Jessie Rose White of Belfast, Maine, received a degree in stenography and bookkeeping after completing courses at Beal College in Bangor in 1939.
"I'm delighted!" White said, "I didn't have the money to pay for the diploma, so I didn't get it."
"I'm glad I had to wait 75 years, because it was more fun than it would have been in the first place," wheelchair-bound White said at a special graduation ceremony held yesterday.
"It stayed in the bank, and he specified it couldn't be used for anything but education," White said.
Also Read
Dona Gilbert, a friend of White's who recently learned about her plight, contacted the college to share White's story.
"She deserved a diploma. I just thought it needed to be done," Gilbert said.
Beal College President Allen Stehle presented White with her diploma.
Diagnosed with polio at 18 months old, White used crutches to make her way around the Beal campus when she was a student. She struggled to get a job after because of her disability, working as a bookkeeper and later a seamstress.
Today, after a number of foot surgeries, White uses a wheelchair.
A regular on the computer and the Internet, White intends to keep pursuing an education.
"I've always had a great thirst for learning, and I try to learn something new every day. I'd love to go back to college now if I had the strength."
"We're very appreciative of the care and attention to detail that was put into the graduation ceremony," said her son, William White.