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Jeanne Abrams Inducted Into Colorado Authors鈥 Hall of Fame

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Emma Atkinson

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Headshot of Jeanne Abrams.

When Jeanne Abrams retires from her position at the 快活app, she will have been with the University for longer than most 快活app students have been alive.

With nearly 42 years of service to 快活app, Abrams鈥 breadth of work spans her time as a history professor, director of the and director of the (RMJHS), housed within the University鈥檚 .

This month, Abrams was honored for more than just her work as an academic鈥攕he was inducted into the on Sept. 11, joining the likes of horror icon Stephen King and the late musician John Denver.听听

鈥淚t's a great honor to me, because since I was a child, books have been the center of my life,鈥 Abrams says.

Born in Stockholm to two Holocaust survivors, Abrams came to the United States when she was less than a year old. She recalls her parents鈥 emphasis on education as a driving factor in her interest in books and remembers the library she visited as a child being the place where her passion grew.

鈥淢y parents didn't have a car. We were in a relatively small town鈥攊t was a good half-hour walk to the library,鈥 Abrams says. 鈥淲e walked that walk once a week, because you were only allowed four books at a time, to take out.鈥

Each week, she would finish her four books and return them to the library, eager to swap them out for something new. When Abrams was 12 years old, her uncle gifted her a typewriter. She learned to type and began furiously trying to type out and copy the tomes she loved most, so that she could have her very own version. It was the beginning of a life-long love affair with literature.

鈥淚t really is very special that I would be honored as an author, because it was something that I never thought would happen, but something I must have aspired to since the day I learned to read in kindergarten,鈥 Abrams says.

Much of Abrams鈥 work centers on three topics: the Founding Fathers of the United States, the American Jewish diaspora and early American medicine.

鈥淚 think the founding of America really resonated with me, being an immigrant whose parents had really experienced one of the most horrendous episodes in world history,鈥 she says. 鈥淎nd America did become a haven, and I think that's something that spoke to me.鈥

Abrams鈥 doctoral dissertation, which she gave during her time as a PhD candidate at the University of Colorado Boulder, was on the (JCRS), a tuberculosis sanatorium founded in Denver in 1904, a time when tuberculosis was the leading cause of death among Americans.

鈥淭hat's where all those crossroads of my interests started to emerge,鈥 Abrams reflects. 鈥淛CRS history is not only about TB care鈥攊t's about American Jewish history. It's about women's history, it's about social history, it's about immigration history. And so, all of a sudden, I had all these threads that hadn't been part of my repertoire before.鈥

Abrams says she sees her three most recent titles鈥斺,鈥 鈥,鈥 and 鈥溾濃攁s a sort of trilogy, unique investigations into the lives of the founding fathers and their lives.

In 鈥淩evolutionary Medicine,鈥 Abrams says she wanted to use the story of the founding fathers鈥 medical histories and various ailments as a stepping stone to looking at American medicine in the 18th century.

鈥淭here鈥檚 a wonderful story about [Benjamin] Franklin and [John] Adams鈥攚ho was a great hypochondriac and lived the longest of any of them, into his mid 90s, which was unusual at the time,鈥 Abrams says. 鈥淏oth of them were sharing a room at an inn during the American Revolution, and Franklin was manic about fresh air. He took what he called open air baths in the nude every morning.

So, he kept opening the windows, and Adams, who felt you might get sick by having the windows open, closed them. Up and down, both of them, apparently all night, opening and closing the windows, and Adams said he got lectured so many times, and frankly, he just got bored, and he finally fell asleep with the windows open.鈥

In her retirement, Abrams says she鈥檚 looking forward to spending time with family. She鈥檒l stay connected to the classroom鈥攂ut not in a traditional sense. History and publishing aren鈥檛 her only loves; she wants to take a botanical illustration course at the Denver Botanic Gardens.

鈥淚 was a history major in school, but I was an art minor,鈥 she says, laughing.

Abrams will retire from the 快活app in February 2024.

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