Roberta Yerkes Blanshard
Roberta Watterson Yerkes Blanshard was an American editor.
Early life and education
Yerkes was born in Cambridge, Massachusetts, the daughter of Robert Mearns Yerkes and Ada Watterson Yerkes. Her father was a psychologist, and her mother was a biologist; both studied primates. Her younger brother David Norton Yerkes was a noted architect. Both Yerkes children remembered living with chimpanzees, their father's research subjects, as household pets. She also traveled in Europe and Africa with her father, in his work to study chimpanzees. She graduated from Bryn Mawr College in 1929.Career
Blanshard worked in the editorial department of Yale University Press from 1929 to 1959. She was one of the editors who rejected the manuscript of her father's autobiography, saying later that it "did not seem to us to present a balanced account" of his life and work.Blanshard was close to her neighbor, former Radcliffe College president Ada Comstock Notestein; they were in a study club together, and Yerkes helped Notestein manage her affairs in widowhood. Yerkes and her brother attended the dedication of the Yerkes Primate Research Center at Emory University in 1965.
Publications
- Alexandra Tolstoy, I Worked for the Soviets
- "Home Life with Chimpanzees: Part 2"