Thea D. Hodge

Thea Drell Hodge (November 8, 1922 – March 3, 2008) was a member of the Association for Computing Machinery and a cofounder of the Minneapolis chapter of the Association for Women in Computing.

She attended Antioch College in Ohio, where she met her husband, Philip Gibson Hodge, and graduated magna cum laude from Hunter College in New York City in 1946.

[1] Hodge worked at New York University from 1943 to 1944, then spent 1960–1967 at Illinois Institute of Technology.

She headed computer centers and supervised staff working in Illinois and Minnesota.

[1] She died March 3, 2008, in Menlo Park, and was buried in Alta Mesa Memorial Park, Palo Alto, California.