Karen Caswelch ‘84 has spent much of her life bucking trends
and setting precedents. The daughter of a white mother and an African-American
father, Caswelch broke into the male-dominated auto industry when few women or
minorities were in the field. Yet as many of her peers have job-hopped their
way up the career ladder, she has remained with the same company she started
working for as an MIT undergraduate.
“I’ve turned down opportunities to leave GM, and even within
GM, because then I’d be sacrificing my family life, and you have to have
balance,” says Caswelch, who is vice president of purchasing at Allison
Transmission, a company that GM spun off in 2007.
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Caswelch now lives in Indianapolis
with her husband, Tom Caswell, and their 12-year-old son and 15-year-old
daughter. Her last name is a combination of her original name, Welch, and her
husband’s.
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A pioneering spirit tempered by a quest for balance may be
embedded in Caswelch’s genes. Her parents, who met in the late 1950s as Washington University students active in the NAACP,
had to travel out of state to wed. They settled in Edwardsville, IL,
because on drives along Route 66 they saw African-American and white children
playing together in schoolyards there. “Dad said, ‘If I have kids, that’s where
I want to raise them,’” Caswelch says.
When Caswelch showed an interest in engineering, her father
urged her to apply to MIT, where she majored in mechanical engineering. She won
a scholarship from GM and worked summers at the company. With a GM fellowship,
she earned her MBA from Harvard
Business School.
Two years ago, she won the National Women of Color Technology Award for her
decades of managerial leadership at GM.
“What MIT gave me was a really good grounding,” Caswelch
says. “Gosh, if you can get through MIT, you can get through anything, but I
had a lot of fun there–I had a lot of balance.”
Today Caswelch maintains balance by carving out time for
non-work pursuits such as singing with the St. Paul’s Episcopal Church choir with her
daughter and chairing the $1.5 million effort to replace the church’s pipe
organ. A former member of the varsity women’s volleyball team, she also serves
on the MIT Corporation Visiting Committee for the Department of Athletics,
Physical Education, and Recreation.