In Memoriam

A Compassion for Students
Eric Estes, beloved vice president for campus life

By Tim Murphy ’91 / September–October 2024
August 29th, 2024
Image of Eric Estes sitting on a bench on campus.
Photo: frank mullin / brown alumni magazine

​Longtime anthropology professor Lina Fruzzetti remembers when she was tasked in 2016 with interviewing Eric Estes, then Oberlin College’s dean of students, for the position of Brown’s vice president for campus life. “He was genuine, human, honest, comfortable with himself, self-assured in his words and with a very dry sense of humor,” she recalls. “We wanted to stop halfway through and say, ‘Hey, this job is yours.’”

But what really clinched it for Fruzzetti was when Estes, over their lunch interview, ordered lamb chops. “Most candidates, in addition to being overly careful about what they say, will order a small salad, which you know isn’t what they want,” she says. “But Eric just looked at me and said, ‘I love lamb chops.’ And that translated to me as an honest person.”

In early June, countless members of the Brown community were dismayed to learn that, on June 4, Estes passed away at age 55 of a sudden illness. BAM talked to a dozen of his current and former colleagues; almost uniformly, they described him as one of the most compassionate, intelligent, hospitable, funny, and deftly diplomatic university administrators they’d known.

In a campus-wide email June 4, President Christina H. Paxson wrote: “Eric was especially dedicated to the success and well-being of students ....During his time at Brown, he guided plans for a new center for health and wellness and three new residence halls.... And Eric worked to build stronger support for military-affiliated students, international students, and students with disabilities. In addition to creating strong facilities and programs, Eric treasured his informal interactions with students, frequently hosting dinners and gatherings for students in his home.”

Estes was “maybe the smartest person I’ve ever met,” said Caitlin O’Neill, the director of Stonewall House, the Brown LGBTQ center for which Estes, who identified as LGBTQ, played a large role in moving into vastly more spacious digs in 2022. “He was really great at being able to zoom out of things and see a bigger picture.” While an Oberlin undergrad, O’Neill worked under Estes, who at the time was head of Oberlin’s Multicultural Resource Center. Estes was across the country when the discovery of racist and homophobic graffiti on campus upended the school. “But he talked us through all of it on the phone,” O’Neill recalls, “guiding us on how to help the students talk through the different things they were feeling.”

“Eric just looked at me and said, ‘I love lamb chops.’ And that translated to me as an honest person.”


Survived by his mother and a brother, Estes graduated with a history degree in 1991 from Trinity College, where he was on the swimming and water polo teams and a member of the Pi Kappa Alpha fraternity. He then earned master’s and PhD degrees in history from Syracuse University before starting his higher-ed career, which included positions at Trinity, Duke, and Syracuse before Oberlin. Once at Brown, he became known campus-wide not just for his extraordinary hospitality in welcoming colleagues and students alike into his home for meals and parties, but for his regular walks with his mastiff, Eleanor, whom he “coparented” with professor Matthew Guterl and his wife, Sandi.

“He could occasionally be quiet and thoughtful, but he had a wicked sense of humor and irony and loved to bring people into his kitchen and cook brisket or gumbo for them,” Guterl recalls of him. “He always turned his house over to families who were grieving the loss of a loved one on campus, or who didn’t have a place to stay during Commencement.”

Recently, amid campus protests nationwide over the devastation in Gaza, Estes was working overtime as a bridge between University leadership and the student protesters who set up a tent encampment on campus and occupied University Hall. “He was up early and up late, constantly working for a peaceful solution that respected the voice of students while also honoring the University’s need to move on with the day-to-day,” says Guterl.

Adds Mina Sarmas ’24, head of the Undergraduate Council of Students, who worked closely with Estes: “I know it was hard for him, because he had to be the administrator who went into University Hall [when it was occupied by protesters] and explain to the students the repercussions they could face” if they did not leave the building. “I talked with a lot of different students who told me that even if they weren’t getting exactly what they wanted, they at least felt heard by him.”

Brown will hold a memorial event for Estes after classes recommence in September.

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