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*[[Frances Beinecke]], President, [[Natural Resources Defense Council]]; member, [[National Commission on the BP Deepwater Horizon Oil Spill and Offshore Drilling]] (2010)
*[[Frances Beinecke]], President, [[Natural Resources Defense Council]]; member, [[National Commission on the BP Deepwater Horizon Oil Spill and Offshore Drilling]] (2010)
*[[Richard M. Brett]], conservationist
*[[Richard M. Brett]], conservationist
*[[William Wallace Covington]],Regents Professor, Northern Arizona University; Director of the [[Ecological Restoration Institute]]
*[[William B. Greeley]], Chief, U.S. Forest Service, 1920–1928
*[[William B. Greeley]], Chief, U.S. Forest Service, 1920–1928
*[[Ralph Hosmer]], pioneering Hawaiian forester
*[[Ralph Hosmer]], pioneering Hawaiian forester

Revision as of 19:42, 15 September 2011

Yale School of Forestry & Environmental Studies
Yale School of Forestry & Environmental Studies
Established1900 — oldest continuously operating forestry/environmental school in the United States, and also the oldest post-graduate forestry program in the US
DeanSir Peter Crane
Location, ,
Websitehttp://www.environment.yale.edu

The Yale School of Forestry & Environmental Studies (F&ES) is one of the graduate professional schools of Yale University. Founded to train foresters, it now trains leaders and creates new knowledge that will sustain and restore the health of the biosphere and the well-being of its people. Still offering forestry instruction, the school has the oldest graduate forestry program in the United States.

History

Yale School of Forestry class of 1904

The School was founded in 1900 as the Yale Forest School, to provide high-level forestry training suited to American conditions. At the urging of Yale alumnus Gifford Pinchot, his parents endowed the two-year postgraduate program. At the time Pinchot was serving as Bernhard Fernow's successor as Chief of the Division of Forestry (predecessor of the USFS). Pinchot released two foresters from the Division to start the School: fellow Yale graduate Henry Solon Graves and J.W. Toumey.[1] Graves became the School's first dean and Toumey its second.

When the School opened, other places in the United States offered forestry training, but none had a post-graduate program. (Both Pinchot and Graves had gone to Europe to study forestry after graduating from Yale.[2]) In the fall of 1900, the New York State College of Forestry at Cornell had 24 students, Biltmore Forest School 9, and Yale 7.[3] Despite its small size, from its beginnings the School influenced American forestry. The first two chiefs of the USFS were Pinchot and Graves; the next three were graduates from the School's first decade. Wilderness and land conservation advocate Aldo Leopold graduated in the class of 1908.

In, 1915, Yale School of Forestry's second dean, James W. Toumey, became one of the "charter members", along with William L. Bray of the New York State College of Forestry, by then reestablished at Syracuse University, and Raphael Zon, of the Ecological Society of America.[4] In 1950, the 1917 "activist wing" of that society formed today's The Nature Conservancy.

The school changed its name to the Yale School of Forestry & Environmental Studies in 1972. The school's newest dean is Sir Peter Crane, the English evolutionary biologist who formerly served as Director of the Royal Botanic Gardens at Kew, London.

School buildings

Kroon Hall, as seen from Prospect Street

The School offers classes at Kroon Hall, Sage Hall, Greeley Labs, Marsh Hall, the Environmental Science Center, the houses at 301 Prospect St. and 380 Edwards St., and teaches the Yale College undergraduate courses needed for the Environmental Studies major. Kroon Hall, the School's flag-ship building, is named for the Philanthropist Richard Kroon (Yale Class of 1964). The building has 50,000 square feet (5,000 m2) of space and is "a showcase of the latest developments in green building technology, a healthy and supportive environment for work and study, and a beautiful building that actively connects students, faculty, staff, and visitors with the natural world." The building obtained Platinum Rating under the LEED certification system.[5] It is designed by Hopkins Architects of London with Architect of Record Centerbrook Architects.

Degree programs

The School currently grants the following degrees: Master of Environmental Management (MEM); Master of Environmental Science (MESc); Master of Forestry (MF); and Master of Forest Science (MFS). One-year, mid-career MEM and MF options are available for environmental professionals with at least 7 years of relevant work experience. Additionally, a program is available for Yale College undergraduates in which a bachelor's degree in the College and a master's degree from the School can be earned in five years. The School also offers joint-degree programs with the Yale School of Architecture, Yale Divinity School, Yale Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, Yale Law School, Yale School of Management, Yale School of Public Health, Pace University School of Law, and Vermont Law School. A new joint program with the Universidad de los Andes in Bogota, Colombia will commence in 2012.

A Doctor of Philosophy (Ph.D.), officially administered by the Yale Graduate School of Arts & Sciences, is also offered at Yale F&ES.

Summer sessions of the School were held on the Pinchot estate, Grey Towers, in Milford from 1901 to 1926. (The site is now Grey Towers National Historic Landmark.)

Centers and programs

School forest

The School owns and manages 10,880 acres (44 km2) of forestland in Connecticut, New Hampshire, and Vermont. The Yale-Myers Forest, in Union, Connecticut, donated to Yale in 1930 by alumnus George Hewitt Myers, is managed by the school as a multiple-use working forest. Yale-Toumey Forest, near Keene, New Hampshire, was set up by James W. Toumey (a former dean of the School) in 1913. Other Yale forestlands include Goss Woods, Crowell Forest, Cross Woods, Bowen Forest, and Crowell Ravine.[2]

Student groups

The school has an active tradition of student involvement in academic and extracurricular life. Many students take part in student interest groups, which organize events around environmental issues of interest to them. There are also purely social and recreational groups, such as the Forestry Club, which organizes Friday "TGIF" ("Thank-God-I'm-a-Forester") happy hours and school parties; the Polar Bear club, which swims monthly in Long Island Sound under the full moon (year-round); Veggie Dinner, which is a weekly vegetarian dinner club; the Loggerrhythms, an a capella singing group; and the student-run BYO Café in Kroon Hall opened in 2010.[6]


Notable graduates

References

  1. ^ "The History of Forestry in America", page 710, by W.N. Sparhawk (a Yale graduate) in Trees: Yearbook of Agriculture, 1949. Washington, D.C. Available: http://www.archive.org/stream/treesyearbookofa00unitrich.
  2. ^ Pinchot, G., Breaking New Ground, p.152 (1998 commemorative edition), Google book search
  3. ^ "The History of Forestry in America", page 710, by W.N. Sparhawk(a Yale graduate) in Trees: Yearbook of Agriculture,1949. Washington,D.C.
  4. ^ http://www.esa.org/history/peopleid.php
  5. ^ [1]
  6. ^ Henderson, Drew, "Kroon opens student café", Yale Daily News, February 18, 2010. References just the singing group and the café. Retrieved 2011-01-29.

External links