
Lewis Thayne
Saint Michael鈥檚 College trustees recently selected Lewis Thayne — a veteran college leader with proven strengths in fundraising, strategic planning, marketing, and enrollment — to serve as interim president. He will start this summer and serve until a formal search process leads to a permanent president sometime in early 2024.
鈥淚 believe my experience is a good fit for Saint Michael鈥檚 at this time,鈥 said Thayne, a former college president at Pennsylvania鈥檚 Lebanon Valley College who has a doctorate in comparative literature from Princeton University and spent decades as a fundraising professional at many distinguished colleges.
Lorraine Sterritt, the Saint Michael鈥檚 president for the past five years, has announced her June 30 retirement. Trustees decided that, rather than rush the selection of a permanent new president, they would contract with an organization called The Registry, which offers 鈥渟enior interim leadership in higher education.鈥
鈥淭he interim role can be a very effective bridge for an institution,鈥 said Thayne, whose top priorities in that role are 鈥渇irst, to do no harm,鈥 and after that, to strengthen enrollment. 鈥淚鈥檝e been given a charge by the trustees to focus on enrollment, to work with the cabinet and the leadership of the faculty on the strategic plan, as well as on financial sustainability which every college and university is working on right now,鈥 he said.
Thayne, a member of The Registry since his 2020 retirement from Lebanon Valley as president, said the more he learned about Saint Michael鈥檚 after hearing of its interim-leader search, the more interested he became.
While the present climate and demographics in higher education make any leadership role a challenge, Thayne said, 鈥淚 like a challenge. I鈥檓 interested in strategy and moving things forward and the evolution of institutions and organizational development.鈥 He said those interests are what made advancement work so appealing to him as a career path. Before leading Lebanon Valley, he was an advancement leader at Franklin Marshall, Agnes Scott College, Mount Holyoke, Bucknell and Columbia University.
Thayne is unfazed by what he calls the 鈥渕ultiple and complicating challenges鈥 in today鈥檚 higher education world, particularly for small liberal arts colleges. 鈥淚鈥檓 accustomed to the issues, particularly having worked for two women鈥檚 colleges. I am familiar with what it means to be in a challenging and changing environment,鈥 he said.
鈥淭he most important thing I can do is work with the people who are at Saint Michael鈥檚 on strengthening the areas we already know are working well, and indicate paths that some of the newer initiatives can widen,鈥 he said. Another important part of the interim role, he believes, is 鈥渢o prepare for the successful transition to a new president — I really think the role has great benefit to the institution bridging from one president to another.鈥
He said in the years since retiring as a college president, his advisory role to institutions and colleagues in the field has enabled him to 鈥渕aintain currency with what鈥檚 going on in higher education,鈥 and he has done presentations or joined seminars to stay up-to date.
鈥淭his is an exciting time for higher education. I want to be part of it, to have a positive impact,鈥 he said, explaining that current higher education challenges compel worthwhile and interesting innovations by colleges that might not have happened in the absence of such an accelerated urgency to adapt.
Thayne鈥檚 CV notes that at Lebanon Valley College, he 鈥渄eveloped high impact strategies to achieve academic distinction, enrollment growth, financial sustainability, and clarity of institutional purpose. His focus on strategies to integrate student demand, regional assets and partners, faculty excellence and institutional purpose resulted in LVC achieving record enrollments.鈥
Though market demand for liberal arts colleges has diminished in recent years, Thayne said, 鈥淚 think a liberal arts education is really the finest education you can have. It is the most versatile, and liberal arts colleges really do develop the whole person.鈥澛 He looks forward to helping communicate that message strongly to Saint Michael鈥檚 prospects and their families.
Thayne said Vermont and Burlington appeal to him and his family as a destination. They have spent many summers in northern New England, although primarily in New Hampshire and Maine. In younger years, he visited Vermont and greater Burlington to ski, and allows that he might 鈥渃autiously鈥 try skiing again this coming winter. Thayne said his wife, Dorothy (鈥淒orry鈥), is a talented artist and painter, a Rhode Island School of Design graduate and iconographer. They have three grown children, one in Los Angeles, another in Martha鈥檚 Vineyard and one 鈥渞ight around the corner鈥 from them in Pennsylvania with the couple鈥檚 granddaughter. They enjoy outdoor activities, including hiking and swimming.
In a recent message to the campus community about Thayne鈥檚 selection, Saint Michael鈥檚 Trustees Chair Patricia Casey said, 鈥淗e brings deep higher education experience to this position and is enthusiastic about working with our community.鈥 She said Thayne would be on campus June 19 through 30 to begin his work, and then work remotely during July, returning to campus full-time starting July 31.
Casey said the College鈥檚 Presidential Search Committee is working 鈥渢o finalize their leadership profile鈥 for Thayne鈥檚 long-term successor and anticipates launching the public search on May 30.
For all press inquiries contact Elizabeth Murray, Associate Director of Communications at 少女福利.