Cooper, William Skinner, 1884-....
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Cooper, William Skinner, 1884-....
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Cooper, William Skinner, 1884-....
Cooper, William Skinner, 1884-1978
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Cooper, William Skinner, 1884-1978
Cooper, William Skinner b. 1884
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Cooper, William Skinner b. 1884
Cooper, William S. (William Skinner), b. 1884
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Cooper, William S. (William Skinner), b. 1884
Cooper, William Skinner 1884-19..
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Cooper, William Skinner 1884-19..
Cooper, William S. 1884- (William Skinner),
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Cooper, William S. 1884- (William Skinner),
Skinner Cooper, William
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Skinner Cooper, William
Cooper, William S. 1884-
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Name :
Cooper, William S. 1884-
Skinner Cooper William 1884-19..
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Name :
Skinner Cooper William 1884-19..
Skinner Cooper, William 1884-
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Skinner Cooper, William 1884-
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Biographical History
Cooper was born on August 25, 1884 in Detroit, Michigan. He attended Detroit public schools and graduated in 1906 from Alma College. He obtained his Ph.D. degree from the University of Chicago in 1911. In 1915 Cooper joined the faculty at the University of Minnesota. Cooper made several scientific trips to Glacier Bay Alaska between 1916 and 1966. He is considered to be the father of Glacier Bay National Park. Cooper retired from the University of Minnesota in 1951 and moved to Boulder, Colorado where he continued his scientific work. His life-long interest in music also followed him to Boulder, and he was a founder of the Boulder Philharmonic Orchestra. He died on October 8, 1978.
Professor of botany at the University of Minnesota;
researched in Glacier Bay National Monument from 1916 until his death.
William Skinner Cooper was born on August 25, 1884 in Detroit, Michigan. He attended Detroit public schools and graduated in 1906 from Alma College, which was founded by his father David Mack Cooper, a Presbyterian minister.
In 1907 he enrolled in Johns Hopkins University, but left after one year to continue his graduate studies at the University of Chicago under Henry Chandler Cowles, an eminent plant ecologist. He obtained his Ph.D. degree from the University of Chicago in 1911. His thesis was based on studies done in 1909 and 1910 of the development of vegetation on Isle Royale in Lake Superior.
From 1912-1916 Cooper studied chaparral vegetation in California, and strand and dune flora of the Pacific Coast Region of Oregon and California, as well as wind patterns that developed dune shapes along the Oregon coast. The results of these studies were published by the Geological Society of America in 1958 and 1967.
In 1915 Cooper joined the faculty at the University of Minnesota as an assistant to Frederick E. Clements, then head of Botany. After a leave of absence in 1918 to enter Y.M.C.A. service, (Board of Regents Minutes, 1917-1918, p. 38) he was promoted to Assistant Professor in 1919, Associate Professor in 1927 and Professor in 1929.
Cooper made scientific trips to Glacier Bay Alaska in 1916, 1921, 1929, 1935 with William O. Field (American Geographical Society), 1956 and 1966. In the 1920's, he chaired a committee of the Ecological Society of America to protect the site of his Alaskan studies. In 1922 he suggested to the Ecological Society that National Park status be awarded to Glacier Bay. On February 25, 1925 President Calvin Coolidge proclaimed Glacier Bay as a National Monument under the American Antiquities Act. In the 1930's Cooper also served on the National Research Council's Committee on the Preservation of Natural Conditions which worked to again elevate Glacier Bay Monument to park status, as well as provide a sanctuary for the Alaskan Brown Bear and prohibit prospecting in Glacier Bay. In 1976 President Gerald Ford signed a law prohibiting mining and prospecting in Glacier Bay. This repealed a previous law passed in 1936 during President Franklin Roosevelt's administration, allowing mining in this area. Glacier Bay became a National Park on December 2, 1980, an international biosphere reserve in 1986 and a World Heritage Site in 1992. Today William Cooper is considered to be the father of Glacier Bay National Park. http://www.glacier.bay.national-park.com/info.htm .
On January 19, 1980 the United States Board on Geographic Names approved the name of Mount Cooper for a mountain located between Lamplugh Glacier and Johns Hopkins Inlet in Glacier Bay, in honor of William Skinner Cooper.
In 1916 Cooper laid out permanent seedling plots in Reid Arm of Glacier Bay in order to study forest vegetation in areas exposed by ice recession. He restudied them on return trips to Reid Arm in 1921, 1929 and 1935. In 1941 University of Minnesota Botany professor, Donald Lawrence, took over this study and revisited the plots at various times, making his last trip in 1988. Raw data and original maps of Cooper's seedling plots are located in the papers of Donald Lawrence (Collection 1020).
Cooper was one of the first ecologists to make use of aerial reconnaissance and photography to work out the history of landscapes. Cedar Bog Lake and swamp in the Anoka Sand Plain were later preserved as the Cedar Creek Natural History Area in Anoka County, Minnesota. Although discovered as a result of Cooper's aerial photography, there is no material in the papers regarding Cedar Creek.
Cooper studied the geological history and changes in the state's landscape, and especially the Anoka Sand Plain. This study refuted the work of Frederick Sardeson, a geologist and professor at the University of Minnesota, who attributed its features to wind action. (See folder 66 for correspondence).
Cooper retired from the University of Minnesota in 1951 and moved to Boulder, Colorado where he continued his scientific work. His life-long interest in music also followed him to Boulder, and he was a founder of the Boulder Philharmonic Orchestra. He died on October 8, 1978.
For more complete information on William Skinner Cooper, consult his biography file, located in the University of Minnesota Archives.
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External Related CPF
https://viaf.org/viaf/71480183
https://www.worldcat.org/identities/lccn-no2003007137
https://id.loc.gov/authorities/no2003007137
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Languages Used
eng
Zyyy
Subjects
Glaciers
Plant ecology
Sand dunes
Sand dunes
Nationalities
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Places
California
AssociatedPlace
Oregon Dunes National Recreation Area (Or.)
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Glacier Bay (Alaska)
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Glacier Bay National Park and Preserve (Alaska)
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Coos Bay (Or.)
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Coos Bay (Or.)
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Glacier Bay (Alaska)
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Isle Royale National Park (Mich.)
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Alaska
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Cedar Creek Natural History Area (Minn.)
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Oregon Dunes National Recreation Area (Or.)
AssociatedPlace
Isle Royale National Park (Mich.)
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Glacier Bay National Park and Preserve (Alaska)
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Glacier Bay National Park and Preserve (Alaska)
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<conventionDeclaration><citation>VIAF</citation></conventionDeclaration>