Jean Sammet

  • Co-developer of the computer programming language COBOL

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Originally unimpressed when she first encountered a computer in 1949, a decade later, was a co-developer of. Designed for business use, COBOL is still in use today. 

Sammet also directed the development of. She 鈥渂rought computing into the business mainstream鈥 wrote The New York Times in its obituary of the computer pioneer. 

Born in New York City, Sammet couldn鈥檛 attend the Bronx High School of Science because the school didn鈥檛 accept girls at the time. She chose Mount Holyoke because of its strong mathematics program.

She was working at the Metropolitan Life Insurance Company when she agreed to participate in an in-house training program to learn about punched-card accounting machines. 

Sammet authored two books and was a recipient of the NCWIT Pioneer Award, the, and was a fellow of the. Sammet was named the first female president of the Association for Computing Machinery, a leading professional association, in 1974. 

A long-time friend to Mount Holyoke, Sammet endowed a professorship, the Jean E. Sammet Professor of Computer Science.

Class year: 1948
Major: mathematics; Honorary Doctorate in Science, 1978

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Recent Campus News

A computer science legacy extends 70 years

Valerie Barr 鈥77, the first Jean E. Sammet Professor of Computer Science, shares with her benefactor an interdisciplinary vision of computing.

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Seniors showcase studies at annual symposium.

Mount Holyoke College seniors covered a wide range of topics in presentations of their independent research at the tenth annual Senior Symposium.

Social entrepreneur to give Sammet lecture.

Computer scientist Lorie Loeb will give the Jean Sammet 鈥48 Lecture on using technology for social change, and offer creativity workshops for students.