The Nancy Ashton Collection: A Living Legacy

By Laurie Melchionne

The Women's, Gender and Sexuality Center

In the F-Wing Women鈥檚, Gender, and Sexuality Center, there is a cozy nook surrounded by plush, comfortable furniture, a shiny flat-screen TV, and, of course, shelves and shelves of books. Unlike other libraries found on campus, the one in this quiet space exists in memory of a single woman who was integral to so many lives here at Stockton: Nancy Ashton. 

When I visited the Nancy Ashton Collection, I was immediately greeted by Rebecca Longo, Assistant Director of the Women鈥檚, Gender, and Sexuality Center. Although her face was hidden behind a floral-printed mask, her eyes were smiling and she helped the space live up to its reputation of inclusion and safety. 

When I told her, 鈥淚鈥檓 here for the Nancy Ashton Collection,鈥 Rebecca鈥檚 eyes lit up. 鈥淥f course!鈥 she exclaimed 鈥淔ollow me!鈥 

She led me into the lounge that the collection calls home, which was like stepping into a rainbow. Every wall, shelf, and piece of furniture is a different color鈥攕ymbolic of the LGBTQ+ flag. There is a TV with access to cable and streaming apps, fully-equipped kitchen area, and an artfully designed chalkboard plastered with phrases like, 鈥渓ove is love,鈥 鈥渆mpowered women empower women,鈥 and 鈥済irls just wanna have fundamental human rights.鈥 

The space screams girl power; here, Nancy Ashton鈥檚 book collection has a fitting home. Ashton, who started teaching at Stockton in 1977, was a powerhouse in the Women鈥檚 Studies program, becoming an early coordinator just one year after joining Stockton. In the spring, she and Peggy Dugan launched the course 鈥淧erspectives on Women,鈥 which influences the curriculum today in current courses such as 鈥淔eminist Theory.鈥  In 1976, she completed her P.h.D in Psychology at the University of Florida, a speciality that would influence her work in women鈥檚 studies for decades to come. 

In addition to being an active member of her Unitarian Church in Haddonfield and serving as the President of the Board of Directors of the Atlantic County Women鈥檚 Center from 1981鈥1982, and serving two terms as a Women鈥檚 Studies Coordinator by 1982, Ashton also served her first of two terms as the Psychology Coordinator at Stockton in 1987, where she submitted a New Jersey Department of Higher Education-funded grant on integrating race, gender, and class into the curriculum. 

The psychology faculty 1981-82
Psychology Faculty 1981-1982: David Lester, Nancy Ashton, Michael Frank, Israel Posner, unidentified; front - unidentified children with Jean Mercer

For thirty years, Nancy Ashton taught Psychology and Women鈥檚 Studies at Stockton, where she created an environment of inclusion for both students and faculty alike. In the Nancy Ashton Memorial video taped after her death in 2013, fellow faculty members, friends, and former students of Ashton related tearful anecdotes. Sue Kidd, a student of Nancy鈥檚 who, at the time, was 29, divorced, and 鈥渢rying to make something of [her] life,鈥 said, 鈥淚 could always feel like I could just walk to her office and just talk to her.鈥

Professor Deborah Gussman, who also spoke in the video, told me during an interview, that Ashton 鈥渁lways offered to help, to babysit...she was really openhearted in terms of her desire to not just talk about women and work/life balance, but really assist in helping her younger colleague to make that happen. I was really grateful to her for that.鈥 Ashton was a people person who talked Gussman through the hardest early years of motherhood, something that Ashton had experience with as a single mom. 

Professor Kristin Jacobson, who also spoke at Ashton鈥檚 memorial, talked about how Ashton sought her out when she first came to Stockton in 2005: 鈥淚 got to know her through her reaching out immediately when I started. She said 鈥業 want to help introduce you to Stockton and get to know the community.鈥 鈥 

If anyone could introduce a new faculty member to the community, it was Nancy Ashton. At her home, guests wouldn鈥檛 find a TV in her living room. This was deliberate because it all but forced interesting conversation at her house and contributed to the way Ashton really listened to whoever was speaking to her. 

Furthermore, this鈥攁mong dozens of other factors鈥攑romoted her lifestyle of being an avid reader. One of the speakers in her memorial video referred to her office on campus as 鈥渢he real library of Stockton.鈥

When visiting the collection in person, it is not hard to see why. There are rows and rows of books of all shapes, colors, sizes, and subjects. They all capture Nancy鈥檚 dedication to psychology and women鈥檚 studies, with titles like Sex and Power in History by Amaury de Reincourt, The Psychology of Women, and Sisterhood is Powerful. Almost all of the books are original copies from the 70s, 80s, and 90s, most of which are no longer accessible in print format. These books that once occupied Ashton鈥檚 office are available for students to access forever. 

鈥淭he collection is part of her legacy,鈥 added Gussman. 鈥淚t鈥檚 important to honor those women鈥檚 legacies that tend to be forgotten.鈥

What was once held in Ashton鈥檚 own hands will now be in the hands of students for generations to come; even after her death, Ashton continues to literally touch lives here at Stockton.