Former psychology professor Lee Borah, 84

Former psychology professor Lee Borah, 84

Lee BorahOn Tuesday, June 7, Dr. Lee A. Borah Jr. joined his parents, Byrnina and Lee Borah Sr. He was 84.

Dr. Borah thrived on teaching and inspiring his students at Wagner College, where he had served as chairman of the Psychology Department during a career that spanned from 1962 to 1997. He brought lecture material to life through personal anecdotes and through his writings in the department newsletter, Hallucinations. In addition to student perspectives, the newsletter included his regular columns: “From the Big Ashtray,” “Sylvester Speaks” and “Report from Higher Brook,” a detailed account of a small, intimate community and the people who lived there. The community itself was an elaborate set of miniatures arranged on his credenza, changing with the seasons.

“People who know me should be able to identify where I live in Higher Brook,” he wrote in 1995. “Naturally, the front door is blue, and there are lilacs blooming on each side of the front door, and around the back door are crepe myrtle trees.” In the summer, he wrote, the village “disappears into the mists of time … into closets, chests, etc.”

Lee’s sense of whimsy extended to his nickname for himself, “the happy hooker,” a reflection of his love of creating hooked rugs. He designed some in the style of Monet, including a version of Monet’s “Water Lilies.”

He created a family for his students. Psychology Club and Psi Chi members joined him for potluck dinners at his apartment and end-of-semester parties on campus; both included his signature dessert, trifle. All were joyous gatherings filled with laughter. Dr. Borah also mentored his students individually, sometimes with the text of an article and his handwritten note, “Read, and let’s discuss.” Many of the friendships he developed with students lasted more than 40 years.

He held a B.A. and Ph.D. from the University of Minnesota, an M.A. from the University of Washington and had been valedictorian of his Cokato High School class of 1950.

Frugal by nature, Dr. Borah lived sparingly for most of the year and then spent summers mainly in England and Japan, where he had established decades-long friendships — among them, Peter and Mary Fears, whom he had visited in England from 1957 for as long as he was able to travel abroad. His annual Christmas letters to friends and former students read like travelogues of his immersion in different cultures, accompanied by theater reviews, commentaries on politics and the news, alumni updates and more. His many travels were reflected in the large, framed matchbook collection that he kept on display at Wagner.

Lee Borah was a lover of opera and theater, a voracious reader and an avid walker. He may have counted every penny but he did not pinch them; Lee helped create a wonderful legacy for the Psychology and English students he supported through scholarships at the University of Minnesota. He donated both time and money to the Minneapolis Symphony Orchestra, the Guthrie Theater and many other organizations. His donations to the cultural life of Minneapolis include a formidable collection of Opera News extending back to his boyhood as well as hundreds of reel-to-reel recordings.

He leaves treasured memories with those who knew him in England, Japan, Minnesota and across the United States.


Written by a former student