Dean J. Bergeron ’61
Dean J. Bergeron, Boston, MA, died December 9, 2023.
Dean was born in a farmhouse in Vermont’s Northeast Kingdom in 1939. He received his early schooling in a one-room schoolhouse in Barton, where he was taught by his mother and where he first learned to teach other young people. Later, attending high school in Orleans, he encountered teachers and mentors who encouraged him to pursue his passion for history and education. Over time, this only child, lovingly mocked as spoiled by his many cousins, grew to be a selfless and giving teacher and mentor.
After majoring in education at Saint Michael’s, Dean received his graduate training in history at Villanova and Brown University. Between the two graduate programs he briefly taught at the high school in Windsor, Vermont. It was there that his gift for touching the lives of students — even the most wayward among them — was first tested. When the superintendent assigned Dean to the most hardscrabble class, the principal scoffed that he wouldn’t last a week. Instead, Dean’s humor, authenticity and unique style of tough love quickly earned him the respect of the students and the dedication of the 1964 yearbook by the graduating class.
In 1965, Dean received a teaching appointment at Lowell State College — the future South Campus of UMass Lowell — where he taught history and political science for more than 40 years. Over that time, he pursued multiple causes outside the university, including the peace movement of the 1960s, George McGovern’s 1972 presidential campaign, and the creation of a Franciscan community called Bethany House that provided hospice care for AIDS patients in the late 1980s.
In 1984, Dean started the initiative for which he is best known and of which he was most proud – Lowell’s Model United Nations program. Since then, hundreds of students from the university have competed in national and international tournaments related to global peace and security. In the end, however, it is through his students that Dean’s heart, his vision, and his legacy live on.
Someone once said that students don’t care what you know until they know that you care. This was Dean’s gift. Dean dedicated his life to the intellectual, spiritual, and personal growth of young people. Because he could always find the kernels of potential that they couldn’t recognize in themselves, many speak about their journeys as “Before Dean” and “After Dean.”
Dean is survived by three sons and by extended family including his cousin Craig Davignon ’96, and his dearest friend, his caretaker, his everything, Jose.