at Ole Miss, contact William Kneip, associate director of development, at kneip@olemiss.edu or 662-915-2254.