Arvind Panjabi
Fort Collins
Dr. Richard G. Beidleman dedicated his
life and career to teaching, research, and conservation, and ornithology was his
passion and a central focus of his endeavors.
He was a lifelong member of the American Ornithologists’ Union (AOU) and
other ornithological societies, first presenting a paper at AOU in 1954 (Winter Species Association Groups Among
Birds). Dr. Beidleman published
extensively on ornithology in Audubon Field Notes, Audubon Magazine, Condor, Journal
of the Colorado-Wyoming Academy of Science, American Birds, Cooper
Ornithological Society, Cornell Laboratory of Ornithology, Journal of Field
Ornithology, American Scientist, and Colorado Birds. He believed in publishing in popular
magazines and newspapers to encourage greater interest in birds (e.g. The School Children and the State Bird,
Denver Post), and did so with humor and a mastery of the history of science. In 1951 he wrote a two-part article in
Audubon Magazine, “Bird-watching – Hobby of the Half Century,” where he related
a story about Joseph Hickey, a well-known ornithologist and bird watcher who
once commented that bird watching is regarded by some people as “a mild
paralysis of the central nervous system, which can be cured only by rising at
dawn and sitting in a bog.”
Dr. Beidleman commenced winter
bird-population studies in 1948 (in various habitats—cottonwood-willow riverbottom,
ponderosa pine, scrub oak, piñon-juniper
woodland, Douglas-fir, even cemeteries, shopping centers, and highway rest
stops) and published them annually through 1996. He pursued many other ornithological studies,
such as on the roosting behavior of White-throated Swifts and on European Starling-Pinyon
Jay associations. He participated in the
Breeding Bird Census and, for over 60 years (his last at age 90), in Christmas
Bird Counts (CBC), including as longtime compiler of the Black Forest CBC. He taught university ornithology courses
at Colorado State University, University of Colorado, and Colorado College; taught
bird short courses and seminars for the Rocky Mountain Nature Association,
Aspen Center for Environmental Studies, and others; and gave hundreds of lectures
on birds for organizations and the general public. In 2004 he received the
Colorado Field Ornithologists’ Ronald A. Ryder Award for Distinguished Service
to Colorado Field Ornithology. His
obituary follows:
Dr. Richard G. Beidleman (1923 –
2014)
Dr. Richard
“Dick” Gooch Beidleman, Professor Emeritis at Colorado College, passed away on
August 7, 2014 after a battle with cancer.
He was ninety-one.
He
started his teaching career as an Assistant Professor of Zoology at Colorado
State University in Fort Collins while finishing his M.A. (biology) and Ph.D.
(ecology) at the University of Colorado, Boulder (CU). He then became an Assistant Professor of
Biology at CU. In these early years, he
enjoyed stints as a summer ranger-naturalist at Yosemite and Rocky Mountain National
Parks.
In 1957
Dr. Beidleman moved to Colorado Springs, where he filled teaching positions at
Colorado College as Assistant, Associate, and then Full Professor of
Biology. He most enjoyed teaching his
field courses, especially in Southwestern Ecosystems and Piñon-Juniper
Woodlands. He also served as Chairman of
the Biology Department during his tenure.
He retired as Professor Emeritus in 1988, and an Honorary Doctor of
Science was conferred on him by Colorado College in 1989. His influence on the lives and careers of his
students and colleagues was profound. He
taught with boundless energy and enthusiasm, a memorable sense of humor, and
compassion. His legacy lives on in the
lives and accomplishments of the thousands of students he inspired, creating in
them, as one wrote, “better and more responsible advocates for the natural
world.”
In addition to sharing his
knowledge and love of the environment with his students, Dr. Beidleman gave
hundreds of public lectures nationally and internationally. He received many awards, and was responsible
for helping to save, as open space, additions to the Garden of the Gods in
Colorado Springs, as well as the Aiken Canyon Preserve for The Nature
Conservancy, Mueller Ranch for Colorado State Parks, and Florissant Fossil Beds
for the National Park Service.
Dr.
Beidleman’s research in the fields of ornithology, vertebrate zoology, ecology,
the history of science, and science education led to his writing over 420
publications. One of his passions was
studying and writing about the history of science in both the U.S. and
Australia. He returned many times to
Australia, transfixed by its spectacular natural history. His last significant publication was California’s Frontier Naturalists, and
at the time of his death he was working on a book manuscript on German
botanist, Frederick Creutzfeldt, and the 1853 Gunnison Expedition.
He also
taught plant and bird short courses and seminars at the Aspen Center for
Environmental Studies, Rocky Mountain Nature Association, University of
California, and other venues. For almost
two decades he volunteered as a Research Associate and archivist at The
University and Jepson Herbaria Archives at the University of California,
Berkeley.
Dick’s
personal hobbies were his professional ones.
He was happiest when teaching, researching, or traveling and being
outdoors observing nature—counting birds or identifying plants. Beyond enjoying and recording bird sightings
in his backyard in Pacific Grove, California, he participated every year in the
Monterey Peninsula Christmas Bird Count, completing his last one, at age
ninety, on December 27, 2013.
His
daughter, Carol Beidleman (of Santa Fe, New Mexico, and Estes Park, Colorado),
followed in his footsteps, pursuing a career in conservation and
ornithology. Contact with the family can
be made through her at beidl...@aol.com.
A “Celebration of Life” ceremony
will be held on Sunday, October 12, 2014, at 9:00 a.m. at Shove Chapel at
Colorado College in Colorado Springs, Colorado.
Gifts in his memory can be made to the “Dr. Richard G. Beidleman
Scholarship for Students of Biology” at Colorado College.