1935 President Edwin T. Hodge
/Edwin T. Hodge was instrumental in organizing the Geological Society of the Oregon Country in Portland in 1935 and was its first president.
Read MoreEdwin T. Hodge was instrumental in organizing the Geological Society of the Oregon Country in Portland in 1935 and was its first president.
Read MorePast President Phillips was a lawyer by trade and a member of a number of civic organizations. He served as president of the Portland City Club as well as GSOC.
Read MoreMr. Vance was born on April 11, 1883, in Decorah, Iowa, where he attended grammar and high school and made his home until 1906. His formal education was obtained at the University of Wisconsin, where he majored in Civil Engineering.
In 1906 he went to Big Horn Basin, Wyoming, on a government land survey contract, and in the fall of that year was appointed a United States Deputy Land Surveyor for Wyoming. With S. W. Brunt as a partner, the firm took contracts for the survey of twelve townships; contracts were completed in 1908.
During the winter of 1907 and through 1908, with the exception of that summer, Mr. Vance worked for the Reclamation Service on the Shoshone project, including work on the Shoshone dam surveys. When he resigned in 1910 to move to Portland, he was in charge of survey party on canal location and construction on the Ralston Unit of the Shoshone Project.
From November 1910 to January 1916 he worked for the City of Portland; from February 1916 to October 1916 he was employed as surveyor draftsman, field mapping a timber cruiser for the U.S. Forest Service. From November 1916 to October 1920 he worked at shipbuilding, starting with the Columbia Engineering Works on engineering for launching ways, and ending with the Coast Shipbuilding. He started with the latter firm as chief draftsman in June 1917 and when he completed his shipbuilding experience in 1920 he was Superintendent of Construction.
After a year each with the Portland Dock Commission and the Port of Portland, Mr. Vance returned to city service in 1923, working through the positions of draftsman, senior engineer, assistant to City Engineer (1929 to 1939). In June 1939 he was appointed Assistant to Commissioner of Public Works William A. Bowes, which position he still holds (1950).
On January 19, 1911, Mr. Vance was married to Florence Juliet Oviatt of Missouri Valley, Iowa, and Powell, Wyoming. They have two children - a daughter, now Mrs. William M. Hiney, Jr., of Los Angeles, Calif., and Albert D. Vance, Jr., of Portland, Oregon.
Mr. Vance is a member of the Presbyterian Church and a lifelong Republican in national politics.
Ray C. Treasher was born in Chicago, Illinois, on July 28, 1898. At the age of five he moved to Sterling, Illinois, and to Sunnyside, Washington, at fourteen. In 1916 he started to Washington State College, but took time out during World War I, returning to college in 1919. He was again out for two years, and in 1922 completed the rest of his collegiate work.
After three and a half years of mining engineering, Mr. Treasher switched to geology and was graduated with a B.S. degree in geology in 1925. A teaching fellowship in 1925 allowed an M.S. degree in geology. He was instructor in geology at Washington State College in 1925-1926 on a one-year contract.
In 1926 he went to University of Oregon on a teaching fellowship with work toward a PhD. Lack of finances terminated that work and he taught geology and science in Livingston, Montana, and Longview, Washington. The depression "froze" him in that work until 1936,when the Oregon State Planning Board employed him to write a bibliography of Oregon geology. Following that assignment he worked for slightly over a year with the Corps of Engineers, Portland Division, on a mineral survey of the Pacific Northwest.
In 1937 Mr. Treasher went from there to the Department of Geology and Mineral Industries of the State of Oregon, where he served in Portland until 1940. During that time he joined the Geological Society of the Oregon Country and served a very enjoyable year (1938-1938) as president of that remarkable group.
In 1940 he went to Grants Pass for the Oregon Department and was in charge of the field office until late in 1943, when he accepted a position as engineering geologist for the Corps of Engineers at Sacramento, California. There he worked under the direction of another ex-member of the G.S.O.C., Mr. Claire Holdredge, where he still remains at this date (1950).
Early in 1950 Mr. Treasher assisted in organizing the Sacramento Geological Society, a group of about fifty professional geologists in the Sacramento area, and served as chairman for several months during the organization period.
Ray Treasher was married in Livingston, Montana, on Christmas Eve, 1927, to a schoolgirl chum, Miss Jessie Landon. They have no children. His hobbies include color photography, fishing and geology.
Arthur Maine Piper was born September 20, 1898, in Thomaston, Maine. He was graduated from Tufts College in l919, M.S. (metal); Idaho in 1920, M.S. (Geol.)1925.
He was employed as topographer by the Idaho Bureau of Mines and Geology, 1920-21; assistant geologist, 1921-22, and geologist 1922-26. In 1926 he was staff scientist with the Economist Survey Expedition, ex-Japanese mandated Islands, West Pacific. Civilian with U.S.A.; U.S.N., 1918.
Mr. Piper is a fellow of the Geological Society, a member of the Geophysics Union, the Society of Economic Geologists. He is a specialist in ground-water geology, stratigraphy, geomorphology, and Pleistocene deposits.
Mr. Piper was married in 1923 and has two children.
John Cyprian Stevens, civil engineer, was born in Moline, Kansas, January 9, 1876, the son of Charles Freeman and Esther Meek (Kilgore) Stevens. His first paternal American ancestor was Cyprian Stevens, who came from England in 1660 and settled in Sudbury, Mass. His father was a minister of the Seventh Day Adventist Church. He received his preparatory education at grade and high schools in Knoxville, Iowa, and Union College, Lincoln, Nebraska, and was graduated B.S. in civil engineering at the University of Nebraska in 1905. He taught at Iowa country schools for several years and served in the Philippines during the Spanish-American war. In 1902 he was appointed assistant state engineer of Nebraska, and in the spring of 1904 was appointed assistant engineer in the U.S. Reclamation Service. He was able to complete his college work without severing his connection with the bureau, and following graduation he went to Denver, Colorado, in the interests of the bureau; then, after a year in Washington, D.C., he was transferred to Portland, Oregon, as district engineer in charge of water supply investigations In the Pacific Northwest.
In 1910 he resigned from government service to engage in the practice of engineering in Portland. In 1912 he went to Spain for the Pearson Engineering Corp. In 1915-16 he was engineer in charge of the West Okanogan Valley irrigation project In the state of Washington. He then resumed private practice in Portland, In 1920 he joined with Ray B. Koon in establishing the firm of Stevens & Koon.
In 1911 Mr. Stevens made a contract with Leupold & Volpel of Portland to manufacture a water level recorder of his design. He became a partner in the firm in 1915 under the name of Leupold, Volpel & Co. This was succeeded in 1940 by Leupold & Stevens Instruments, which now manufactures a great number of engineering instruments. All surveying instruments carry the name of Stevens.
His published writings include papers published by the U.S. Geological Survey and numerous articles in the Transactions of the International Engineering Congress, the Engineering News-Record, Journal of the Associated Engineering Societies, Transactions of the American Society of Civil Engineers, and others. He has been a member of the Oregon State Conservation Commission, member of the committee that drafted the water code of the state, vice-chairman of the superpower survey committee of the Pacific Northwest, and consulting engineer for the Portland sea wall and intercepting sewer development project.
In 1944 he was elected president of the American Society of Civil Engineers. He is also a member of the Professional Engineers of Oregon (first president in 1929), American Institute of Consulting Engineers, American Institute of Electrical Engineers, American Association of Engineers, Newcomen Society, Portland Chamber of Commerce, the Kappa Sigma, Sigma Xi, and Theta Nu Epsilon fraternities, and the Rotary and Irvington clubs of Portland.
He was founder and co-author of the first ritual of Sigma Tau, honorary engineering fraternity, and endowed the J. C. Stevens Award of the American Society of Civil Engineers for the best discussion of a paper on hydraulics published in the Transactions of the Society.
A C.E. degree was conferred on him by the University of Nebraska in 1928, and a Doctor of Engineering (honorary) degree by the Oregon System in 1938; also a Doctor of Engineering (honorary) degree by the University of Nebraska in 1947. For the past five years (since March 1945) Dr. Stevens has been president of the Oregon Museum Foundation. In politics he is a Republican. He was married in Lincoln, Nebraska, June 15, 1905, to Nancy, daughter of William and Margaret Ann Canning of Beatrice, Neb. They have three children: Jane Canning, who married A. Kimbrough Hackman; Martha Elizabeth, who married Donald Hay; Robert John Stevens, and an adopted granddaughter, Nancy Lou Stevens, who married Audiss Smith of Pontiac, Michigan.
After serving OMSI as president for thirteen years to Nov. 15, 1951, he was named by the Board as President Emeritus. The J. C. Stevens Hall of Hydrodynamics was officially dedicated during the week of June 21-27, 1958.
On July 1st 1953, he was hospitalized by a stroke which resulted in the loss of his ability to speak, Mrs. Stevens was also brought to the hospital, but was later released to a nursing home. She was finally brought home but died there on Nov. 5, 1953. After regaining a certain ability to speak, he remarried Ruth Newton on Feb. 12, 1954. They built a home at 6639 S. E. Yamhill Court. Their world trip is picturesquely written in The Autobiography of a Civil Engineer by John Cyprian Stevens.
Kenneth Phillips was born at Fairgrove, Kansas, on September 28, 1897. In 1915 he moved with his parents to Albany, Oregon. With one year's interruption by the First World War, he was graduated from Oregon State College in 1921 in the School of Engineering.
Upon graduation he began working with the United States Geological Survey, with offices in Portland, and he has continued with that branch of the service until the present time (1950). Most of his work has been within the State of Oregon, with the exception of five years during which he was stationed in Southern Oregon. He had one brief assignment in Washington for three months and one assignment of six weeks in Alaska. Since 1948, upon the retirement of George H. Canfield, Mr. Phillips has been District Engineer for the Geological Survey.
Kenneth Phillips is a charter member of the Geological Society of the Oregon Country and served one year as its president, as well as serving on various committees at different times.
In 1921 he was married to Miss Florence Hunter of Albany, Oregon. They have two daughters - Mrs. Merritt Cootes of Karachi, Pakistan, and Mrs. Peter Ford of Portland, Oregon - two granddaughters, Anne Carol and Bronwyn Ford, and one grandson, Marcus Ford.
Mr. Phillips is a member of the Mount Tabor Presbyterian Church, the Mazama Club, the American Society of Civil Engineers, and the Geological Society of the Oregon Country.
Harold Bruce Schminky was born in Woodbury, New Jersey, February 18, 1897, the son of Harry Newton and Alice Sidney Schminky, both of whom were born in Gratz, Pennsylvania, His parents moved to Reading, Pennsylvania, and from there came to Portland in 1905 to see the Lewis and Clark Fair. In 1909 they visited Seattle for the Alaska, Yukon and Pacific Exposition. By this time the lure of the West had become too strong to resist, and after looking around in both Seattle and Tacoma for a suitable business location, they came to Portland, and remained in Oregon from then on.
Bruce attended grammar school in Pennsylvania, California, Colorado, Washington and Oregon, graduating at Sandy, Oregon, in June 1912. He spent his first year of high school at Sandy and completed the last three years at Washington High school in Portland, from which he was graduated with the class of June 1916. He entered Oregon State College, where he majored in Highway Engineering, and received his degree of Bachelor of Science in June 1920.
The summer after graduation he began work with the late John H. Lewis, consulting engineer, and former State Engineer, on a proposed irrigation project on the John Day River. This work took him over much of the northeastern corner of Oregon, besides most of the John Day canyon. It was then that he came to love the rugged beauty of the eastern part of our state, but at that time he was not aware of the fossils and minerals to be found there.
In February 1922 he entered the employ of the Department of Public Works of the City of Portland, where he still works.
On December 23, 1922, he married Ruth Adelia Brown, a graduate of the Oregon College of Education at Monmouth. They have two daughters, Carol Ann and Alice May.
The Schminkys are charter members of the Oregon Agate and Mineral Society, and became charter members of the Geological Society of the Oregon Country at the organization meeting held in Lincoln High School on April 18, 1935. They are Republicans and Presbyterians.
Mr. Schminky has held the following positions in the Society:
1935 Member of the Exploration (trip) Committee; on August 8, 1935, was appointed trip chairman by the Executive Board, following the resignation of Harry Clark, the first chairman.
1937Curator of Maps; member of Exploration Committee.
1938Chairman of Publicity Committee; Chairman of Wallowa Summer Camp Committee; member of Research Committee; Associate Editor of News Letter.
1939Vice-president; Chairman of Coos Bay Summer Camp Committee; Associate Editor of News Letter.
1940 Chairman of Trip Committee; Associate Editor of News Letter.
1941 Member of Annual Banquet Committee; Associate Editor of News Letter.
1942President; Associate Editor of News Letter.
1943 Director: Chairman of Publicity Committee; Associate Editor of News Letter.
1944 Director; Chairman of Trip Committee; Chairman of Annual Banquet Committee; Associate Editor of News Letter.
1945 Associate Editor of News Letter; Chairman of Trip Committee.
1946 Elected to Fellow in the Society; member of Annual Banquet Committee.
1947 Chairman annual Banquet Committee; Associate Editor of News Letter.
1948 Associate Editor of News-Letter; member of Annual Banquet Committee.
1949 Chairman Nominating Committee; Associate Editor of News Letter; member of Annual Banquet Committee.
E. Newton Bates, the tenth President of the Geological Society of the Oregon Country, was born on a farm In Dorr Township, Allegan County, Michigan, in 1879. He lived on the farm until his father, after whom he was named, went into the general country store business in the neighboring small town of Moline, which is located fifteen miles south of Grand Rapids on the Pennsylvania Railroad. While working in his father's store he developed a small bicycle repair business and he was the "trouble shooter" for the Citizens Telephone Company, which maintained a country telephone exchange in his father's store.
He spent two years in the college preparatory department of Olivet College, Olivet, Michigan, and completed one year in the scientific course of the college. He then changed to the Michigan State College at East Lansing, from which he was graduated in Mechanical Engineering in 1906. In 1913 he was granted an M.S. degree from Michigan State College. After graduation he accepted a position as instructor in physics at the college, and three years later a position in Boston, Mass., with the engineering firm of D.C. and William B. Jackson. While employed in Boston he married Miss Cora L. Brown, a girl from his Michigan home town.
The Bates's next moved to New York City, where E.N. was employed as draftsman in the construction department of the Standard Oil Company at 26 Broadway. In 1912 they moved to State College, Pennsylvania, where Mr. Bates was assistant professor in mechanical engineering.
In 1918 Mr. Bates resigned his teaching position to accept a position as scientific assistant with the U.S. Department of Agriculture. This proved to be his last change of employers, but by no means his last change of address. In 1920 he was transferred to Portland, Oregon, to take charge of the office of Grain Investigations for the Pacific Coast. One of the duties he assumed was to encourage the handling of grain in bulk instead of in sacks. Raymond L. Baldwin was one of his able assistants in this work while the office was located in Portland.
In 1927 the office was moved to San Francisco with Bates in charge and its name changed to Office of Rice and Grain Investigations. Problems of efficient production, storing and marketing of rice were added to the other duties.
After nine years in San Francisco, the office was discontinued and the Bates's were transferred to Portland in 1936 to be attached to the Pacific Coast Headquarters Office of Federal Grain Supervision to have charge of developments, maintenance and standardization of the mechanical equipment used in the Pacific Coast Grain Supervision Offices.
Upon returning to Portland one year after the birth of the Geological Society of the Oregon Country his good friend Raymond L. Baldwin introduced him to that enthusiastic group of professional and amateur geologists. Mr. Bates says that his interest in the Society has centered more in the geologists than in geology. The great variety of beautiful rock formations attracts him more than their industrial use and the classification phase of the science.
The Bates's have a daughter, Eleanor B., who is married and lives in San Francisco. Bates claims that Franklin Davis bamboozled him into accepting the nomination as president for the Society by telling him that every so often the Society was expected to elect a rank amateur to its highest office.
Mr. Bates retired from Government service in March 1949 and in May of that year was awarded a medal for superior service, and was called to Washington, D.C., at government expense to accept the award.
I was born March 17, 1884, in the small village of St. Joe, Searcy County, Arkansas. The birthplace of my father was Springfield, Illinois, and that of my mother Marietta, Georgia. At the age of seven symptoms of a weakness for the earth sciences began to manifest themselves. Armloads of limestone slabs filled with crinoid stems were carried into the house for inspection, and when I asked why these rocks were filled with worms, was emphatically ordered to return them to the hillside and to refrain from further foolish questions, as these were just rocks and nothing more.
When I was nine years of age, my parents migrated to Indian Territory. There I found the geological picture greatly changed and much more interesting. Along the eroded banks of the Arkansas river were innumerable veins of coal outcroppings. Between these and beds of concretions filled with pastel shades of clay I spent many happy days. When my father found a lot of these multicolored clays smeared all over the side of the barn another of my geological endeavors was quickly and decisively squelched.
Educational advantages in the Indian Territory at that time were practically nil. During the six years of residence there, only a few intermittent months of “Subscription School” were available, and principally for that reason my parents decided to follow the course of empire westward. Acquiring two covered wagons or "prairie schooners", we loaded in and for three long months listened to the song of wagon wheels across the states of Kansas, Colorado, Wyoming and Idaho, reaching the green and fertile valley of the Snake river just at the opening of the harvest season. This so resembled Paradise in comparison to anything we had ever seen before that Oregon of course became our home.
Among the many advantages to be found in this land of promise was one in particular which caught my interest. Just across the river in Idaho was a boarding school known as the Idaho Intermountain Institute. At this place one without means could secure enough employment on the campus to pay for both board and tuition. I contacted the school authorities at the earliest possible date, all arrangements were easily made, and I became an immovable fixture for four years.
My arrival at this school should have created quite a sensation because I had with me all my worldly goods and these consisted of two sacks, one filled with clothing and the other with rocks. My second sack was to bring me deep disappointment. No one seemed to know very much about rocks, and cared less.
One professor, however, was somewhat sympathetic and directed me to the Weiser Academy, located about half a mile away, where he thought I might probably get the desired information. The instructor was found and for a full hour he delved into the mysteries of mineralogy - all of which failed to register with me. This I know because when I returned to my school the teacher insisted that I explain fully to the class all I had learned about my specimens. To the best of my memory, those small yellowish-pink crystals were called "mizpahs". Later I learned that what the teacher had really said was that they were feldspars. Still the class marveled exceedingly - it was their first lesson in geology.
After spending four years at this school, it became increasingly apparent that the seventy-five dollars which I could save during the three summer months would hardly support me in the lavish manner in which I craved to live through the nine-month school year, so I decided to spend a year or so in Alaska for the purpose of bolstering my modest fortune, and possibly locating a few of those elephants frozen in the ice which I had been reading about.
The explorations of course proved fruitless, and the long, workless winter months exhausted my summer earnings to such an extent that when I arrived back in Seattle my fortune had dwindled to two dollars and fifty cents. It was then and there I made up my mind that what I most needed was a guardian, so I became an employee of the Post Office Department and remained in this position thirty-five years. It was during my employment in this position that I met and married Miss Berrie Horton, who has always shared my interest and enthusiasm in my lifelong avocation.
During these many years as a government employee my interest in the earth sciences never lessened, but on the other hand grew and a very large portion of my spare time, such as vacations and holidays, were spent roaming the semi-deserts of the Northwest and exploring the fossil-bearing cliffs of the John Day country.
In 1933 a semi-technical club was organized, known as the Oregon Agate and Mineral Society. This I joined as a charter member, having already spent fourteen years with the Mazamas.
Beginning in 1934 and extending through several years, the University of Oregon conducted extension courses at the Lincoln High School in the following sciences: Geology, Dr. Edwin T. Hodge; Rocks and Minerals, Dr. W. D. Wilkinson; Paleontology, Dr. Earl Packard; Anthropology, Dr. Goldenweiser. From these sources I received all of my classroom geology.
John Eliot Allen was born in Seattle, Wash., on August 12, 1908, the son of Eric W. (ex-dean of journalism at University of Oregon) and Sally Elliott Allen (writer and playwright). He was educated in the Eugene public schools, was graduated from the University of Oregon, where he received his B.A. degree in 1931, M.A. in 1932. In 1944 he received his Ph.D degree from the University of California. All degrees were conferred in his major field - Geology. In 1933 he was married to Margaret Moss of Portland; they have one daughter, Sallie Ann. She is married to Scott McNall and they have two children, Miles and Amy.
Dr. Allen's professional experience includes being: field geologist for the Rustless Iron and Steel Corporation, 1935 to 1938; chief geologist for the Oregon State Department of Geology and Mineral Industries 1938 to 1947; and senior Economic Geologist with the New Mexico Bureau of Mines for four years.
His teaching experience includes: Teaching Fellow at Oregon one year, at Berkeley three years. Taught geology for the Oregon Extension Division in Portland for two years, and for Statewide in eastern Oregon for two years. Was Associate Professor of Geology and Director of the Summer Camp at Pennsylvania State University, 1948-49; Professor and Head of the Department of Geology at the New Mexico Institute of Mining and Technology for two years. He came to Portland State in 1956 and has at one time or another taught all of the courses required for graduation. Was SEATO Professor at the University of Peshawar, Pakistan, in 1963-64. He is Professor of Geology and Head of the Earth Science department at Portland State University and has had 19 years of teaching experience.(1970)
Dr. Allen has been or is a member of the following organizations: Phi Beta Kappa, Sigma Xi, Theta Tau, Geological Society of the Oregon Country (President 1946), Geological Society of America, American Geological Institute, Society of Economic Geologists, American Institute of Mining & Metallurgical Engineers, American Association of Petroleum Geologists, American Geophysical Union, American Institute of Professional Geologists, American Scientific Gem Association (regional vice president), Oregon Academy of Science, National Association of Geology Teachers (president 1967), and Northwest Scientific Association.
His bibliography of publications includes some forty listings, ranging from the highly technical to the very descriptive. Many have been used by GSOC members for source and trip background material.
Arthur Carhart Jones was born in Oberlin, Ohio, on September 11, 1896, the son of Rev. Burton and Angie (Tallmon) Jones. He was educated in the public schools of Kansas, California, and Oregon. His B.A. degree he received at Pacific University, Forest Grove, Oregon, in 1921. From the University of Oregon Medical School he obtained his M.A. degree in 1925, and in 1926 his M.D. Dr. Jones is a member of Sigma Xi, Alpha Omega Alpha, Nu Sigma Nu, and Gamma Sigma.
As a physician and Surgeon Dr. Jones was associated with the Else-Dudman-Nelson Clinic from 1927 until 1931, and since that date has been in private practice, except for the time spent in military service. He was associate in Anatomy at the University of Oregon Medical School from 1934 to 1940, and has been director of Physical Medicine there since 1929. During World War II he was commissioned as major and stationed at Letterman General Hospital in San Francisco, and at Mitchell Convalescent Hospital at Campo, California. Doctor Jones is an authority and pioneer in work on physical medicine and rehabilitation, and is one of the founders and medical director of the Portland Rehabilitation Center.
Dr. Jones was married on September 18, 1924, to Doris W. Wolcott of Portland, Oregon. They have two children - a daughter, Ardis Carolyn, now Mrs. Donald R. McKay, and a son, Irving Wolcott Jones.
The Doctor is a member of the American Medical Association, the Portland Academy of Medicine, the American Congress of Physical Medicine, the American Association for the Advancement of Science, and the Geological Society of the Oregon Country. He is a Mason and a Republican. Dr. and Mrs. Jones are members of the Unitarian Church. Their home is at 3300 S.W. Heather Lane, Portland. (1950)
After the tragic mountaineering death of Donald -R. McKay, Ardis was married to David G. Hitchcock.
At a most beautiful wedding service at the First Presbyterian Church attended by 1200 of their friends, Dr. Freeda 0. Hartzfeld, Dean of Women at Lewis and Clark College, and Dr. Arthur C. Jones were married on October 1, 1965. Besides continuing their life-time individual interests, they have joined together in the state and national promotion of the Laubach Literacy program. Dr. Arthur is a member of the Board of Directors of the Laubach Literacy of Oregon, Inc., of which Dr. Freeda is president.
Dr. Arthur has been known to say that he considers this volunteer program that is carried out in the disadvantaged areas of the world as well as in the United States to be one of the most Christian action programs possible. -Doris Wolcott Jones, 1964.
Fay Wilmott Libbey was born in Macawhoc, Maine, on October 11, 1882, the son of Charles Otis and Josephine (Chadbourne) Libbey. He was educated in the public schools and at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, where he received his B.S. degree in 1906. In December 1913 he was married to Rose C. Kaiser of Portland, Oregon. They have one daughter, now Mrs. John Swanson.
Mr. Libbey began his engineering work as assayer of the Nipissing Mining Co. in Cobalt, Ontario; later was superintendent of the Vulture Mining Co. in Wlckenburg, Arizona; engaged in mine leasing in Arizona, and oil exploration in California. He was superintendent of the Pinto Valley Co. of Miami, Arizona; consulting engineer for the U.S. Engineers of Portland, Oregon; mining engineer for the State Department of Geology and Mining Industries, Portland, of which he has been director for the past six years (since July 1944). He was a first lieutenant with the U.S. Army Engineers in 1917.
Mr. Libbey is the author of the following: Dredging of Farmland in Oregon; Progress Report on Coos Bay Coal Field; Mineral Deposits in Region of Imnaha and Snake Rivers, Oregon, and co-author of Manganese in Oregon; Preliminary Report on High-Alumina Iron Ore in Washington County, Oregon; and Ferruginous Bauxite Deposits in Northwestern Oregon.
He is a member of the American Institute of Mining and Metallurgical Engineers; the Professional Engineers of Oregon; American Association of State Geologists.
In politics he is a Republican; in religion, an Episcopalian.
A brilliant photographer and Renaissance man, Leo Simon was a very enthusiastic charter member of GSOC. He was also a member of Mazamas, Oregon Academy of Science, Oregon Museum of Science and Industry, the Native Plant Society, etc., etc. An Academy of Science citation was to him the epitome and "greatest honor that ever happened to me."
Read MoreThis article contains Dr. Hodge’s 1970 obituary in the Oregonian - Dr. Edwin T. Hodge, noted geologist and the man who sparked the drive to found the Oregon Museum of Science and Industry, is dead, The Oregonian learned Friday.
Read MoreFord E Wilson, a descendant of pioneer families, was born in Oronoko Township, Berrien County, Michigan, July 26, 1900, the son of George V. and Minnie B. (Ford) Wilson. The family moved to Oregon in 1900. He was educated in Oregon grade schools, Newport High School, University of Oregon (B.A. 1922, M.A. 1923), and Carnegie Institute of Technology (M.S. 1924) in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.
He was employed as an industrial chemist for seven years, and since 1942 has held various positions with the Corps of Engineers.
On June 20, 1953, Mr. and Mrs. Wilson removed to Gallup, New Mexico, continuing Mr. Wilson's employment with the Army Engineers.
On December 21, 1943, he married Miss Alice Thompson of Bend, Oregon. Mr. Wilson has two sons, Ford E, Jr., and Richard G., and two grandchildren, Jeanne L. and Robert A.
Organizations other than the Geological Society of the Oregon Country in which he holds membership include the following:
Sons of the American Revolution
American Legion
Masons
Mineralogical Society of America
Oregon Agate and Mineral Society
Bureau Issues Association
American Revenue Association
Oregon Archeological Society
Norris B. Stone was born in Topeka, Kansas, July 3, 1888, later moving with his parents to St. Joseph, Missouri, where he attended grade school and high school. In 1904 he went to work for Swift & Co. After three years with them, at the age of nineteen, he was transferred from St. Joseph to their new venture in Portland when they purchased the Union Meat Company and the Sun Dial Ranch at Troutdale and Fairview. He was made head of their by-products department, stationed at Troutdale, and remained with this firm for a total of eighteen years.
At Troutdale Mr. Stone found social conditions most unfavorable for young people, there being three saloons running wide open, and the two local churches closed. He was instrumental in having one of the churches reopened and a gymnasium organized, to the great improvement of conditions for the teenagers.
During this period, at the age of twenty-one, Mr. Stone joined the Masonic Lodge, and in 1913 was Master of Kenton Blue Lodge No. 15, A.F. & A.M., of Portland, Oregon. In 1915 he joined the Shrine and was immediately enrolled in the Shrine Chanters, with whom he sang until 1946, serving during the last two years as manager of the Chanters.
In 1921 Mr. Stone resigned from Swift & Company to go into business for himself, handling principally packing-house by-products, including wool, hides, animal feeds, animal fertilizers, etc., in which business he is now engaged. During his connection with Swift & Company Mr. Stone built up their entire byproducts departments from nothing to a very appreciable volume by 1921, when he resigned.
Mr. Stone was married to Miss Bessie Briedwell of Amity, Oregon, on May 16, 1909. Three sons and three daughters were born to them, the two youngest being twin girls. Bessie Stone died on June 26, 1926. On January 16, 1928, Mr. Stone was married to Miss Clara Love, a member of an old pioneer family and granddaughter of Captain Lewis Love.
Mr. Stone joined the Geological Society of the Oregon Country in September 1946.
Raymond L. Baldwin was born on a farm near Caldwell, New Jersey, on August 31, 1883. He was graduated from Caldwell High School in 1900. In 1901-1904 he was ranching in the Pacific Northwest. In the fall of 1905 he entered Rutgers College, New Jersey, on a scholarship, and was graduated in 1909 with a B.S. degree. He was elected to Phi Beta Kappa. During his senior year at Rutgers he was elected president of the newly formed Agriculture Club.
The next few years were spent in farming and creamery management in New Jersey, New York, and the Pacific Northwest.
While at Rutgers in 1916-1917 working for his M.S. degree he took the Federal examination for the position of Scientific Assistant in Grain Standardization, and received a temporary appointment for field work in the Pacific Northwest. Later Portland was made his permanent headquarters.
Mr. Baldwin is co-author of two government bulletins, "Cleaning Grain at Thresher with Bates Aspirator" and "Washing Pacific Coast Wheat."
In 1944 he was appointed a member of the Pacific Coast Board of Grain Supervisors, which board has charge, in seven western states, of grading and inspection of all grains for which standards have been established. He retired on June 30, 1948, after thirty-one years of Federal service.
Mr. Baldwin was married on October 12, 1910, to Miss Alberta B. Brillhart of Hayden Lake, Idaho. She passed away in 1912, leaving him with an infant daughter. On December 31, 1918, he was married to Miss Gladys Durst of Portland. His daughter, her husband and their two children live in Portland.
Mr. Baldwin is a life long Republican and a member of the Presbyterian Church.
He is a charter member of the Geological Society of the Oregon Country.
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Pepper (Stephanie) March
Ed McNamara and Andrea Vargo
Kathleen Myers
Deb Nye
Liz Paulus
Thomas Peterson
Randall Radmer
Diana Reeck
David Richter and Dominique Garnier
Cynthia and Claire Robinson
Brit and Jeremy Schnyder
MacNeale Smith
Grayson Smith
Asa Stein
Jeremy and Elizabeth Stout
Jack Swisher
Richard Thalhammer
Ben Wagner
Kirk Warner
Hunter Wyndham
Interested in geology news and casual conversation with other geology fans? Attend our Monthly Meetups!
Our monthly lectures and local field trips are open to all!
Want to come on in-depth overnight field trips led by professional geologists? Become a GSOC Member!
Questions about Geology? Ask in our Facebook Group!
Concerned about earthquake preparedness? Arrange for public speaking on Cascadia Earthquake Preparedness.
Portland State University Department of Geology, our gracious host since 1971, offers undergraduate and graduate programs in geology, as well as free auditing for seniors.
Interested in Gems and Minerals?
In the Bend area? Visit our sister club Central Oregon Geoscience Society!
Interested in fossils? Check out the North American Research Group.
GSOC • P.O. Box 80133 • Portland, OR 97280 • communications@gsoc.org