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Jane Kessler

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Jane Kessler
Kessler in 1976
Born
Elizabeth Jane Wilson

(1921-03-09)March 9, 1921
DiedJuly 21, 2025(2025-07-21) (aged 104)
Alma materColumbia University
Case Western Reserve University
OccupationPsychologist
Spouse
Morris M. Kessler
(m. 1947; died. 1973)

Elizabeth Jane (Wilson) Kessler (March 9, 1921[1] – July 21, 2025) was an American psychologist and educator. She was a clinical psychologist, psychoanalyst, psychotherapist and university professor.

Early life, family and education

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Elizabeth Jane Wilson was born in Beverly, Massachusetts,[1] the daughter of Dustin Wilson, a chemical engineer; and Mary Elizabeth (Nelson) Wilson, a homemaker from Salem, Massachusetts.[2]

She attended Scarsdale High School in Scarsdale, New York, graduating in 1937. She began college at age 16, earning her undergraduate degree at the University of Michigan.[2][3] She subsequently attended Columbia University, earning her master's degree in psychology in 1943, and then served in the United States Navy[2] in the WAVES from 1943 to 1946.[3] After her discharge, she attended Case Western Reserve University, earning her PhD degree in clinical psychology in 1951.[3]

Career

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While serving in the US Navy, Kessler conducted psychological evaluations in San Diego, California.[4] Her rank ended as a lieutenant, junior grade.[2] After she earned her doctorate in Cleveland, she became the first-ever staff psychologist at University Hospitals.[2]

Her career also included private practice (psychotherapy as well as psychonanalysis),[1] consulting, and especially as a professor in the department of psychology at her alma mater Case Western Reserve University — from 1958 to 1993.[5][6][4] She began working at the school as the teaching assistant to Dr. Benjamin Spock, often filling in to deliver class lectures when his fame took him away from classroom duties.[2] Beginning in 1958, she organized and became director of the Mental Development Center,[3] an interdisciplinary clinical facility at the university that evaluated and treated developmental disabilities of children.[2]

Dr. Kessler wrote a definitive book for its time, Psychopathology of Childhood (1966), published by Prentice Hall; "the most widely taught graduate text in that field."[2] A second edition was published in 1988.[7]

In 1976, she was named the Lucy Adams Leffingwell Distinguished Professor.[8] She was president of the American Orthopsychiatric Association (1978–1979). She had already been a fellow of the organization and chairperson of the Council on Child and Youth Issues, and a fellow for the American Psychological Association and the American Association for Mental Deficiency, having served as the president of its Ohio chapter.[3] She had been president of the Ohio Psychological Association and wrote advisory articles for the PTA.[3]

She retired from Case Western Reserve in 1993.[4] However, as the proprietor of Appletree Books in nearby Cleveland Heights, Ohio, she continued to work.[4]

Personal life and death

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She was married twice. Her first marriage to psychiatrist Dr. Bernard Diamond, when she was in Navy during World War II, was brief and ended in divorce.[2] In 1947, she married another psychiatrist, Dr. Morris M. Kessler, who was a psychoanalyst.[2] Their marriage lasted until his death in 1973.[2][9] She was also a mother;[3] her son Martin is a musician, conductor and educator.[2]

On March 9, 2021, Kessler turned 100 years old. She lived another four years, dying at the age of 104 on July 21, 2025.[2]

References

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  1. ^ a b c O'Connell, Agnes; Nancy Felipe, Russo, eds. (August 13, 1990). Women in Psychology: A Bio-Bibliographic Sourcebook. Bloomsbury Academic. p. 392. ISBN 9780313260919 – via Google Books.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m "Jane Wilson Kessler". brown-forward.com. Cleveland: Brown-Forward Funeral Home. Retrieved July 22, 2025.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g Morse, William C. "Jane W. Kessler, Ph.D." (PDF). American Orthopsychiatric Association. pp. 180–183. Retrieved July 22, 2025 – via Deep Blue Library, University of Michigan.
  4. ^ a b c d "2017 Alumni Award Winners". case.edu. Cleveland: Case Western Reserve University. Retrieved July 22, 2025.
  5. ^ "Psychologist Says Problems of Slow-Learners Are Rising". The Cleveland Press. Cleveland. November 27, 1968. p. 26. Retrieved July 22, 2025 – via Newspapers.com. Closed access icon
  6. ^ "Dr. Kessler Is Featured Speaker At Mental Health Meet". Bucyrus Telegraph-Forum. Bucyrus, Ohio. January 20, 1976. p. 6. Retrieved July 22, 2025 – via Newspapers.com. Closed access icon
  7. ^ Ollendick, Thomas H.; Hersen, Michel, eds. (2013). Handbook of Child Psychopathology (3rd ed.). Springer US. p. 555. ISBN 9781461559054. Retrieved July 24, 2025 – via Google Books.
  8. ^ "SLU Invites Psychologist". The Post-Standard. Syracuse, New York. January 8, 1976. p. 5. Retrieved July 22, 2025 – via Newspapers.com. Closed access icon
  9. ^ "Kessler: Never one to live life by the book". The Plain Dealer. Cleveland. March 26, 2006. p. 14. Retrieved July 22, 2025 – via Newspapers.com. Closed access icon
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