A man wearing a red jacket stands at the helm of a boat on a foggy lake, with water droplets on the windshield and trees in the background.

Born April 22, 1936

New York, New York

Died Sept. 16, 2025

Bridport, Vermont

Details of services

Saint Stephen’s Episcopal Church, Middlebury, VT. Saturday, October 18th at 11:00am


Travis Beal Jacobs, 89, Fletcher D. Proctor Professor Emeritus of American History at Middlebury College, the son of Albert C. and Loretta Beal Jacobs, died at his home in Bridport, VT on September 16th, surrounded by his loved ones.

He graduated from Deerfield Academy and Princeton University โ€™58 cum laude. Planning to attend Columbia Law School, at the last minute he switched to the graduate program in American History for his Ph.D. 1965 he joined the faculty at Middlebury College and soon began teaching a popular two-semester lecture course on 20th Century American History. He served as Department Chair for seventeen years. โ€œOne of the first . . . chairs to embrace the Collegeโ€™s aspirations in minority recruiting,โ€ he was โ€certainly the most conspicuously successful.โ€ His publications include America and the Russo-Finnish Winter War, 1939-1940; co-editing Navigating the Rapids, 1918-1971, the Diaries of a Adolf A. Berle, a FDR Brain Truster; and Eisenhower at Columbia. He also edited the Middlebury College General Catalogue: Bicentennial Edition2000, a Who Was Who and Whoโ€™s Who of the College. He received several Earhart Foundation Fellowships; taught in Tunis on a Fulbright; served on the Presidential Studies Quarterly Editorial Board; and attended many Salzburg Seminars on American Studies. He retired as Fletcher D. Proctor Emeritus of American History in 2008.

He spent many summers on Chappaquiddick Island, Edgartown, MA., many of them at his familyโ€™s Stanford White house at Green Pastures on Katama Bay. Since 2014 he spent time throughout the year at Chazy Lake in the Adirondacks.

An early member of Middlebury Town and Gown, he regularly attended the lunches, until his health faded, and he had delivered a handful of talks. He also enjoyed the Addison-Bridport Horse Thief Society. He was president of the Henry Sheldon Museum during the capital campaign that led to the Paris Fletcher Community Center; he remained a strong supporter of its Research Center with its valuable Vermont history collections and in 2021 he established the J. Robert Maguire Research Fund. He leaves unfinished a study of the late Vermonter Robert T. Stafford, former Governor, U.S. Congressman, and U.S. Senator. Early in the 21st Century he and his traveling companion, Constance Carroll, took a series of trips to Europe, ranging from France to Hungary, from Italy, Sicily, Tunisia and Malta to Russia and Finland.

His family is grateful for assistance from Addison Home, Health, and Hospice, and UVM Oncology(?). Besides his parents, he was predeceased by two older sisters and two former wives, one Eleanor T. Morison, the mother of his sons T. Beal Jacobs, Jr., and Holmes M. Jacobs who own Two Brothers Tavern in Middlebury. He had three grandchildren who he lovingly adored, Jackson, Piper and Sally Jacobs. A Memorial will be held at Saint Stephens Episcopal Church in Middlebury, VT on October 18th.