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Maryly Van Leer Peck

Maryly Van Leer Peck was an American academic and college administrator. She founded numerous programs in Guam, one of them being the Community Career College at the University of Guam. She was the first female president of a public institution of higher learning in Florida, the first female president of a Florida community college while president of Polk Community College, also known as Polk State College. She was one of the first female graduates of the School of Engineering at Vanderbilt University and the first woman to graduate with a degree in chemical engineering. She was also the first woman to receive an M.S. and a Ph.D. in engineering from the University of Florida. She also founded Society of Women Engineers chapters, and was an active board member.

Early life and education
Maryly Van Leer Peck was born on June 29, 1930, in Washington, D.C. She was the second child, and only daughter, of Blake Ragsdale Van Leer and Ella Lillian Wall Van Leer. She was a member of the influential Van Leer family. Peck's parents both had strong academic backgrounds and were close friends with renowned intellectuals of their time, including Frank Bunker Gilbreth Sr. and Lillian Moller Gilbreth, which not only exposed Peck very early to engineering, but it also showed her the possibility that she could be one herself. while also graduating with highest honors and becoming the first woman initiated into Tau Beta Pi, the honorary engineering fraternity. Four years later, she became one of the first female graduates in engineering from Vanderbilt and the first woman with an engineering master's degree from the University of Florida, where she also received her doctorate in 1963. ==Career==
Career
While working on her master's degree, Peck started tutoring older students in math-related subjects. This caught the eye of a professor at Florida University, who asked her to substitute for him, while he was away presenting a paper. This was the first of many teaching jobs Peck would have during the following decades. By 1962 she was named national vice president of the organization. Later In 1962, as she was finishing her doctoral dissertation, Peck found a job as a propellant and aerospace engineer for Rocketdyne Corporation and United States Naval Research Laboratory in Washington, D.C. She developed solid fuel and engines which are still used in the space program today. She was also a chairman on its board. She then became the founder of the Community Career College at the University of Guam. In 1982, Peck was selected to be the president of Polk Community College, now Polk State College, and she served in this position until 1997, which made her the first female president of a public institution of higher learning in Florida. Peck was the first woman to be named president of any of Florida's 26 community colleges. In 2005, Peck received the National Community Service Award from the Daughters of the American Revolution organization. During Peck's tenure, Polk Community College added the Lakeland campus and established a foundation which, by the time she retired, had $5.5 million for scholarships and college equipment. After her retirement in 1997, Peck served as the headmaster of the Episcopal All Saints' Academy and later joined the board for the Vanguard School. Peck was honored as a Distinguished Alumnus of the University of Florida in 1991, and in 2007, she was selected by the Governor of Florida to be inducted into the Florida Women's Hall of Fame. ==Personal life==
Personal life
Peck married Jordan Brown Peck, Jr. in 1951, the year she received her B.A. The couple had four children. ==See also==
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