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State University of New York College of Environmental Science and Forestry

The State University of New York College of Environmental Science and Forestry (ESF) is a public research university in Syracuse, New York focused on the environment and natural resources. It is part of the State University of New York (SUNY) system. ESF is immediately adjacent to Syracuse University, within which it was founded, and with which it maintains a special relationship. It is classified among "R2: Doctoral Universities – High research activity".[8]

State University of New York College of Environmental Science and Forestry
Motto"Improve Your World"
TypePublic
EstablishedJuly 28, 1911; 112 years ago (1911-07-28)
Parent institution
State University of New York
(formerly Syracuse University)
Academic affiliation
USU
Endowment$41.9 million (2022)[1]
PresidentJoanne M. Mahoney[2]
ProvostSamuel B. Mukasa[3]
Academic staff
125 full-time[4]
48 part-time
Students1,976 (fall 2022)[5][6]
Undergraduates1,621
Postgraduates355
Location, ,
U.S.
CampusUrban and rural, 25,000 acres (10,000 ha)
Colors      Green, white & gold
NicknameMighty Oaks, Stumpies
Sporting affiliations
USCAA (HVIAC)
MascotOakie the Acorn[7]
Websiteesf.edu

ESF operates education and research facilities also in the Adirondack Park (including the Ranger School in Wanakena), the Thousand Islands, elsewhere in Central New York, and Costa Rica. The college's curricula focus on the understanding, management, and sustainability of the environment and natural resources.

History edit

Founding edit

The New York State College of Forestry at Syracuse University was established on July 28, 1911, through a bill signed by New York Governor John Alden Dix.[9] The previous year, Governor Charles Hughes had vetoed a bill authorizing such a college.[10] Both bills followed the state's defunding in 1903 of the New York State College of Forestry at Cornell.[11][12] Originally a unit of Syracuse University, in 1913, the college was made a separate, legal entity.

 
Hunter Mountain, Twilight (1866) by Hudson River School artist Sanford Robinson Gifford, showing the devastation wrought by years of tanbarking and logging.

Syracuse native and constitutional lawyer Louis Marshall, with a summer residence at Knollwood Club on Saranac Lake and a prime mover for the establishment of the Adirondack and Catskill Forest Preserve (New York), became a Syracuse University Trustee in 1910. He confided in Chancellor James R. Day his desire to have an agricultural and forestry school at the university,[13] and by 1911 his efforts resulted in a New York State bill to fund the project: the aforementioned appropriation bill signed by Governor Dix.[14] Marshall was elected president of the college's board of trustees at its first meeting, in 1911; at the time of his death, eighteen years later, he was still president of the board.[15]

 
Syracuse University, College of Forestry (Bray Hall)

The first dean of the college was William L. Bray, a Ph.D., graduate from the University of Chicago,[16] botanist, plant ecologist, biogeographer and Professor of Botany at Syracuse University. In 1907 he was made head of the botany department at Syracuse, and in 1908 he started teaching a forestry course in the basement of Lyman Hall. Bray was an associate of Gifford Pinchot, who was the first Chief of the United States Forest Service.[17][18] In 1911, in addition to assuming the deanship of forestry, Bray organized the Agricultural Division at Syracuse University. He remained at Syracuse until 1943 as chair of botany and Dean of the Syracuse Graduate School.[19]

In 1915, the same year that Dr. Bray published The Development of the Vegetation of New York State, he became one of the founding members, along with Raphael Zon and Yale School of Forestry's second dean, James W. Toumey, of the Ecological Society of America.[20] In 1950, the 1917 "activist wing" of that Society formed today's The Nature Conservancy.[21][22]

Most of the professors in the early years of the College of Forestry at Syracuse and the Department of Forestry at Cornell's New York State College of Agriculture were educated in forestry at the Yale School of Forestry. The forestry students at Syracuse but not at Cornell were referred to as "stumpies" by their classmates.

Fifty-two students were enrolled in the school's first year, the first 11 graduating two years later, in 1913.[23] Research at the college commenced in 1912, with a study of New York state firms using lumber, including from which tree species and in what quantities.[citation needed]

Expansion edit

In 1912, the college opened its Ranger School in Wanakena, New York, in the Adirondacks. The college began enrolling women as early as 1915, but the first women to complete their degrees—one majoring in landscape engineering and two in pulp and paper—graduated in the late 1940s.[24]

In January 1930, Governor Franklin D. Roosevelt, recommending an allocation of $600,000 towards construction of the college's second building, in honor of Louis Marshall, recently deceased, noted that: "under [Marshall's] leadership and the leadership of its late dean, Franklin Moon, the School of Forestry made giant strides until it became recognized as the premier institution of its kind in the United States".[25] The cornerstone of Louis Marshall Memorial Hall was laid in 1931 by former Governor and presidential candidate Alfred E. Smith who was elected to assume the presidency of the college's board of trustees.[citation needed]

Affiliation with SUNY edit

With the formation of the State University of New York (SUNY) in 1948, the college became recognized as a specialized college within the SUNY system, and its name was changed to State University College of Forestry at Syracuse University. In 1972, the college's name was changed yet again to State University of New York College of Environmental Science and Forestry.[citation needed] Unlike other state-supported degree-granting institutions which had been created at private institutions in New York State, the New York State College of Forestry at Syracuse University was an autonomous institution not administratively part of Syracuse University. In 2000, SUNY System Administration established ESF's "primacy" among the 64 SUNY campuses and contract colleges for development of new undergraduate degree programs in Environmental Science and Environmental Studies.[26]

Campuses edit

Syracuse edit

 
"Young Abe Lincoln on Horseback", sculpture by Anna Hyatt Huntington, on the ESF campus
 
Autumn colors, Bray Hall
 
Centennial Hall

ESF's main campus, in Syracuse, New York, is where most academic, administrative, and student activity takes place. The campus is made up of nine main buildings:

  • Baker Laboratory: Named after Hugh P. Baker, dean of the college from 1912 to 1920 and again 1930–33. The building is the location of several computer clusters and auditorium-style classrooms. It is home to the Department of Environmental Resources Engineering and the Division of Environmental Science. The building underwent a $37 million overhaul in the early 2000s, providing updated space for the Tropical Timber Information Center and the Nelson C. Brown Center for Ultrastructure Studies. Baker Lab is the site of ESF's NASA-affiliated Research Center. Baker Laboratory houses two multimedia lecture halls, a "smart" classroom outfitted for computer use and distance learning, and two construction management and planning studios. It also has a full-scale laboratory for materials science testing, including a modern dry kiln, a wood identification laboratory, shop facilities (including portable sawmill) and wood preservation laboratory.[27]
  • Bray Hall: The building is the oldest on campus, completed in 1917, the largest building devoted to Forestry at the time. It is named after William L. Bray, a founder of the New York State College of Forestry at Syracuse University and its first dean, 1911–1912. It is the location of most administrative offices and the Department of Sustainable Resources Management. The State University Police department is in the basement.
  • Gateway Center: The campus' newest building, opened in March 2013, "sets a new standard for LEED buildings, producing more renewable energy than it consumes," according to Cornelius B. Murphy, Jr. The building is "designed to achieve LEED Platinum Certification".[28][29] The ESF College Bookstore, Trailhead Cafe, and Office of Admissions are in the Gateway Center.[30]
  • Illick Hall: The building was completed in 1968, and is home to the Department of Environmental and Forest Biology. It is named after Joseph S. Illick, a dean of the State University College of Forestry at Syracuse University. There is a large lecture hall (Illick 5) on the ground floor. Several greenhouses are on the fifth floor. The Roosevelt Wildlife Museum is also in the building.
  • Jahn Laboratory: Named after Edwin C. Jahn, former head of the New York State College of Forestry at Syracuse University. The building was completed in 1997. Home to the Department of Chemistry.
  • Marshall Hall: Named after Louis Marshall, one of the founders of the New York State College of Forestry at Syracuse University. The Alumni (Nifkin) Lounge and Marshall Auditorium are within. Twin brass plaques commemorate the contributions of Marshall and his son, alumnus Bob Marshall. Home of the Department of Environmental Studies, the Department of Landscape Architecture, and the Division of General Education.[31]
  • Moon Library: Dedicated to F. Franklin Moon, an early dean of the college. Completed in 1968, along with Illick Hall. A computer cluster and student lounge are in the basement.
  • Walters Hall: Named after J. Henry Walters, who served on the college's board of trustees. Completed in 1969. Home to the Department of Chemical Engineering. The pilot plant in the building includes two paper machines and wood-to-ethanol processing equipment.
  • Centennial Hall: ESF's on-campus student dormitory, commemorating the college's 100th anniversary. The facility is capable of accommodating 280-300 freshman (in double or triple studio rooms with private bath), 116 upperclassmen (in single bedroom suits with private bath), and an additional 56 upperclassmen (in 4-bedroom, 2-bath apartments). A $31 million project, Centennial Hall opened in 2011.[32]

Bray Hall, Marshall Hall, Illick Hall, and Moon Library border the quad. Other buildings on the Syracuse campus include one for maintenance and operations, a garage, and a greenhouse converted to office space. Among planned new buildings is a research support facility.

The historic Robin Hood Oak (photo below) is behind Bray Hall. The tree is said to have grown from an acorn brought back by a faculty member from the Sherwood Forest in England. It was the first tree listed on the National Registrar of Historic Trees in the United States.[citation needed]

Wanakena edit

 
SUNY-ESF Ranger School, Wanakena

Students in the forest and natural resources management curriculum may spend an academic year (48 credits) or summer at the Ranger School, in Wanakena, New York, earning an Associate of Applied Science (A.A.S.) degree in forest technology, surveying, or environmental and natural resources conservation.[33] The campus, established in 1912,[34] is on the east branch of the Oswegatchie River that flows into Cranberry Lake, in the northwestern part of the Adirondack Park. It includes the 3,000-acre (12 km2) James F. Dubuar Memorial Forest, named after a former director of the Ranger School.[35][36]

Field stations and forests edit

New York
 
Newcomb campus, c. 1973
 
Heiberg Forest classroom, Tully
Costa Rica
  • The Arturo and Maria Sundt Field Station, ESF's first international field station, is used for research and teaching. A former farm, it is near the town of Coyolito, in the province of Guanacaste, Costa Rica, approximately one mile (1.6 km) from the Gulf of Nicoya on the country's west coast.[43]

Academics edit

The ESF mission statement is "to advance knowledge and skills and to promote the leadership necessary for the stewardship of both the natural and designed environments."[47] ESF is a "specialized institution" of the State University of New York, meaning that curricula focus primarily on one field, the college's being environmental management and stewardship. Students may supplement their education with courses taken at Syracuse University. ESF has academic departments in the fields of chemistry; environmental and forest biology; environmental resources engineering; environmental studies; sustainable resources management; landscape architecture; and chemical engineering. Environmental science programs offer students integrative degrees across the natural sciences.[48]

The admission rate for applicants to ESF is 70 percent (Fall 2022).[4] ESF is ranked at 58th in the 2023 US News & World Report rankings of the top public national universities.[49][50] Furthermore, ESF is tied for 115th in the 2023 US News & World Report list of the best National Universities (both public and private).[49] U.S. News & World Report ranked ESF as 64th best graduate school in Environmental/ Environmental Health Engineering category in 2016.[51] The Washington Monthly College Guide ranked ESF No. 49 among the nation's top service-oriented colleges and universities for 2012 (and sixth in "community service participation and hours served").[52]

 
Front entrance, Marshall Hall

Forbes Magazine ranked ESF #54 in its listing of "America's Best College Buys" for 2012.[53] Forbes.com has also ranked ESF at No. 3 on its 2010 list of the 20 best colleges for women in science, technology, engineering and mathematics (STEM). ESF is listed at No. 2, ahead of top programs like Duke, Cornell and Yale, among the best college environmental programs in the nation by Treehugger.com, a website devoted to sustainability and environmental news.[54] In 2007, DesignIntelligence magazine ranked ESF's undergraduate and graduate programs in "Landscape Architecture", respectively at No. 12 and No. 9 in the United States.[54]

The Online College Database ranked ESF at No. 6 on its list of "50 Colleges Committed to Saving the Planet" for 2013.[55] The ranking relates in part to one of the school's newest programs, Sustainable Energy Management. Launched in 2013, the program focuses on energy markets, management, and resources. Global issues such as responsible energy use and development of sustainable energy sources are critical focal points in the STEM major.[56]

Research edit

ESF is classified as a "Carnegie R2 Doctoral Universities: High Research Activity" institution.[57] The first research report published in 1913 by the College of Forestry was the result of the above noted USDA Forest Service supported study of the wood-using industries of New York State.[58] Since that time, the research initiatives of the State University of New York College of Environmental Science and Forestry (ESF) have expanded greatly as faculty and students conduct pioneering studies, many with a global reach.[59] ESF researchers delve into topics well beyond the boundaries of central New York. Recent international sites of research interest include Madagascar, the Amazon floodplains, Mongolia and the Galapagos Islands. Vermont and the Sierra Nevada are other locales within the US where recent research has focused.[citation needed] Current research efforts include the Willow Biomass Project and the American Chestnut Research and Restoration Project which produced the Darling 58 chestnut tree.[citation needed]

Campus life edit

 
The 'Robin Hood Oak' (Q. robur), direct descendant of Major Oak, of Sherwood Forest, England[60]

Many students identify themselves as a "Stumpy" (or "Stumpie"). The nickname was given to students by their neighbors at Syracuse University, probably in the 1920s, and most-likely refers to forestry "stump jumpers". Although originally used as an insult, today, most students embrace the nickname with pride.

Students at the Syracuse campus enjoy many activities on and off campus. There are a number of student clubs and organizations at ESF, including the Mighty Oaks Student Assembly (formerly United Students Association), Graduate Student Association, the Guy A. Baldassare Birding Club, the Student Environmental Education Coalition, the Woodsmen Team, Bob Marshall Club, Alpha Xi Sigma Honor Society,[61] Soccer Team, Sigma Lambda Alpha, The Knothole (weekly newspaper), Papyrus Club, The Empire Forester (yearbook), Landscape Architecture Club (formally the Mollet Club), Forest Engineers Club, Environmental Studies Student Organization, Habitat for Humanity, Ecologue (yearly journal), the Bioethics Society, Green Campus Initiative, Baobab Society, and the Sustainable Energy Club. Wanakena students have their own woodsmen and ice hockey teams. A number of professional organizations are also open to student membership, including the Society of American Foresters, The Wildlife Society, Conservation Biology club, American Fisheries Association, and the (defunct) American Water Resources Association.

ESF has an agreement with adjacent Syracuse University that allows ESF students to enjoy many amenities offered by SU. ESF students take courses at their sister institution, can apply for admission to concurrent degree and joint certificate programs, and may join any SU organization except for NCAA sports teams. SU students are also welcome to enroll in ESF classes. Because of this, students feel a certain degree of integration with the Syracuse University community. Every May, ESF holds a joint commencement ceremony with Syracuse University in the Carrier Dome. ESF's baccalaureate diplomas bear the seals of the State University of New York and Syracuse University.

Students also enjoy a variety of shops, restaurants, museums, and theaters in Syracuse, and nearby Marshall Street and Westcott Street.

Gateway Center edit

ESF has launched several programs, within the confines of campus and other locations, to reduce its carbon emissions. The Gateway Center utilizes sustainable energy resources to generate power and heat utilized across the campus. The building includes a state-of-the-art, combined heat-and-power (CHP) system, producing 65% of campus heating needs along with 20% of its electrical needs. The CHP system uses biomass to drive a steam turbine and produce electricity, while natural gas is used for steam heating along with additional electricity. It has been estimated this building alone is responsible for reducing ESF's carbon footprint by 22%.[62]

 
The Gateway Center's green roof/ garden (foreground)

Increased global awareness of global warming and reduced nonrenewable resources has driven ESF to invest in biomass. Biomass is a renewable resource that draws light energy, carbon dioxide, and water from the environment; in return oxygen is released.[63] It can be harvested without negatively affecting the environment. For this reason, ESF launched a program to grow its own biomass, known as the Willow Biomass Project. Benefits of woody willow include, high yields and fast growth times, quick re-sprouting, and high heat energy is produced when burned. Woody willow also increases habitat diversity significantly contributes to carbon neutrality.[64]

The Gateway Center was one of the final stages in the school's Climate Action Plan, that encompasses the vision of carbon neutrality and reduced fossil fuel dependence by 2015. Currently, the school rests in Phase III of the program and is on track to reach its goal. Included in Phase III is the opening of The Gateway Center, retrofits to Illick Hall, and rooftop greenhouse replacement.[65] One other advancement towards carbon neutrality can be seen on top of the campus's buildings. Rooftop gardens provide reduced energy consumption and water runoff. Shrubbery, soil thickness, and moisture content all can contribute to increased energy savings.[66] Gateway and other buildings on campus utilize rooftop gardens to reduce energy consumption and water runoff.

Athletics edit

The SUNY ESF athletic teams are called the Mighty Oaks. The college is a member the United States Collegiate Athletic Association (USCAA), primary competing in the Hudson Valley Intercollegiate Athletic Conference (HVIAC) since about the 2004–05 academic year.[67]

ESF competes in 11 intercollegiate varsity sports: Men's sports include basketball, cross country, golf, soccer and track & field; while women's sports include cross country, soccer and track & field; and co-ed sports include bass fishing and timber sports.

Cross country edit

The school's men's cross-country team are six-time USCAA national champions (2011-2014; 2021-2022). The women's cross-country team are three-time USCAA national champions (2018; 2021-2022).[68][69][70] The men's soccer team was invited to the 2012 USCAA National Championship Tournament in Asheville, North Carolina, making it to the semifinals.[71]

Woodsmen edit

ESF has a long tradition of competing in intercollegiate woodsmen competitions in the northeastern US and eastern Canada.[72] The team came in first in both the men's and women's divisions of the northeastern US and Canadian 2012 spring meet.[73] Students at the SUNY-ESF Ranger School, in Wanakena, compete as the Blue Ox Woodsmen team.[74]

Club sports edit

In addition to the intercollegiate USCAA and woodsman teams, ESF students participate on club sports teams at both ESF and Syracuse University, including ESF's competitive bass fishing team,[75][76][77] and SU's quidditch team.[78][79] Students at the Ranger School participate in the Ranger School Hockey Club.[80]

Athletics history edit

In one notable part of the college's history, Laurie D. Cox, professor of Landscape Architecture, was responsible for establishing Syracuse University's renowned lacrosse program in 1916, including players from the New York State College of Forestry.[81]

Affiliation with Syracuse University edit

ESF was founded in 1911 as the New York State College of Forestry at Syracuse University, under the leadership of Syracuse University Trustee Louis Marshall, with the active support of Syracuse University Chancellor Day. Its founding followed several years after the cessation of state funding to the earlier New York State College of Forestry at Cornell.[82]

ESF is an autonomous institution, administratively separate from Syracuse University, while some resources, facilities and infrastructure are shared.[83] The two schools share a common Schedule of Classes; students may take courses at both institutions, and baccalaureate diplomas from ESF bear the Syracuse University seal along with that of the State University of New York. A number of concurrent degree programs and certificates are offered between the schools. ESF receives an annual appropriation as part of the SUNY budget and the state builds and maintains all of the college's educational facilities. The state has somewhat similar financial and working relationships with five statutory colleges that are at Alfred University and Cornell University, although unlike ESF, these statutory institutions are legally and technically part of their respective host institutions and are administered by them as well.

ESF faculty, students, and students' families join those from Syracuse University (SU) in a joint convocation ceremony at the beginning of the academic year in August and combined commencement exercises in May. ESF and SU students share access to library resources, recreational facilities, student clubs, and activities at both institutions, except for the schools' intercollegiate athletics teams, affiliated with the USCAA and NCAA, respectively.[84]

Traditions edit

The best known tradition among ESF students is that walking across the quad is shunned. The tradition, which dates back to at least the early 1960s, is intended to inhibit tracks from being worn into the lawn. Hecklers have been known to yell and even tackle people walking across the quad. However, other activities such as frisbee and soccer are encouraged on the Quad.

Eustace B. Nifkin, ESF's previous mascot, is an unofficial student. He first appeared in the 1940s after a group of students summering in the Adirondacks thought him up. Ever since, he has appeared on class rosters, written articles for The Knothole, and sent mail to the college from around the world. He has a girlfriend, the lesser-known Elsa S. Freeborn. SUNY granted him a bachelor's degree in 1972. The Alumni Lounge in Marshall Hall is dedicated to Nifkin.

Another well known legend is that of Chainer or Chainsaw who supposedly graduated in 1993.

Traditional events include:

  • Earth Week events
  • Spring Banquet
  • December Soiree
  • Friends and Family BBQ
  • Coffee Haus
  • Festival of Places
  • Paper run
  • Donut Hours
  • Waste Audit
  • Free Movies Nights
  • Insomniacs
  • Woodsmen Team (Forestry Club)
  • ESF Day of Service
  • Quadstock Music and Arts Festival

Notable alumni edit

More than 19,000 have graduated from ESF since its founding in 1911. The college's Alumni Association was founded 14 years later, in 1925.[85] Notable alumni include:

  • Reginald E. Balch, MS '28, Canadian photographer and scientist
  • Thomas Balsley, BLA '68, founder and principal designer of Thomas Balsley Associates, a New York City-based landscape design firm
  • Diana J. Knight Bendz, BS '68, an American polymer scientist and environmental and industrial engineer
  • Bruce C. Bongarten, BS '73, former Provost and Vice President for Academic Affairs, ESF
  • Joseph Buongiorno, MS '69, Class of 1933 Bascom Professor of Forest Economics, University of Wisconsin-Madison[86]
  • Roger Donlon, first man to receive the Medal of Honor in Vietnam
  • Christopher Dunn, BS '76, Director of Cornell Plantations[87]
  • Ronald J. Eby, BS '69, PhD '74, National Medal of Technology award, 2007 for his work in pediatric medicine. A polysaccharide / carbohydrate chemist whose career was devoted to vaccine development.[88]
  • Frank Edwin Egler, plant ecologist and pioneer in the study of vegetation science
  • Patrick Flood, BS '74, Maine state legislator
  • Sol Feinstone, '15, historian, businessman, conservationist[89]
  • Jean Fréchet, MS '69, PhD '71, Henry Rapoport Chair of Organic Chemistry and Professor of Chemical Engineering, UC Berkeley - Dendritic Polymers: Dendrimers;[90] 2013 Japan Prize Laureate[91] His PhD student, Will Dichtel professor of chemistry at Cornell, earns MacArthur 'Genius Award' 9/2015[92]
  • Delfin Ganapin Jr., PhD '87, Global Manager, Global Environmental Facility Small Grants Program, United Nations Development Program[93]
  • William M. Harlow, BS '25, MS '26, PhD '28, SUNY ESF Professor in the field of wood technology
  • Avery Yale Kamila, American journalist, vegan columnist and community organizer.
  • David Kaplan, PhD '78, Director, Cellular Agriculture, Tufts University {the only stand-alone institute for Cellular Agriculture in the world}[94][95][96]
  • Edwin Ketchledge, BS '49, Distinguished Teaching Professor of Botany and Dendrology, ESF[97][98][99]
  • Robin Wall Kimmerer, BS '75, author of Gathering Moss: A Natural and Cultural History of Mosses; Professor of Biology and Director, Center for Native Peoples, ESF
  • Michael Kudish, PhD '71, author, historian, forester and professor.
  • Raymond (Ray) Leonard, Ph.D., skipper of the ill-fated sailboat S. V. Satori made famous in the book and movie, The Perfect Storm; a pioneering forest ecologist at Hubbard Brook Experimental Forest in W. Thornton, NH.[100]
  • Moshe Levy, PhD '55, professor of chemistry, discoverer of living polymerization, and solar energy researcher
  • Mark Marquisee, in the seminal 1965 'Science' paper describing the structure of alanine transfer RNA, linking DNA and protein synthesis for which Robert W. Holley shared the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine in 1968 a member of his team was Mark Marquisee. He graduated from SUNY ESF (NYS College of Forestry) in forest chemistry in either 1959 or 1960 coming to Cornell for his PhD in biochemistry.[101]
  • Bob Marshall, BS '24, forester, writer and wilderness activist
  • Joe Martens, MS '81, former Commissioner, New York State Department of Environmental Conservation[102]
  • Donald E. Moore III, BS, PhD '76, animal behaviorist, zoo-based wildlife biologist, associate director of Animal Care Sciences, Smithsonian National Zoo, Washington, DC[103]
  • James D. Morrissey, BS '58, "first American to climb the east face of Mt. Everest"[104]
  • Clarence Petty, BS '30, forest ranger, conservationist and outdoorsman
  • Harry Frederick Recher, ornithologist
  • Bruce Shelley, BS '70, computer game designer
  • Sgt. William Shemin, Ranger School 1914, BS after the war, Medal of Honor recipient for bravery in World War I[105][106]
  • Earl Lewis Stone, Jr., BS '38, In 1948, he became the first endowed Charles Lathrop Pack Professor of forest soils at Cornell University. Retired 1979[107]
  • Lissa Widdoff, BS '79, executive director, Robert and Patricia Switzer Foundation[108]

Environmental leadership edit

From soon after its founding, ESF affiliated individuals have been responsible for establishing and leading prominent scientific and advocacy organizations around the world focused on the environment. Others have provided leadership to governmental environmental agencies.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Office of Development, Annual Investment Allocation Statement," SUNY-ESF, 12/31/2022. Accessed: November 23, 2023.
  2. ^ "SUNY Board of Trustees Appoints Presidents at Old Westbury, Upstate Medical, and SUNY ESF Campuses" SUNY News Release, Nov. 4, 2020. Accessed: 4 November 2020.
  3. ^ "Dr. Samuel B. Mukasa Joins ESF as Executive Vice President and Provost," ESF website, Nov. 1, 2021. Accessed: 9 November 2021.
  4. ^ a b College Navigator, National Center for Education Statistics. Accessed: 19 September 2023.
  5. ^ "College of Environmental Science and Forestry," SUNY.edu website. Accessed: 23 November 2023.
  6. ^ "SUNY College of Environmental Science and Forestry", National Center for Educational Statistics. Accessed: 23 November 2023.
  7. ^ "ESF's New Mascot, Oakie, Meets the Public," ESF website. Accessed: 27 March 2019.
  8. ^ "Carnegie Classifications Institution Lookup". carnegieclassifications.iu.edu. Center for Postsecondary Education. Retrieved 13 September 2020.
  9. ^ Syracuse University (October 1956). Relationship of the New York State College of Forestry at Syracuse University to Syracuse University. College History (Report). Vol. 5. p. 10. Retrieved 17 February 2021.
  10. ^ Rodgers, A.D. Liberty Hyde Bailey: A Story of American Plant Sciences. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1949.
  11. ^ . 2007-10-07. Archived from the original on October 7, 2007. Retrieved 2012-11-01.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
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  13. ^ . Archives.syr.edu. Archived from the original on 2012-03-15. Retrieved 2012-11-01.
  14. ^ Herbert Alpert (2008-11-03). Louis Marshall: 1856-1929. iUniverse. p. 36. ISBN 978-0-595-48230-6.
  15. ^ Louis Marshall,"Champion of Liberty", selected papers and addresses(in 2 volumes), edited by Charles Reznikoff,1957. Jewish Publication Society, Philadelphia, PA.
  16. ^ "American Environmental Photographs, 1891-1936 - Ecology and the American Environment (American Memory from the Library of Congress)". Memory.loc.gov. Retrieved 2012-11-01.
  17. ^ William L. Bray (1904). Forest resources of Texas. U.S. Dept. of Agriculture, Bureau of Forestry. p. 1.
  18. ^ "The Knothole: Student Life and Government". April 4, 2008. Volume 61 Issue 9. Retrieved on October 23, 2009.
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  25. ^ Adler, Cyrus, "Louis Marshall: A Biographical Sketch", American Jewish Year Book, 1930-31, pp. 54-55
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  28. ^ "SUNY-ESF Breaks Ground for Gateway Building". Esf.edu. Retrieved 2012-11-01.
  29. ^ "Gateway Building" (with webcam), ESF. Accessed: June 24, 2012.
  30. ^ "The Gateway Center", ESF website. Accessed: October 3, 2015.
  31. ^ "Marshall Hall", ESF website. Accessed 26 October 2020.
  32. ^ "Centennial Hall". Retrieved 3 October 2013.
  33. ^ "Suny-ESF : Improve Your World : The Ranger School" (PDF). Esf.edu. Retrieved 2016-07-17.
  34. ^ "Ranger School Celebrates Its 100th," ESF, August 6, 2012. Accessed: August 6, 2012.
  35. ^ "SUNY-ESF: SUNY College of Environmental Science and Forestry - The Ranger School". Esf.edu. 2011-09-24. Retrieved 2012-11-01.
  36. ^ "James F. Dubuar Forest," Adirondack North Country Association, 2011. Accessed: June 24, 2012.
  37. ^ "SUNY-ESF: Cranberry Lake Biological Station". Esf.edu. Retrieved 2012-11-01.
  38. ^ "Adirondack Ecological Center". ESF website. Retrieved on October 23, 2009.
  39. ^ . SUNY College of Environmental Science and Forestry. Archived from the original on July 17, 2016. Retrieved August 13, 2016.
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External links edit

  • Official website
  • Official athletics website

43°02′05″N 76°08′08″W / 43.034793°N 76.135475°W / 43.034793; -76.135475

state, university, york, college, environmental, science, forestry, public, research, university, syracuse, york, focused, environment, natural, resources, part, state, university, york, suny, system, immediately, adjacent, syracuse, university, within, which,. The State University of New York College of Environmental Science and Forestry ESF is a public research university in Syracuse New York focused on the environment and natural resources It is part of the State University of New York SUNY system ESF is immediately adjacent to Syracuse University within which it was founded and with which it maintains a special relationship It is classified among R2 Doctoral Universities High research activity 8 State University of New York College of Environmental Science and ForestryMotto Improve Your World TypePublicEstablishedJuly 28 1911 112 years ago 1911 07 28 Parent institutionState University of New York formerly Syracuse University Academic affiliationUSUEndowment 41 9 million 2022 1 PresidentJoanne M Mahoney 2 ProvostSamuel B Mukasa 3 Academic staff125 full time 4 48 part timeStudents1 976 fall 2022 5 6 Undergraduates1 621Postgraduates355LocationSyracuse New York U S CampusUrban and rural 25 000 acres 10 000 ha Colors Green white amp goldNicknameMighty Oaks StumpiesSporting affiliationsUSCAA HVIAC MascotOakie the Acorn 7 Websiteesf edu ESF operates education and research facilities also in the Adirondack Park including the Ranger School in Wanakena the Thousand Islands elsewhere in Central New York and Costa Rica The college s curricula focus on the understanding management and sustainability of the environment and natural resources Contents 1 History 1 1 Founding 1 2 Expansion 1 3 Affiliation with SUNY 2 Campuses 2 1 Syracuse 2 2 Wanakena 2 3 Field stations and forests 3 Academics 4 Research 5 Campus life 6 Gateway Center 7 Athletics 7 1 Cross country 7 2 Woodsmen 7 3 Club sports 7 4 Athletics history 8 Affiliation with Syracuse University 9 Traditions 10 Notable alumni 11 Environmental leadership 12 See also 13 References 14 External linksHistory editSee also History of the New York State College of Forestry Founding edit The New York State College of Forestry at Syracuse University was established on July 28 1911 through a bill signed by New York Governor John Alden Dix 9 The previous year Governor Charles Hughes had vetoed a bill authorizing such a college 10 Both bills followed the state s defunding in 1903 of the New York State College of Forestry at Cornell 11 12 Originally a unit of Syracuse University in 1913 the college was made a separate legal entity nbsp Hunter Mountain Twilight 1866 by Hudson River School artist Sanford Robinson Gifford showing the devastation wrought by years of tanbarking and logging Syracuse native and constitutional lawyer Louis Marshall with a summer residence at Knollwood Club on Saranac Lake and a prime mover for the establishment of the Adirondack and Catskill Forest Preserve New York became a Syracuse University Trustee in 1910 He confided in Chancellor James R Day his desire to have an agricultural and forestry school at the university 13 and by 1911 his efforts resulted in a New York State bill to fund the project the aforementioned appropriation bill signed by Governor Dix 14 Marshall was elected president of the college s board of trustees at its first meeting in 1911 at the time of his death eighteen years later he was still president of the board 15 nbsp Syracuse University College of Forestry Bray Hall The first dean of the college was William L Bray a Ph D graduate from the University of Chicago 16 botanist plant ecologist biogeographer and Professor of Botany at Syracuse University In 1907 he was made head of the botany department at Syracuse and in 1908 he started teaching a forestry course in the basement of Lyman Hall Bray was an associate of Gifford Pinchot who was the first Chief of the United States Forest Service 17 18 In 1911 in addition to assuming the deanship of forestry Bray organized the Agricultural Division at Syracuse University He remained at Syracuse until 1943 as chair of botany and Dean of the Syracuse Graduate School 19 In 1915 the same year that Dr Bray published The Development of the Vegetation of New York State he became one of the founding members along with Raphael Zon and Yale School of Forestry s second dean James W Toumey of the Ecological Society of America 20 In 1950 the 1917 activist wing of that Society formed today s The Nature Conservancy 21 22 Most of the professors in the early years of the College of Forestry at Syracuse and the Department of Forestry at Cornell s New York State College of Agriculture were educated in forestry at the Yale School of Forestry The forestry students at Syracuse but not at Cornell were referred to as stumpies by their classmates Fifty two students were enrolled in the school s first year the first 11 graduating two years later in 1913 23 Research at the college commenced in 1912 with a study of New York state firms using lumber including from which tree species and in what quantities citation needed Expansion edit In 1912 the college opened its Ranger School in Wanakena New York in the Adirondacks The college began enrolling women as early as 1915 but the first women to complete their degrees one majoring in landscape engineering and two in pulp and paper graduated in the late 1940s 24 In January 1930 Governor Franklin D Roosevelt recommending an allocation of 600 000 towards construction of the college s second building in honor of Louis Marshall recently deceased noted that under Marshall s leadership and the leadership of its late dean Franklin Moon the School of Forestry made giant strides until it became recognized as the premier institution of its kind in the United States 25 The cornerstone of Louis Marshall Memorial Hall was laid in 1931 by former Governor and presidential candidate Alfred E Smith who was elected to assume the presidency of the college s board of trustees citation needed Affiliation with SUNY edit With the formation of the State University of New York SUNY in 1948 the college became recognized as a specialized college within the SUNY system and its name was changed to State University College of Forestry at Syracuse University In 1972 the college s name was changed yet again to State University of New York College of Environmental Science and Forestry citation needed Unlike other state supported degree granting institutions which had been created at private institutions in New York State the New York State College of Forestry at Syracuse University was an autonomous institution not administratively part of Syracuse University In 2000 SUNY System Administration established ESF s primacy among the 64 SUNY campuses and contract colleges for development of new undergraduate degree programs in Environmental Science and Environmental Studies 26 Campuses editSyracuse edit nbsp Young Abe Lincoln on Horseback sculpture by Anna Hyatt Huntington on the ESF campus nbsp Autumn colors Bray Hall nbsp Centennial Hall ESF s main campus in Syracuse New York is where most academic administrative and student activity takes place The campus is made up of nine main buildings Baker Laboratory Named after Hugh P Baker dean of the college from 1912 to 1920 and again 1930 33 The building is the location of several computer clusters and auditorium style classrooms It is home to the Department of Environmental Resources Engineering and the Division of Environmental Science The building underwent a 37 million overhaul in the early 2000s providing updated space for the Tropical Timber Information Center and the Nelson C Brown Center for Ultrastructure Studies Baker Lab is the site of ESF s NASA affiliated Research Center Baker Laboratory houses two multimedia lecture halls a smart classroom outfitted for computer use and distance learning and two construction management and planning studios It also has a full scale laboratory for materials science testing including a modern dry kiln a wood identification laboratory shop facilities including portable sawmill and wood preservation laboratory 27 Bray Hall The building is the oldest on campus completed in 1917 the largest building devoted to Forestry at the time It is named after William L Bray a founder of the New York State College of Forestry at Syracuse University and its first dean 1911 1912 It is the location of most administrative offices and the Department of Sustainable Resources Management The State University Police department is in the basement Gateway Center The campus newest building opened in March 2013 sets a new standard for LEED buildings producing more renewable energy than it consumes according to Cornelius B Murphy Jr The building is designed to achieve LEED Platinum Certification 28 29 The ESF College Bookstore Trailhead Cafe and Office of Admissions are in the Gateway Center 30 Illick Hall The building was completed in 1968 and is home to the Department of Environmental and Forest Biology It is named after Joseph S Illick a dean of the State University College of Forestry at Syracuse University There is a large lecture hall Illick 5 on the ground floor Several greenhouses are on the fifth floor The Roosevelt Wildlife Museum is also in the building Jahn Laboratory Named after Edwin C Jahn former head of the New York State College of Forestry at Syracuse University The building was completed in 1997 Home to the Department of Chemistry Marshall Hall Named after Louis Marshall one of the founders of the New York State College of Forestry at Syracuse University The Alumni Nifkin Lounge and Marshall Auditorium are within Twin brass plaques commemorate the contributions of Marshall and his son alumnus Bob Marshall Home of the Department of Environmental Studies the Department of Landscape Architecture and the Division of General Education 31 Moon Library Dedicated to F Franklin Moon an early dean of the college Completed in 1968 along with Illick Hall A computer cluster and student lounge are in the basement Walters Hall Named after J Henry Walters who served on the college s board of trustees Completed in 1969 Home to the Department of Chemical Engineering The pilot plant in the building includes two paper machines and wood to ethanol processing equipment Centennial Hall ESF s on campus student dormitory commemorating the college s 100th anniversary The facility is capable of accommodating 280 300 freshman in double or triple studio rooms with private bath 116 upperclassmen in single bedroom suits with private bath and an additional 56 upperclassmen in 4 bedroom 2 bath apartments A 31 million project Centennial Hall opened in 2011 32 Bray Hall Marshall Hall Illick Hall and Moon Library border the quad Other buildings on the Syracuse campus include one for maintenance and operations a garage and a greenhouse converted to office space Among planned new buildings is a research support facility The historic Robin Hood Oak photo below is behind Bray Hall The tree is said to have grown from an acorn brought back by a faculty member from the Sherwood Forest in England It was the first tree listed on the National Registrar of Historic Trees in the United States citation needed nbsp Gateway Center nbsp Jahn Laboratory nbsp Illick Hall nbsp Baker Laboratory nbsp Marshall Hall nbsp Walters Hall nbsp Moon Library Wanakena edit nbsp SUNY ESF Ranger School Wanakena Main article SUNY ESF Ranger School Students in the forest and natural resources management curriculum may spend an academic year 48 credits or summer at the Ranger School in Wanakena New York earning an Associate of Applied Science A A S degree in forest technology surveying or environmental and natural resources conservation 33 The campus established in 1912 34 is on the east branch of the Oswegatchie River that flows into Cranberry Lake in the northwestern part of the Adirondack Park It includes the 3 000 acre 12 km2 James F Dubuar Memorial Forest named after a former director of the Ranger School 35 36 Field stations and forests edit New York nbsp Newcomb campus c 1973 nbsp Heiberg Forest classroom Tully Cranberry Lake The college s environmental and forest biology summer field program is at the Cranberry Lake Biological Station on Cranberry Lake in the Adirondack Park 37 Newcomb The Adirondack Ecological Center and Huntington Wildlife Forest a 15 000 acre 6 000 hectare field station in the central Adirondack Mountains are near Newcomb New York 38 The site includes the Arbutus Great Camp bunkhouses and a dining center among other facilities Syracuse The Lafayette Road Experiment Station is in the City of Syracuse 39 Thousand Islands The Thousand Islands Biological Station and Ellis International Laboratory are in the Thousand Islands New York Tully ESF s Tully Field Station and the Svend O Heiberg Memorial Forest a 3 800 acre 1 500 hectare research forest are in Tully New York 40 Warrensburg The Charles Lathrop Pack Demonstration Forest and NYS Department of Environmental Conservation s Environmental Education Camp are near Warrensburg New York Follensby Follensby Park the 14 600 acre property near Tupper Lake where Ralph Waldo Emerson held his historic philosophers camp The announcement was made during a virtual press conference on Tuesday February 13 2024 41 42 Costa Rica The Arturo and Maria Sundt Field Station ESF s first international field station is used for research and teaching A former farm it is near the town of Coyolito in the province of Guanacaste Costa Rica approximately one mile 1 6 km from the Gulf of Nicoya on the country s west coast 43 Academics editAcademic rankingsNationalForbes 44 330U S News amp World Report 45 115Washington Monthly 46 254 The ESF mission statement is to advance knowledge and skills and to promote the leadership necessary for the stewardship of both the natural and designed environments 47 ESF is a specialized institution of the State University of New York meaning that curricula focus primarily on one field the college s being environmental management and stewardship Students may supplement their education with courses taken at Syracuse University ESF has academic departments in the fields of chemistry environmental and forest biology environmental resources engineering environmental studies sustainable resources management landscape architecture and chemical engineering Environmental science programs offer students integrative degrees across the natural sciences 48 The admission rate for applicants to ESF is 70 percent Fall 2022 4 ESF is ranked at 58th in the 2023 US News amp World Report rankings of the top public national universities 49 50 Furthermore ESF is tied for 115th in the 2023 US News amp World Report list of the best National Universities both public and private 49 U S News amp World Report ranked ESF as 64th best graduate school in Environmental Environmental Health Engineering category in 2016 51 The Washington Monthly College Guide ranked ESF No 49 among the nation s top service oriented colleges and universities for 2012 and sixth in community service participation and hours served 52 nbsp Front entrance Marshall Hall Forbes Magazine ranked ESF 54 in its listing of America s Best College Buys for 2012 53 Forbes com has also ranked ESF at No 3 on its 2010 list of the 20 best colleges for women in science technology engineering and mathematics STEM ESF is listed at No 2 ahead of top programs like Duke Cornell and Yale among the best college environmental programs in the nation by Treehugger com a website devoted to sustainability and environmental news 54 In 2007 DesignIntelligence magazine ranked ESF s undergraduate and graduate programs in Landscape Architecture respectively at No 12 and No 9 in the United States 54 The Online College Database ranked ESF at No 6 on its list of 50 Colleges Committed to Saving the Planet for 2013 55 The ranking relates in part to one of the school s newest programs Sustainable Energy Management Launched in 2013 the program focuses on energy markets management and resources Global issues such as responsible energy use and development of sustainable energy sources are critical focal points in the STEM major 56 Research editESF is classified as a Carnegie R2 Doctoral Universities High Research Activity institution 57 The first research report published in 1913 by the College of Forestry was the result of the above noted USDA Forest Service supported study of the wood using industries of New York State 58 Since that time the research initiatives of the State University of New York College of Environmental Science and Forestry ESF have expanded greatly as faculty and students conduct pioneering studies many with a global reach 59 ESF researchers delve into topics well beyond the boundaries of central New York Recent international sites of research interest include Madagascar the Amazon floodplains Mongolia and the Galapagos Islands Vermont and the Sierra Nevada are other locales within the US where recent research has focused citation needed Current research efforts include the Willow Biomass Project and the American Chestnut Research and Restoration Project which produced the Darling 58 chestnut tree citation needed Campus life edit nbsp The Robin Hood Oak Q robur direct descendant of Major Oak of Sherwood Forest England 60 Many students identify themselves as a Stumpy or Stumpie The nickname was given to students by their neighbors at Syracuse University probably in the 1920s and most likely refers to forestry stump jumpers Although originally used as an insult today most students embrace the nickname with pride Students at the Syracuse campus enjoy many activities on and off campus There are a number of student clubs and organizations at ESF including the Mighty Oaks Student Assembly formerly United Students Association Graduate Student Association the Guy A Baldassare Birding Club the Student Environmental Education Coalition the Woodsmen Team Bob Marshall Club Alpha Xi Sigma Honor Society 61 Soccer Team Sigma Lambda Alpha The Knothole weekly newspaper Papyrus Club The Empire Forester yearbook Landscape Architecture Club formally the Mollet Club Forest Engineers Club Environmental Studies Student Organization Habitat for Humanity Ecologue yearly journal the Bioethics Society Green Campus Initiative Baobab Society and the Sustainable Energy Club Wanakena students have their own woodsmen and ice hockey teams A number of professional organizations are also open to student membership including the Society of American Foresters The Wildlife Society Conservation Biology club American Fisheries Association and the defunct American Water Resources Association ESF has an agreement with adjacent Syracuse University that allows ESF students to enjoy many amenities offered by SU ESF students take courses at their sister institution can apply for admission to concurrent degree and joint certificate programs and may join any SU organization except for NCAA sports teams SU students are also welcome to enroll in ESF classes Because of this students feel a certain degree of integration with the Syracuse University community Every May ESF holds a joint commencement ceremony with Syracuse University in the Carrier Dome ESF s baccalaureate diplomas bear the seals of the State University of New York and Syracuse University Students also enjoy a variety of shops restaurants museums and theaters in Syracuse and nearby Marshall Street and Westcott Street Gateway Center editESF has launched several programs within the confines of campus and other locations to reduce its carbon emissions The Gateway Center utilizes sustainable energy resources to generate power and heat utilized across the campus The building includes a state of the art combined heat and power CHP system producing 65 of campus heating needs along with 20 of its electrical needs The CHP system uses biomass to drive a steam turbine and produce electricity while natural gas is used for steam heating along with additional electricity It has been estimated this building alone is responsible for reducing ESF s carbon footprint by 22 62 nbsp The Gateway Center s green roof garden foreground Increased global awareness of global warming and reduced nonrenewable resources has driven ESF to invest in biomass Biomass is a renewable resource that draws light energy carbon dioxide and water from the environment in return oxygen is released 63 It can be harvested without negatively affecting the environment For this reason ESF launched a program to grow its own biomass known as the Willow Biomass Project Benefits of woody willow include high yields and fast growth times quick re sprouting and high heat energy is produced when burned Woody willow also increases habitat diversity significantly contributes to carbon neutrality 64 The Gateway Center was one of the final stages in the school s Climate Action Plan that encompasses the vision of carbon neutrality and reduced fossil fuel dependence by 2015 Currently the school rests in Phase III of the program and is on track to reach its goal Included in Phase III is the opening of The Gateway Center retrofits to Illick Hall and rooftop greenhouse replacement 65 One other advancement towards carbon neutrality can be seen on top of the campus s buildings Rooftop gardens provide reduced energy consumption and water runoff Shrubbery soil thickness and moisture content all can contribute to increased energy savings 66 Gateway and other buildings on campus utilize rooftop gardens to reduce energy consumption and water runoff Athletics editThe SUNY ESF athletic teams are called the Mighty Oaks The college is a member the United States Collegiate Athletic Association USCAA primary competing in the Hudson Valley Intercollegiate Athletic Conference HVIAC since about the 2004 05 academic year 67 ESF competes in 11 intercollegiate varsity sports Men s sports include basketball cross country golf soccer and track amp field while women s sports include cross country soccer and track amp field and co ed sports include bass fishing and timber sports Cross country edit The school s men s cross country team are six time USCAA national champions 2011 2014 2021 2022 The women s cross country team are three time USCAA national champions 2018 2021 2022 68 69 70 The men s soccer team was invited to the 2012 USCAA National Championship Tournament in Asheville North Carolina making it to the semifinals 71 Woodsmen edit ESF has a long tradition of competing in intercollegiate woodsmen competitions in the northeastern US and eastern Canada 72 The team came in first in both the men s and women s divisions of the northeastern US and Canadian 2012 spring meet 73 Students at the SUNY ESF Ranger School in Wanakena compete as the Blue Ox Woodsmen team 74 Club sports edit In addition to the intercollegiate USCAA and woodsman teams ESF students participate on club sports teams at both ESF and Syracuse University including ESF s competitive bass fishing team 75 76 77 and SU s quidditch team 78 79 Students at the Ranger School participate in the Ranger School Hockey Club 80 Athletics history edit In one notable part of the college s history Laurie D Cox professor of Landscape Architecture was responsible for establishing Syracuse University s renowned lacrosse program in 1916 including players from the New York State College of Forestry 81 Affiliation with Syracuse University editESF was founded in 1911 as the New York State College of Forestry at Syracuse University under the leadership of Syracuse University Trustee Louis Marshall with the active support of Syracuse University Chancellor Day Its founding followed several years after the cessation of state funding to the earlier New York State College of Forestry at Cornell 82 ESF is an autonomous institution administratively separate from Syracuse University while some resources facilities and infrastructure are shared 83 The two schools share a common Schedule of Classes students may take courses at both institutions and baccalaureate diplomas from ESF bear the Syracuse University seal along with that of the State University of New York A number of concurrent degree programs and certificates are offered between the schools ESF receives an annual appropriation as part of the SUNY budget and the state builds and maintains all of the college s educational facilities The state has somewhat similar financial and working relationships with five statutory colleges that are at Alfred University and Cornell University although unlike ESF these statutory institutions are legally and technically part of their respective host institutions and are administered by them as well ESF faculty students and students families join those from Syracuse University SU in a joint convocation ceremony at the beginning of the academic year in August and combined commencement exercises in May ESF and SU students share access to library resources recreational facilities student clubs and activities at both institutions except for the schools intercollegiate athletics teams affiliated with the USCAA and NCAA respectively 84 Traditions editThe best known tradition among ESF students is that walking across the quad is shunned The tradition which dates back to at least the early 1960s is intended to inhibit tracks from being worn into the lawn Hecklers have been known to yell and even tackle people walking across the quad However other activities such as frisbee and soccer are encouraged on the Quad Eustace B Nifkin ESF s previous mascot is an unofficial student He first appeared in the 1940s after a group of students summering in the Adirondacks thought him up Ever since he has appeared on class rosters written articles for The Knothole and sent mail to the college from around the world He has a girlfriend the lesser known Elsa S Freeborn SUNY granted him a bachelor s degree in 1972 The Alumni Lounge in Marshall Hall is dedicated to Nifkin Another well known legend is that of Chainer or Chainsaw who supposedly graduated in 1993 Traditional events include Earth Week events Spring Banquet December Soiree Friends and Family BBQ Coffee Haus Festival of Places Paper run Donut Hours Waste Audit Free Movies Nights Insomniacs Woodsmen Team Forestry Club ESF Day of Service Quadstock Music and Arts FestivalNotable alumni editMore than 19 000 have graduated from ESF since its founding in 1911 The college s Alumni Association was founded 14 years later in 1925 85 Notable alumni include Reginald E Balch MS 28 Canadian photographer and scientist Thomas Balsley BLA 68 founder and principal designer of Thomas Balsley Associates a New York City based landscape design firm Diana J Knight Bendz BS 68 an American polymer scientist and environmental and industrial engineer Bruce C Bongarten BS 73 former Provost and Vice President for Academic Affairs ESF Joseph Buongiorno MS 69 Class of 1933 Bascom Professor of Forest Economics University of Wisconsin Madison 86 Roger Donlon first man to receive the Medal of Honor in Vietnam Christopher Dunn BS 76 Director of Cornell Plantations 87 Ronald J Eby BS 69 PhD 74 National Medal of Technology award 2007 for his work in pediatric medicine A polysaccharide carbohydrate chemist whose career was devoted to vaccine development 88 Frank Edwin Egler plant ecologist and pioneer in the study of vegetation science Patrick Flood BS 74 Maine state legislator Sol Feinstone 15 historian businessman conservationist 89 Jean Frechet MS 69 PhD 71 Henry Rapoport Chair of Organic Chemistry and Professor of Chemical Engineering UC Berkeley Dendritic Polymers Dendrimers 90 2013 Japan Prize Laureate 91 His PhD student Will Dichtel professor of chemistry at Cornell earns MacArthur Genius Award 9 2015 92 Delfin Ganapin Jr PhD 87 Global Manager Global Environmental Facility Small Grants Program United Nations Development Program 93 William M Harlow BS 25 MS 26 PhD 28 SUNY ESF Professor in the field of wood technology Avery Yale Kamila American journalist vegan columnist and community organizer David Kaplan PhD 78 Director Cellular Agriculture Tufts University the only stand alone institute for Cellular Agriculture in the world 94 95 96 Edwin Ketchledge BS 49 Distinguished Teaching Professor of Botany and Dendrology ESF 97 98 99 Robin Wall Kimmerer BS 75 author of Gathering Moss A Natural and Cultural History of Mosses Professor of Biology and Director Center for Native Peoples ESF Michael Kudish PhD 71 author historian forester and professor Raymond Ray Leonard Ph D skipper of the ill fated sailboat S V Satori made famous in the book and movie The Perfect Storm a pioneering forest ecologist at Hubbard Brook Experimental Forest in W Thornton NH 100 Moshe Levy PhD 55 professor of chemistry discoverer of living polymerization and solar energy researcher Mark Marquisee in the seminal 1965 Science paper describing the structure of alanine transfer RNA linking DNA and protein synthesis for which Robert W Holley shared the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine in 1968 a member of his team was Mark Marquisee He graduated from SUNY ESF NYS College of Forestry in forest chemistry in either 1959 or 1960 coming to Cornell for his PhD in biochemistry 101 Bob Marshall BS 24 forester writer and wilderness activist Joe Martens MS 81 former Commissioner New York State Department of Environmental Conservation 102 Donald E Moore III BS PhD 76 animal behaviorist zoo based wildlife biologist associate director of Animal Care Sciences Smithsonian National Zoo Washington DC 103 James D Morrissey BS 58 first American to climb the east face of Mt Everest 104 Clarence Petty BS 30 forest ranger conservationist and outdoorsman Harry Frederick Recher ornithologist Bruce Shelley BS 70 computer game designer Sgt William Shemin Ranger School 1914 BS after the war Medal of Honor recipient for bravery in World War I 105 106 Earl Lewis Stone Jr BS 38 In 1948 he became the first endowed Charles Lathrop Pack Professor of forest soils at Cornell University Retired 1979 107 Lissa Widdoff BS 79 executive director Robert and Patricia Switzer Foundation 108 Environmental leadership editFrom soon after its founding ESF affiliated individuals have been responsible for establishing and leading prominent scientific and advocacy organizations around the world focused on the environment Others have provided leadership to governmental environmental agencies Adirondack Council 109 Clarence Petty 30 co founder 1975 director 110 111 Adirondack Park Agency Ross S Whaley former ESF President chair 2003 07 Association for the Protection of the Adirondacks Louis Marshall President ESF Board of Trustees trustee 112 Paul Schaefer Trustee and V P for 50 years 113 Ecological Society of America Dean William L Bray and Professor Charles C Adams co founders 1915 114 Finger Lakes Land Trust Summer 2011 Cornelius B Murphy Jr named to Advisory Council along with Lynn Leopold widow of A Carl Leopold Founding President 115 116 National Parks Association Bob Marshall 24 board member 1930s 117 The Nature Conservancy Dean William L Bray co founder 1950 Onondaga Environmental Institute Ed Michalenko PhD 91 President 118 Society of American Foresters Ross S Whaley former ESF President president 1991 119 Taiwan Environmental Action Network Wen ling Tu MS 96 co founder Union of Concerned Scientists Howard Bud Ris Jr MLA 75 executive director president 1984 2003 120 121 United States Society for Ecological Economics Dr Karin Limburg ESF faculty member president 2006 07 Dr Valerie Luzadis ESF faculty member president 2012 14 122 The Wilderness Society Bob Marshall 24 co founder 1935 123 124 See also editAdirondack High Peaks ESF s origins and inspiration Adirondack Park Agency visitor interpretive centers History of the New York State College of Forestry List of heads of the New York State College of Forestry Francois Andre Michaux laid the foundation for American forestry with his work The North American Sylva akin to John James Audubon The Birds of America 125 126 starting in 1811 References edit Office of Development Annual Investment Allocation Statement SUNY ESF 12 31 2022 Accessed November 23 2023 SUNY Board of Trustees Appoints Presidents at Old Westbury Upstate Medical and SUNY ESF Campuses SUNY News Release Nov 4 2020 Accessed 4 November 2020 Dr Samuel B Mukasa Joins ESF as Executive Vice President and Provost ESF website Nov 1 2021 Accessed 9 November 2021 a b College Navigator National Center for Education Statistics Accessed 19 September 2023 College of Environmental Science and Forestry SUNY edu website Accessed 23 November 2023 SUNY College of Environmental Science and Forestry National Center for Educational Statistics Accessed 23 November 2023 ESF s New Mascot Oakie Meets the Public ESF website Accessed 27 March 2019 Carnegie Classifications Institution Lookup carnegieclassifications iu edu Center for Postsecondary Education Retrieved 13 September 2020 Syracuse University October 1956 Relationship of the New York State College of Forestry at Syracuse University to Syracuse University College History Report Vol 5 p 10 Retrieved 17 February 2021 Rodgers A D Liberty Hyde Bailey A Story of American Plant Sciences Princeton NJ Princeton University Press 1949 Department of Natural Resources History 2007 10 07 Archived from the original on October 7 2007 Retrieved 2012 11 01 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint unfit URL link Roots of American Forestry Education PDF Foresthistory org Retrieved 2016 07 17 Syracuse University Archives Exhibits SUNY ESF and SU 100 Years of Collaboration 1900 1919 Archives syr edu Archived from the original on 2012 03 15 Retrieved 2012 11 01 Herbert Alpert 2008 11 03 Louis Marshall 1856 1929 iUniverse p 36 ISBN 978 0 595 48230 6 Louis Marshall Champion of Liberty selected papers and addresses in 2 volumes edited by Charles Reznikoff 1957 Jewish Publication Society Philadelphia PA American Environmental Photographs 1891 1936 Ecology and the American Environment American Memory from the Library of Congress Memory loc gov Retrieved 2012 11 01 William L Bray 1904 Forest resources of Texas U S Dept of Agriculture Bureau of Forestry p 1 The Knothole Student Life and Government April 4 2008 Volume 61 Issue 9 Retrieved on October 23 2009 Chrono Biographical Sketch William Bray A Biographical History of Biogeography by Charles H Smith Ph D Joshua Woleben and Carubie Rodgers Retrieved on October 23 2009 The Ecological Society of America s History and Records by the ESA Historical Records Committee Esa org Retrieved 2016 07 17 New York Nature Conservation Environment Issues The Nature Conservancy Nature org Archived from the original on 2010 03 25 Retrieved 2012 11 01 Conservation amp Green News The Nature Conservancy Nature org Retrieved 2012 11 01 ESF 2008 Alumni Directory 100th Anniversary Edition Syracuse NY p 455 A History of ESF ESF website Retrieved on October 26 2009 Adler Cyrus Louis Marshall A Biographical Sketch American Jewish Year Book 1930 31 pp 54 55 Peter D Salins Guidelines for Consideration of New Undergraduate Degree Programs in Environmental Science Studies PDF Retrieved 2009 07 09 ESF s Baker Laboratory Revamped for Engineering ESF Office of Communications Retrieved on October 23 2009 SUNY ESF Breaks Ground for Gateway Building Esf edu Retrieved 2012 11 01 Gateway Building with webcam ESF Accessed June 24 2012 The Gateway Center ESF website Accessed October 3 2015 Marshall Hall ESF website Accessed 26 October 2020 Centennial Hall Retrieved 3 October 2013 Suny ESF Improve Your World The Ranger School PDF Esf edu Retrieved 2016 07 17 Ranger School Celebrates Its 100th ESF August 6 2012 Accessed August 6 2012 SUNY ESF SUNY College of Environmental Science and Forestry The Ranger School Esf edu 2011 09 24 Retrieved 2012 11 01 James F Dubuar Forest Adirondack North Country Association 2011 Accessed June 24 2012 SUNY ESF Cranberry Lake Biological Station Esf edu Retrieved 2012 11 01 Adirondack Ecological Center ESF website Retrieved on October 23 2009 Lafayette Road Experiment Station SUNY College of Environmental Science and Forestry Archived from the original on July 17 2016 Retrieved August 13 2016 Svend O Heiberg Memorial Forest and Tully Field Station SUNY College of Environmental Science and Forestry Retrieved August 13 2016 Nature Conservancy state reach Follensby compromise 13 February 2024 Follensby Pond Transforms Conservation Again ESF in Costa Rica Esf edu Retrieved 2012 11 01 Forbes America s Top Colleges List 2023 Forbes Retrieved September 22 2023 2023 2024 Best National Universities U S News amp World Report Retrieved September 22 2023 2023 National University Rankings Washington Monthly Retrieved February 10 2024 ESF Mission amp Vision ESF website Retrieved on October 23 2009 Academic Departments Retrieved 3 October 2013 a b National University Rankings u Top National Universities u US News Best Colleges u page 7 Retrieved 2022 09 14 SUNY College of Environmental Science and Forestry SUNY Environmental Science and Forestry Best College US News Colleges usnews rankingsandreviews com Retrieved 2023 09 19 Top Environmental Environmental Health Engineering Programs US Graduate School Rankings Best Engineering Schools in USA 2017 Tuition Education Rankings www university list net National University Service Rankings 2012 Washington Monthly Archived 2012 10 06 at the Wayback Machine Accessed September 22 2012 The Forbes Top 100 Best Buy Colleges 2012 Accessed September 10 2012 a b Rankings and Ratings ESF Accessed September 10 2012 50 Colleges Committed to Saving the Planet Online College Database Archived from the original on October 1 2013 Retrieved 3 October 2013 Undergraduate Student Handbook for The Department Forest and Natural Resources Management PDF SUNY ESF FNRN Department 2013 p 32 SUNY College of Environmental Science and Forestry The Carnegie Classification of Institutions of Higher Education Accessed 6 February 2019 Wood Using Industries of New York Bul Syracuse Univ Series XIV No 2 213 pp 1913 Retrieved 12 September 2014 Kocak Paul 2011 The World is Their Lab PDF InsideESF Centennial Edition 18 21 Retrieved 12 September 2014 Interpretive sign ESF Alpha Xi Sigma Honor Society ESF website Accessed August 18 2013 The Gateway Center Retrieved 3 October 2013 Liu Shijie Abrahamson L Scott G 2012 Biorefinery Ensuring biomass as a sustainable renewable source of chemicals materials and energy Biomass and Bioenergy 39 April 1 4 Bibcode 2012BmBe 39 1L doi 10 1016 j biombioe 2010 12 042 The Willow Biomass Project Retrieved 4 October 2013 Heavey Justin Kelleher Michael 2009 Climate Action Plan for SUNY ESF Department of Renewable Energy Systems p 6 21 Wong N H Cheonga D Yana H Soha J Ongb C Siab C May 2003 The effects of rooftop garden on energy consumption of a commercial building in Singapore Energy and Buildings 35 4 353 364 doi 10 1016 s0378 7788 02 00108 1 HVIAC Members HVIAC website Accessed October 1 2015 ESF Mighty Oaks Men Win National Cross Country Championship November 11 2011 Accessed May 18 2012 Mighty Oaks Men Run to Second National Championship November 9 2012 Accessed November 13 2012 Mighty Oaks Men s Cross Country Team Are Third time National Champs ESF website Accessed December 14 2013 Mighty Oaks Fall in Soccer Semifinal November 2 2012 Accessed November 13 2012 Castello y Tickell Sofia October 15 2012 Woodsmen s teams practice a sport that is less run of the mill USA Today Archived from the original on 17 October 2012 Retrieved 17 October 2012 ESF Men s Women s Teams Win Timber Sports Spring Meet Accessed May 18 2012 Blue Ox News Newsletter Ranger School Alumni Association Winter 2011 12 Accessed August 18 2013 Alwis Anjali 2014 September 30 SUNY ESF fishing team founded by student attains success in first year Daily Orange Accessed October 1 2014 Figuera David October 28 2014 SUNY ESF joins the growing college bass fishing circuit with its first ever team The Post Standard Retrieved October 29 2014 Schonbrun Zach October 18 2014 Collegiate Fishing s Added Lure Cash on the Line New York Times pp A1 ff Retrieved October 19 2014 ESF Students Score with SU Quidditch Team ESF website Accessed December 11 2013 Quidditch Tournament Benefits Local Charities ESF website Accessed April 18 2015 The Ranger School Hockey Club ESF website Accessed August 18 2013 Herron Frank June 27 2004 Cox began lacrosse legacy at Syracuse The Post Standard Syracuse NY Archived from the original on October 23 2012 Retrieved 2009 01 15 Education amp Agriculture A History of the NYS College of Agriculture at Cornell University 1963 by Gould P Colman page 161 Cornell University Press Syracuse University Archives Exhibits SUNY ESF and SU 100 Years of Collaboration Archives syr edu Archived from the original on 2013 02 06 Retrieved 2012 11 01 The ESF SU Relationship State University of New York Retrieved 2008 09 18 Alumni ESF Alumni website Accessed 21 June 2018 Joseph Buongiorno Department of Forest and Wildlife Ecology UW Madison Fwe wisc edu Archived from the original on 2012 03 01 Retrieved 2012 11 01 Plantations appoints botanist from Hawaii as director Cornell Chronicle News cornell edu 2014 02 05 Retrieved 2016 07 17 Suny Esf Web Esf edu Retrieved 2016 07 17 Archived copy PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2012 07 07 Retrieved 2012 06 24 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Welcome to the Frechet Group Frechet cchem berkeley edu Archived from the original on 2012 11 01 Retrieved 2012 11 01 Tobin Dave 2013 January 30 SUNY ESF alumnus Jean Frechet wins Japan Prize Syracuse com Accessed January 31 2013 ByBlaine Friedlander 2015 09 29 Chemist Will Dichtel earns MacArthur Genius Award Cornell Chronicle News cornell edu Retrieved 2016 07 17 Delfin Ganapin Jr ESF Accessed August 3 2012 Faculty and Staff Tufts University Center for Cellular Agriculture After years of promise cell based meat is moving from the lab to dinner plates the Boston Globe The Boston Globe David Kaplan Named Fellow of the National Academy of Inventors Tufts Now 12 December 2023 Mary Thill July 2010 Remembering Ketch Educator and Conservationist The Adirondack Almanack Retrieved 2012 11 01 Adirondack Daily Enterprise Dr Edwin H Ketchledge AdirondackDailyEnterprise com News Sports Jobs Saranac Lake region Adirondack Daily Enterprise AdirondackDailyEnterprise com Retrieved 2012 11 01 Research in High Peaks Led to Protection of Alpine Vegetation Esf edu 2011 01 08 Retrieved 2012 11 01 Raymond Leonard Obituary Fort Myers FL The News Press Legacy com Retrieved 2016 07 17 Robert W Holley Biography USDA Retrieved September 11 2021 Joe Martens Commissioner of the New York Department of Environmental Conservation ESF n d Accessed January 15 2013 Don Moore Archived 2013 05 23 at the Wayback Machine Smithsonian National Zoological Park Accessed March 11 2013 ESF ESF Facts and Stats Accessed May 18 2012 Stern Andrew 2015 06 02 Two from World War I to get Medal of Honor CNNPolitics com Cnn com Retrieved 2016 07 17 Almost 100 years after World War I William Shemin s Medal of Honor reunites two families syracuse com 8 June 2015 Retrieved 2016 07 17 Cornell Chronicle Earl Stone obituary News cornell edu 2008 02 19 Retrieved 2012 11 01 1 Archived February 7 2009 at the Wayback Machine About the Adirondack Council Adirondackcouncil org Archived from the original on 2012 07 30 Retrieved 2012 11 01 Hevesi Dennis December 6 2009 Clarence Petty Protector of the Adirondacks Dies at 104 The New York Times Retrieved May 24 2010 Adirondack Inspiration Clarence Petty NYS Dept of Environmental Conservation Dec ny gov Retrieved 2012 11 01 Graham Frank Jr 1978 The Adirondack Park A Political History New York Alfred A Knopf p 147 Defender of the Wilderness NYS Dept of Environmental Conservation Dec ny gov Retrieved 2012 11 01 ESA History Officers Esa org 1926 08 18 Archived from the original on 2012 09 18 Retrieved 2012 11 01 Archived copy Archived from the original on 2012 03 28 Retrieved 2011 07 31 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Finger Lakes Land Trust Welcome to the Finger Lakes Land Trust Fllt org 2012 09 24 Retrieved 2012 11 01 Sutter Paul S 2002 Driven Wild How the Fight against Automobiles Launched the Modern Wilderness Movement Seattle University of Washington Press p 231 Onondaga Environmental Institute Archived from the original on 2009 12 05 Retrieved 2010 02 25 Archived copy PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2010 06 13 Retrieved 2009 11 15 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Suny Esf Web Esf edu Retrieved 2016 07 17 Archived copy PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2009 11 03 Retrieved 2009 11 15 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Board Uvm edu Retrieved 2016 07 17 Shabecoff Philip 2003 A Fierce Green Fire The American Environmental Movement Washington Island Press p 81 The Wilderness Society 75 years of saving America s wild heritage The Wilderness Society Wilderness org Retrieved 2012 11 01 North American sylva or A description of the forest trees of the United States Canada and Nova Scotia considered particularly with respect to their use in the arts and their introduction into commerce to which is added a description of the most use NYPL Digital Collections Retrieved 17 July 2016 Thomas Nuttall North American Sylva First Edition Bauman Rare Books Retrieved 2012 11 01 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to SUNY ESF Official website Official athletics website 43 02 05 N 76 08 08 W 43 034793 N 76 135475 W 43 034793 76 135475 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title State University of New York College of Environmental Science and Forestry amp oldid 1209452843, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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