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FHS Board of Directors
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is the managing partner of Lehmann, Ullman and Barclay LLP. He graduated from the University of Alabama with a Bachelor's degree in Commerce and Business Administration (Accounting). Henry was employed by an international accounting firm then joined Lehmann, Ullman and Barclay LLP in 1971 and became a partner in 1974. He is a member of the Forest Landowners' Association, the American Institute of Certified Public Accountants, the Alabama Society of Certified Public Accountants and its Birmingham Chapter. Henry is also chairman of the board of the Forest Landowners Tax Council. |
Lisa M. Brady
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is Associate Professor, Department of History at Boise State University where she has been since 2003. Much of her teaching, research, publications, and presentations have involved environmental history associated with war or other military actions, ranging from the Civil War to Korea in the 20th century. She teaches courses on history and environmental history of the United States and the world, and her lectures and presentations have included the topics of conservation and natural disasters. At the University of Sidney, she examined the political and ecological aspects of the wood chipping debate that surrounded Australia's pulp and paper related timber industry. |
Hayes Brown
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is a practicing attorney in Birmingham AL and has a forest management degree from Auburn University. He has represented private forest owners on a wide variety of legal matters including land title, timber sales, acquisition and business formation. He also has represented forest industry, timber management organizations, family businesses, registered foresters and forestry consultants. For many years, he has served as general counsel for the Alabama Forest Owners Association. The mission of the Association is to be the advocate for forest owners and to keep members well informed on all things related to forest ownership. Since 2000, he has been the host of frequent audio conferences interviewing experts on topical issues in forest management. |
Michael Clutter
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is Professor of Forest Finance and Dean of the Warnell School of Forestry and Natural Resources at the University of Georgia in Athens. Michael received a B.S. in Forest Resources from Mississippi State University in 1981, a Master's in Forest Resources from the University of Georgia in 1983, and earned his Ph.D. in 1991 from the University of Georgia. His research interests include the changing nature of forest ownership over time, the use of capital budgeting techniques by timberland investors, and the application of growth and yield techniques to inventory projection. |
Vivian Day
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is the granddaughter of F.K. Weyerhaeuser who on behalf of the Weyerhaeuser family, made a contribution to the Minnesota Historical Society that established the Forest History Society, and daughter of Lynn and Stan Day who were long-time supporters of the Society. She graduated from Miss Porter's School in Farmington, CT and then received a Bachelors degree in the History of Art from Richmond, The American International University in London. In addition to serving on the Board of Directors of Richmond, she serves on a variety of other boards and civic organizations including Bon Secours Cottage Health Services, University Liggett School, the Community Foundation of Southeastern Michigan and the Michigan Environmental Council. |
Frank A. Dottori
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retired as CEO of Tembec, Inc. January 2006 after 32 years of service. He had formed Tembec with three other executives in 1973 to acquire a shutdown pulpmill and the company went on to become a large global forest products company with 55 mills in North America, Europe and South America, 10,000 employees and assets of approximately four billion dollars. Dr. Dottori currently serves as Chair of the Canadian Pulp and Paper Research Institute (Paprican) and a Director of FP Innovation, a new R&D Association of Paprican, Feric and Forintek He is Vice-chair of Habitat for Humanity Canada, Director of Rainforest Alliance and an Advisor on the David Suzuki National Business Advisory Board. He has received numerous awards, the most notable being the Order of Canada received in 1989. He has also received 4 honary doctorate degrees. He currently works as an independent business consultant. |
Thomas R. Dunlap
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is professor of history at Texas A&M University and thrice winner of FHS awards for scholarship in the field of forest and conservation history. He has served on the Board of the American Society for Environmental History and authored DDT: Scientists, Citizens and Public Policy and Saving America's Wildlife. Tom received a B.A. in Chemistry from Lawrence University in 1965, a M.A. in history from the University of Kansas in 1972, and a Ph.D. in history from the University of Wisconsin-Madison in 1975. He served in the U.S. Army from 1968-1970. From 1975 to 1991 he served from Assistant Professor to Professor of History at VPI&SU and since 1991 at Texas A&M as Professor. He was a previous Director of FHS Board from 1990 - 1998 and served as Chair from 1997-1998. |
James J. Farrell
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retired as Assistant Deputy Minister of the Canadian Forest Service (CFS), Natural Resources Canada. Prior to his appointment in March 2007, he was Director General of the Policy, Economics and Industry Branch. Jim joined the federal public service in 1983 as the senior forestry officer in Saskatchewan. He later became Director of Forestry Development for Ontario, where he was responsible for federal-provincial programs and for research and development programs in forest-landscape management, fire management, forest health and climate change. Before joining the public service, he worked with Abitibi Paper Company in Manitoba and Ontario, supervising forestry operations, and buying and selling logs for company mills. He also worked with the Ontario Ministry of Natural Resources in Toronto. Jim is Vice-President of the Ontario Forestry Association and graduated from the University of Toronto with a Bachelor of Science in Forestry. |
J. Carter Fox
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retired in 1998 as Chairman, President, and Chief Executive Officer of Chesapeake Corporation, having spent 35 years with the company in various positions from maintenance helper to controller to senior vice-president and assistant treasurer. He received a B.S. in Physics-Engineering in 1961 from Washington and Lee University and an MBA from University of Virginia - Colgate, Darden School of Business Administration. He has previously served as a Director of Crestar Financial Corporation, the New York Stock Exchange, Shaw, McLeod, Belser and Hurlbutt, Inc, and as Chairman of the American Forest & Paper Association and as a Trustee of the Chesapeake Foundation. He is currently a Director of American Forest Management, Inc. and serves on the Board of the American Forest Foundation. |
Sara Gregg
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teaches environmental history at the University of Kansas. She holds a Ph.D. in U. S. History from Columbia University, and her research interests include environmental, agricultural, and political history. She has written a book on federal conservation planning in Appalachia, entitled Managing the Mountains: Land Use Planning, the New Deal, and the Creation of a Federal Landscape in Appalachia, and co-editing an anthology of agrarian writing entitled American Georgics:
Writings on Farming, Culture, and the Land, both of which were published by Yale University Press. |
Robert G. Healy
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retired in 2007 after serving as Professor of Resource and Environmental Policy at the Nicholas School of the Environment at Duke University since 1987. Bob teaches courses in land-use policy and in U.S. and international environmental policy. His interests include land use policy in rapidly growing areas, environmental policy in developing countries, interactions between conservation and economic development, tourism planning and policy, national park policy, regional development and spatial policy in Canada and Mexico. He received a B.A. (1965) in Economics and English, and an M.A. (1968) and Ph.D. (1972) in Economics, all from UCLA. From 1975 to 1987 he was a Senior Associate at the Conservation Foundation. He has served as an economist for the Urban Institute and a research associate for Resources for the Future. He also has served as Director of Duke's Center for International Studies and its Center for North American Studies. |
Joy N. Hodges
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serves as Managing Partner for family owned enterprises including Hodges Natural Resources and Hodges Land Management and is a Director and Vice President of W.H. Hodges and Co., Inc. Additionally she was a board member of the National Livestock Marketing Association. She served as a Director of Rapides Bank and Trust Company and as a member of the Community Advisory Board for Bank One. Presently, she is a board member of the Willwoods Foundation, and has received the Servus Fidelis Award. She is a member of the Board of the Forest Landowners' Association, and the Louisiana Forestry Association, where she served consecutive terms as the first female president and was named the First Lady of Louisiana Forestry. |
Douglas Hutton
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is President of the Hutton Group Media Corporation, a New York company and King Motion Picture Corporation; a family owned Alberta Company since 1983. Mr. Hutton is a Writer, Producer and Director. He has experienced a long and successful career in the television and music production business. Over the past 30 years, his 301 television credits include various international series, 120 programs on Canadian history and many programs featuring the cultural and natural heritage of North and South America. In 1990, he created and produced a television series entitled "This Living World" and was the founder of This Living World Nature Trust, dedicated to promoting a strong world-wide conservation ethic and helping fund the purchase of sensitive wildlife habitat with a group of conservancy partners that includes Nature Conservancy Canada; Alberta Sport, Recreation, Parks and Wildlife Foundation; Saskatchewan Watershed Authority; North American Migratory Bird Fund; and the Manitoba Habitat Heritage Corporation. In 2005, Douglas produced and directed "Alberta - A Centennial Forest History" the first Canadian program to be broadcast in HD on Global Television Network. |
L. Michael Kelly
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is president of Forest Investment Associates in Atlanta. During his eighteen years with the company, he has served as Management Forester, Vice President and Director of Timberland Management, and Executive Vice President. Michael graduated from Auburn University in 1979 with a B.S. in forestry and also holds an M.B.A. from the University of South Alabama (1987). He is a certified forester and a registered forester in five states. |
Mark Kuhlberg
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is an Associate Professor of History at Laurentian University in Sudbury, Ontario. His book, One Hundred Rings and Counting: Forestry and Forestry Education in Toronto and Canada, was published in 2009. He received his bachelor's degree in Political Science with a minor in History from the University of Toronto and his master's in History and Ph.D. in Canadian, American and Canadian Constitutional Law and Politics from York University. |
L. Keville Larson
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is Chairman of the Board of Larson & McGowin, Inc. After receiving a B.A. in Geography from Stanford University in 1959 and a Master of Forestry degree from Yale in 1961 Keville worked as a forester and manager for Pomeroy & McGowin Forest Service Company through 1968. From 1968-1973 he served as vice president and from 1974-1999 as president, treasurer, and owner of Larson & McGowin, Inc. |
David Louter
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is History Program Manager for the Pacific West Region of the National Park Service. He received his B.A. in Liberal Arts from the University of Montana in 1988, and his M.A. in History in 1991 and his Ph.D. in History in 2000 from the University of Washington. He has worked for the National Park Service for twenty years, and directs research for national parks and provides assistance to historic preservation partners from the Pacific Coast to the Pacific Islands. His particular interest is environmental history not only for the perspective it brings to environmental change but also for the opportunities it offers for working with scientists on complex issues such as climate change. He is the author of Windshield Wilderness: Cars, Roads and Nature in Washington 's National Parks, published by the University of Washington Press in 2006. |
Douglas W. MacCleery
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is known for his work and writings on historical development of forests and forest policies in the United States. His USDA/Forest Service background includes field forester, Deputy Assistant Secretary for Natural Resources and the Environment and member of numerous committees for the review or analysis of policies ad strategies concerning forest resources. He has experience in the private sector as a policy analyst for the National Forest Products Association in Washington DC and has done international forestry work. His focus on environmental history has been to seek to highlight how the relationship between humans and their forests has evolved over the years and on the lessons this experience provides that are relevant to future forest conservation. |
Stuart J. (Scott) McCampbell
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is a General Partner of The Lyme Timber Company. Scott received his B.S. in Economics from Trinity College and did graduate work at Columbia University. He joined Lyme in 1986 and directs the timberland investment program. Prior to joining Lyme, Scott was with the American Paper Institute (now AF&PA) for ten years as manager of its largest division working with forest products CEOs on industry policy and economic and trade matters. He has a 35-year perspective on forests as an investment class. Mr. McCampbell is a resident of Hanover, NH and is active in local conservation activities, having served for six years on the Board of the Upper Valley Land Trust. |
Tony Melchiors
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is the Director of Timberlands Environmental Forestry Research for Weyerhaeuser Company. He earned B.S. (Wildlife Science) and M.S. (Wildlife Ecology) degrees from Purdue University, and then worked briefly for the West Virginia Division of Wildlife Resources in 1976. Tony has been employed by Weyerhaeuser Company since 1977 in both the Southeast U.S. and the Pacific Northwest in various positions as a scientist and manager, responsible for environmental research and technical support programs in Timberlands Technology. He has cooperated with numerous agencies, universities, and conservation organizations on forestry-wildlife research studies and biodiversity conservation projects. Tony currently chairs the Conservation & Biodiversity Subcommittee of the American Forest & Paper Association and the Industry Committee of Partners in Flight (U.S.), a North American bird conservation initiative. |
Edward W. (Ned) Phares
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is the Academic Advisor for the Criminal Justice Studies Program at the University of Georgia. After serving in the United States Marine Corps as a Signals Intelligence Analyst, he earned his B.A. degree in Political Science and Philosophy from Montana State University. He has served as an Elder in the Presbyterian Church, as a Cubmaster and Scoutmaster with the Boy Scouts of America and as a trustee for Athens Academy and for the Weyerhaeuser Family Foundation. |
Bond Starker
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is President of Starker Forests, Inc., a family-owned business that holds approximately 60,000 acres of forest land in Benton, Lincoln, Lane, and Polk counties in Oregon. Like his grandfather, father and brother Bart, Bond is graduate forester of Oregon State University. Starker Forests maintains a perpetual forest for both public and private use through reforestation and sound forest conservation practices. |
Peter R. Stein
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joined The Lyme Timber Company in 1990 and provides leadership in the development and structuring of conservation-oriented forestland and rural land purchases and dispositions. Peter also manages the Company's conservation advisory business. Prior to joining the Company, Peter was Senior Vice President of the Trust for Public Land (TPL) where he directed TPL's conservation real estate acquisitions in the Northeast and Midwest. He is a member of the Board of Advisors of the Appalachian Mountain Club and serves on the Boards of Island Press and the Hubbard Brook Research Foundation. Peter earned a B.A. with Highest Honors from the University of California at Santa Cruz in 1975 and a Certificate in Advanced Environmental Studies from Harvard University in 1981. |
Allison Stewart
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is director of the Grey Towers National Historic Site in Milford, Pennsylvania. Prior to moving to Milford
Stewart served as the national press officer of the U. S. Forest Service in the Washington, D.C., headquarters. From 2000 to 2007
she managed nearly 300,000 acres of national forest as district ranger in San Bernardino National Forest.
Before joining the Forest Service, Stewart enjoyed a career on Capitol Hill, working for a member of Congress from Washington state for 12 years. |
Jeffrey K. Stine
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is Curator of Environmental History and Chair of the Division of Medicine and Science at the Smithsonian Institution's National Museum of American History. He earned his B.A., M.A., and Ph.D. in history from the University of California, Santa Barbara. Prior to joining the Smithsonian in 1989, he served as an American Historical Association Congressional Fellow with the House Committee on Science and Technology, where he assisted the special Task Force on Science Policy by writing A History of Science Policy in the United States, 1940-1985. He founded and co-edited the University of Akron Press book series on Technology and the Environment (1993-2001) and has been an Editorial Advisor to RFF Press since 2003. He has served as president of the American Society for Environmental History (1999-2001) and the Public Works Historical Society (2002-2003). Stine's article on "Regulating Wetlands in the 1970s" received the Forest History Society's Frederick K. Weyerhaeuser Award for the best article published in the Journal of Forest History in 1983. |
Mark Wilde
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is a Managing Director of Deutsche Bank Securities. He is a leading sellside analyst covering the paper, forest products, and packaging industries. He is a regular member of the Institutional Investor All-Star Team and has repeatedly been a member of the Wall Street Journal's "Best on the Street" Team. Mark was a Partner at Bankers Trust and oversaw U.S. Equity Research. He holds a doctorate in history and did his undergraduate honors thesis on the lumber industry in Michigan. Mark and his family live in Princeton, NJ. |
Ed Wilson
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is co-founder and Vice President of Outdoor Underwriters Inc. where he manages the operations for all aspects of their forestry-related insurance products. Outdoor's product lines include hunting lease liability, timberland liability, standing timber insurance, consulting foresters, prescribed burning and other related forestry products and services. In addition to his 18 years in the insurance industry, he has 12 years of additional experience with Virginia Tech, West Virginia University, and Weyerhaeuse,r where he was actively involved in research projects for timber management and operations research, timber harvesting, and workers compensation for logging contractors. He is a certified forester and a member of the Society of American Foresters. Ed has earned the following degrees: a B.S. in Forest Management from West Virginia University ; a M.S in Forestry Economics from West Virginia University ; and a Ph.D. in Industrial Forestry Operations from Virginia Tech. |
Forest
Service Liaison for the FHS Board of Directors
Allison Stewart,
Grey Towers National Historic Landmark, Milford, PA
National
Park Service Liaison for the FHS Board of Directors
David Louter, National
Park Service, Washington, DC
Emeritus
Members of the FHS Board of Directors
John M. McClelland, Jr.,
Seattle, WA
Charles S. Peterson, St. George, UT
Herbert I. Winer, New Haven, CT
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