Richard (Dick) Gordon Leahy of Westwood, formerly of Chestnut Hill, died of natural causes on Nov. 19. He was 91.

Married for 67 years, he was the beloved husband of Sarah Griswold Leahy.

Born in Buffalo, N.Y. on March 6, 1929, Dick was the son of the late Leon and Gladys (Hanley) Leahy. He attended the Groton School, where he made many lifelong friends. In summers, Dick, his younger sister Barbara and his parents spent some of their favorite days at their fishing and hunting camp on Lake Pytonga in Quebec.

He earned his bachelor’s degree from Yale University in 1952. While in New Haven he met Sarah (Sally) Brooks Griswold. He quickly realized he had met his match and proposed after a few short months. Both students at the time, Dick and Sally married and moved to Cambridge.

Sally transferred from Smith College to Wellesley College to complete her bachelor’s degree and Dick entered the doctoral program in geophysics at Harvard University.

After graduating in 1957 with a Ph.D. from Harvard, Dick and Sally moved first to Woods Hole and then Martha’s Vineyard where they built a house. Dick worked at the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution as research associate and assistant to the director. During his early years of marriage he was often out at sea on the R/V Atlantis, a 42 steel-hulled ketch owned by WHOI.

In 1961 Sally and Dick moved to Chestnut Hill with their three young children, Sarah, Betsy and Peter, and Dick began work at Harvard where he remained for the rest of his career. At Harvard he was principally concerned with supporting the science faculty, facilities and programs. He served as associate dean of the faculty of arts and sciences and held a variety of other positions including the director of laboratories of the division of engineering and applied sciences (now the division of applied sciences) and coordinator for governmental relations in the office of the president.

He also served as executive director of the New England Consortium for Undergraduate Science Education and chairman of the board of the John von Neumann National Supercomputer Center in Princeton, N.J. He was a chairman and member of the Massachusetts design selection board, overseer at the Boston Museum of Fine Arts and the Boston Science Museum and trustee for the National Institute for Global Environmental Change. A champion of education, over the years he also served on the boards of trustees of the Park School, Groton School and Smith College.

Many thought of Dick as a quiet, intelligent introvert, but those who knew him best recognized his sharp sense of humor, generous spirit, upstanding character and deep love of his family. He was fascinated with all things scientific, especially when related to climate, weather and ocean, but he had many other interests as well. He loved music, theatre, and most of all art. He was a knowledgeable collector and profound appreciator. He also was a beautiful skier who relished spending days on the slopes with family, and he surprised all with his dancing and figure skating abilities.

On the Vineyard, he enjoyed duck hunting with his beloved black Labradors, and though not much of a swimmer, he loved boats and being out on the ocean. He was a skilled mechanic, carpenter, plumber and electrician and could fix almost anything. He played golf and tennis in his earlier days.

Throughout his life, however, Dick’s primary focus was his wife Sally. Together for almost seven decades, they were inseparable. Dick’s passions for the arts, science, and education were instilled in his three children and seven grandchildren as well. He was extremely proud of each of them, supported their educations and followed their lives, accomplishments and careers closely.

In addition to his wife Sally, he is survived by his three children and their spouses, Sarah Leahy Cerami and Joseph Cerami, Betsy Leahy Morton and Rory Morton, Peter Leahy and Izabela Czepiel Leahy; grandchildren David Cerami, wife Hollie Barden and their son Indigo Cerami, Mia Cerami, Anna, Eric and Jacob Morton, Samantha and Caroline Leahy and their mother Linda Leahy; and his sister and brother in law Barbara Leahy Regan and William Regan.

Services will be private.

Donations can be made to the Boston Museum of Fine Arts, 465 Huntington Avenue, Boston, MA 02115 (www.mfa.org).

For online guestbook, please visit www.DeeFuneralHome.com.