Richards graduated from Smith College in 1922,[4] and earned her master's and doctoral degrees at Radcliffe College in 1923 and 1933, respectively.[5] Her dissertation, "The Transformation of the Tory Party after 1780: A Study in Eighteenth-Century Party Politics", won the Caroline Wilby Prize for 1933.[6]
Career
In 1934 Crosby was teaching at Dartmouth College, when she took leave to work in Washington with the Committee on Economic Security.[7] In the 1940s, Crosby taught at Wellesley College, Hunter College, and Radcliffe College.[5] She reviewed academic monographs for The Yale Review,[8]and The American Historical Review.[9][10] Although her output was cut short by her early death, two works by Crosby have remained relevant to historians:
"George III: Historians and a Royal Reputation" (1941), in Essays in Modern English History, in Honor of Wilbur Cortez Abbott[11][12]
Disarmament and peace in British politics, 1914-1919 (1957, published posthumously)[13][14]
Personal life and legacy
Gerda Richards married engineering geologist Irving Ballard Crosby in 1929.[15][16] She died in 1953, aged 52 years, in Cambridge, Massachusetts, survived by her husband and both her parents.[5] Harvard University's Department of Government awards an annual Gerda Richards Crosby Prize.[17] Recipients of the Gerda Richards Crosby Prize include lawyer Oona A. Hathaway and economist Amy Finkelstein.