A Tribute to Eleanor P. Robinson, Co-Founder of RTP Estuary Center continued
Joining with another former Old Lyme resident, Dr. Theodore Van Itallie, they formed a group of concerned citizens and soon founded the Roger Tory Peterson Estuary Center as a part of the Connecticut Audubon Society. It was founded literally out of the trunk of Eleanor’s car, in the living rooms of fellow board members, and the halls of local libraries as well as coffee shops.
With an initial grant from the Community Foundation of Eastern Connecticut, Eleanor and our teachers adapted a science-based school curriculum to include more about our local environment and traveled to local public schools to begin educating students, not in the classroom, but outdoors, in a living laboratory. Just over six years ago, the first group of 35 students in third grade in the Essex elementary school were taught. This past year, the RTPEC reached over 3,500 in regional public schools!
In December 2020, the RTPEC purchased the site at 100 Lyme Street to create the environmental center that she and Ted envisioned. It will offer a variety of programs and include a hands-on science lab for children to learn the fundamentals of scientific research.
Eleanor was our first Center Director and she and Ted established a high standard for our programs. She had the vision, enthusiasm, and energy to kick-start the organization. She brought tenacity and a profound commitment to environmental conservation and conservation research. Ted established the scientific advisory board and worked to ensure that research would continue as a high priority. They both shared a belief that through the Center, we could promote understanding and stewardship and learning. It was Ted who once said: “I’m not interested in doing anything ordinary.” Together, they did create something extraordinary.
Eleanor Robinson had the determination, courage, and energy to see her center created. It was this courage and tenacity which served her through a long and terrible illness. It was her humor, passion for life, and friendship which saw us through.
In the end, while the physical Center itself will endure, it is the generations of young scientists, environmentalists, and stewards which will be her everlasting legacy. This the challenge that she has left to us.