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Home Is Where the Art Is

Carol Clayman Woody ’71 and Robert Woody support students’ career dreams through the Woody Internship in Museum Studies

November 18, 2024
By Emma Henry ’25

Carol and Robert Woody first met in Williamsburg during her senior year at the university and his first year at William & Mary Law School — in the 10th pew of Bruton Parish Church. (Photo by Tess Willett)

Tucked away in a quiet neighborhood near campus, over 700 works of art line the walls of a single-family brick home that better resembles a world-class art gallery.

As Charles Center photographer Tess Willett and I follow Carol Clayman Woody ’71 and Robert Woody into their living room, we pass the couple’s methodically arranged paintings, hung above symmetrical display cases filled with vintage bibelots. Their dog, Eleanora, a nine-year-old American Cocker Spaniel, playfully plods along underfoot.

We make our way through the house, and it is clear that we are within a miniature museum, curated with family heirlooms and works acquired with great care and attention.

I take a seat near Robert, who settles into a wingback chair, a wooden cane propped against his knee. Carol is on the couch across from me, Eleanora at her side. Separating us, an elaborate blue and white candle arrangement stands atop a round marble table.

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Williamsburg home of Carol Clayman Woody '71 and Robert Woody, visionary donors behind the Charles Center museum internship bearing their name, resembles one of the world's great art museums. The Woody's collection includes works that have been in their families for generations. (Photo by Tess Willett)

Since 2015 the couple have supported William & Mary students’ passion for public history, art history, and museums through the Woody Internship in Museum Studies administered by the Charles Center. The internship matches undergraduates with mentors at museums for 10-week summer internships supported by $5,000 stipends.

This coming year, 10 museums will host W&M students, including Colonial Williamsburg, the Charleston Museum, the Phillips Collection, the Taft Museum of Art, and Winterthur Museum, Garden & Library. Read more about students in the program.

A half century of shared adventures

After 52 years spent together, the pair share an incomparable life story complete with adventure and a continuous desire to break barriers. Carol places her hand on Eleanora’s head as she reminisces about how she and Robert first met in Williamsburg during her senior year at the university and his first year at William & Mary Law School (Robert ultimately completed his J.D. at the University of Louisville).

They met in Bruton Parish Church, in the 10th pew, Robert interjects.

Once Carol graduated with a degree in mathematics, she took a job with the federal government in Washington, D.C. When the phone bills between them started adding up, the couple decided to officially tie the knot in 1972, “to reduce our long-distance charges,” Carol says.

Despite their busy careers, the pair refused to let business stop them from pursuing adventure. Robert specifically mentions that they would often attend the opera after Carol would finish writing software at work.

“They got used to seeing her sweep in with evening clothes on, hair up, and they would let me go up with her,” Robert muses, playfully.

“Well, you were in a tux, so we didn’t look like scrounges,” Carol laughs.

Robert, now retired, enjoyed a 50-plus-year career as an antiques dealer. They often worked antique shows together around the country and overseas while Carol earned an M.B.A. from Wake Forest University and then a Ph.D. in information systems from Nova Southeastern University.

Prior to their marriage, she fostered her love of music as part of the W&M Choir and member of the music fraternity Delta Omicron. As one of the few women studying mathematics at William & Mary at the time, her career trajectory was not entirely clear.

Glass ceilings, broken

“I came to college planning to be a teacher in math, because my mother was a teacher and there weren’t many careers open to women at that point in time,” Carol explains. “But I spent two summers working as a camp counselor at a Presbyterian Church camp, and ten kids for a week just about drove me crazy.”

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Carol Clayman Woody '71, who broke barriers at William & Mary as one of the few women to major in mathematics at the time, explains her current work as the head of the Cyber Security Engineering Team for a Department of Defense research center. (Photo by Tess Willett)

Carol is certainly not one to shy away from a challenge. Since then, she has worked for Textron Lycoming as a financial design supervisor, Yale University as a project manager, and ImageWork Technologies Corporation as a consultant. She currently works for the Software Engineering Institute, a research center for the U.S. Department of Defense, where she heads the Cyber Security Engineering Team as a technical manager.

While at Yale, the couple lived on Carol’s salary, as Robert reinvested earnings into the antique business. He would sell at about 36 antique shows a year, with Carol joining him on his travels in the late 1980s. To Robert’s surprise, she increased business by engaging more women in conversations about antiques.

“We would swap customers, depending on people’s interests, but it was fun, it was a good challenge,” Carol says.

A radical vision for hands-on learning

Roughly 10 years after graduation from W&M, Carol was contacted by an alum who mentioned that the university was setting up a Gender, Sexuality & Women’s Studies program. Rather than offer the program money directly, Carol insisted on creating an internship for women to attend meetings and networking opportunities, a decision she calls “radical” for the time.

After their internships, Carol asked the women to write her a letter about their experiences — treasures she keeps and continues to read to this day.

“The beauty of the internship was that they could also find out if they didn’t like it while they still had time to come back and refocus,” she says. “A lot of it related to the fact that very few women got exposure at home. It’s that added layer of interaction and building contacts.”

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Robert Woody recalls to Emma Henry ’25 the couple’s many international adventures during his more than five decades as an antiques dealer. (Photo by Tess Willett)

Eventually the couple decided to travel the world with friends on what they call a “Grand Tour,” scouting for antiques along the way. In their elegant living room, the pair recount trips to Milan, Paris and Venice with an endearing nonchalance.

Robert calls to mind memories of taking the Orient Express from Venice to England (stopping in Paris) and sailing home on the Queen Elizabeth ocean liner, partly due to the fragility of many antiques and art pieces they had acquired. He explains that the ships would often have beds that lifted up and compartments under the closet floors to store valuable items. Robert leans back in his chair, deep in memory.

“She would go to the bar and have a drink or two, and I would deal with the porters,” Robert laughs. “By the time she strolled back to the cabin, it was like any other cabin, like nothing had happened!”

All roads lead home – to W&M

Carol and Robert’s adventures around the world have led them home, where they continue to create transformative experiences for William & Mary students in areas that combine their passion for nurturing women’s professional development, music and museums. 

In addition to founding the Gender, Sexuality & Women’s Studies program internship, they created the Woody Music Internship Fund, as well as the visionary museum internship that bears their name.

The Woody Internship in Museum Studies is one of the largest and longest-running such programs in the nation. Now in its 11th year, the program has funded a range of summer experiences in museums for 47 undergraduates — the majority of whom have gone on to pursue a career in museums or graduate studies in a related field.

“Students who studied at intern programs for museums were taught to hate antique dealers,” Robert says. “But one of the things we’ve been trying to convince the students of every year is that yes, they’re going to see a lot of gorgeous things and learn about a lot of gorgeous things, but I want them to know who to call when the plumbing is leaking. I want them to know how to deal with the newspaper for advertisements, I want them to know the practicalities of it, too.”

Carol and Robert Woody are partners in every sense of the word. Outside of the art and adventure, the duo live a quiet life surrounded by beautiful things.

Robert’s eyes begin to water as he describes his relationship with Carol. His favorite thing about her isn’t her tenacity, courage, or candidness — he loves her because she’s kind. In a way, their relationship mirrors the very essence of their passion for art — it is a love that has been fostered through devotion, nuance, creativity and time.