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Entomology was
a discipline area in the very beginning of the state's land-grant
university, and in many ways the department reflects the changing
focus and maturity of the university. Several well-known entomologists
have studied in the department and contributed to its practical
and conceptual foundation, including C. W. Woodworth, W. J. Baerg,
Dwight Isely, H. H. Schwardt, W. R. Horsfall, and Charles G. Lincoln.
Arkansas Industrial University opened on January 23, 1872. Professor
Richard Thurston, M.D., stated in the 1873 Catalog of Studies "to
effectively control insects there is required a knowledge of entomology".
Entomology was listed in the Catalog of Studies for the second term
of the student's third year during the early years of the university.
The Arkansas Agricultural Experiment Station was established in
1888. S. W. Crossman was the first trained entomologist and published
the third bulletin of the Experiment Station on "The Peach
Tree Borer and the Codling Moth" -- the first experiment station
bulletin the U.S. published with Hatch funds.

Dr. L. O. Warren,
Emeritus Professor of Entomology and past Director of the Experiment
Station, located this picture post card of the U of A campus (above),
taken in 1908. Notice the small red building to the left, this was
the first Entomology facility on campus. Entomology classes and
labs were held in this building when the department was in its infancy.
Later, around 1935, the building housed the Vocational Education
Department and Dr. Warren attended FFA classes here. The building
to the right was at first the Agriculture Building, and then became
the Home Economics Building. The building later became the infirmary
for the campus and after that housed the department of Agriculture
Engineering. The building is now known as the Agriculture Annex
and houses the Agriculture computer lab, Agriculture statistics
lab and graduate student offices. The annex building is located
directly North of the present Agriculture Building. The position
of the camera appears to be at the NE corner of Mullins Library,
looking North toward Maple Street. Of course, none of these mentioned
buildings existed at the time of this picture. Notice the wagon
ruts in the small road going North to Maple Street. Only two of
the oak trees pictured in the south lawn of the Agriculture Annex
building remain today.
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| Charles
Adams |
George
Becker |
The College
of Agriculture was established in 1905, with the former commissioner
of agriculture, W. G. Vincenheller, appointed dean. State appropriations
of $35,500 and federal funds of $42,000 allowed the University of
Arkansas to build the first Agriculture Building and the Dairy Building.
The new college included seven departments: Agricultural Chemistry,
Agronomy, Animal Husbandry, Dairy Husbandry, Entomology, Horticulture
and Veterinary Science. The total college faculty included two professors
and six instructors. Charles F. Adams, an entomologist and the first
Head of the Department of Entomology, became dean and director in
1908. He retained leadership of the department until 1914, when
George Becker became head of a one-man department. Becker was instrumental
in developing and organizing the Arkansas State Plant Board. Courses
taught in 1914-1915 included general entomology, economic entomology,
morphology and systematics.
Much of the academic foundation of the Department
was established during the tenure of W. J. Baerg, a naturalist and
authority on spiders and birds, who served as department head from
1918 until 1951. During his tenure, departmental philosophy was
forged, largely on the teachings of Dwight Isely, considered by
many to be the father of integrated pest management. Isely’s
methods of analyzing insect problems and integrating natural and
biological suppressions (indirect controls), deploying insecticides
(direct controls) only when needed, still dominate departmental
philosophy of applied entomology and research priorities. The first
recognized cotton scout anywhere was James Horsfall, a student working
with Isely in the 1920s.
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| William
J. Baerg |
Dwight
Isely |
During Baerg's time, the department evolved from a two-man department
to a graduate-degree-granting entity. Floyd Miner was hired in
1942, primarily responsible for classroom instruction. Extension
entomology was formalized with the hire in 1942 of Charles Lincoln
as the first extension entomologist. Previously, extension was
considered part of every entomologist's responsibility and most
activity was focused on helping Arkansans with insect problems.
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| Charles
G. Lincoln |
Floyd
D. Miner |
Major expansion
began in the 1950s when Charles Lincoln became Head. The graduate
program was initiated in 1951 and the department added faculty and
expertise in the areas of entomology linked to Isely's ideas of
ecological pest management. The department experienced significant
growth in student numbers as veterans returned from WWII to complete
degrees. Isely's ideas of pest management were not in step with
growing use of organic insecticides in the 1950s. Lincoln's strong
will and linkages to Arkansas farmers allowed the department to
withstand significant criticism and further expand the departmental
vision. Faculty added in the late 1940s and 1950s included W. D.
Wylie, L. O. Warren, Fred Whitehead, Larry Rolston, J. L. Lancaster,
Jack Sherrer, Tom Leigh, W. P. Boles, Will Whitcomb, Robert Hunter,
and Paul Boyer. The commitment to more-basic research increased
in the 1960s with the hires of C. E. McCoy, Jacob R. Phillips, W.
C. Yearian, Rodney Kirkton, R. T. Allen, S. Y. Young, III, and N.
P. Tugwell.
The Ph.D program
was initiated in 1972, and Gary Herzog was the first Ph.D graduate
in 1976. The department was integrally linked with the "Huffaker"
and "CIPM" projects and provided leadership for national
research efforts in cotton and soybean pest management. Faculty
hired in the 1960s provided leadership for Arkansas' involvement
in these national IPM programs. Max Meisch joined the department
in 1970, initially in a joint research-extension appointment for
rice-field mosquitoes. Bill Jones addressed extension entomology
programs from the Fayetteville campus. Art Mueller assumed responsibilities
for soybean entomology in 1972. Capacity in quantitative ecology
was added when Fred Stephen arrived in 1974 to fill the forest entomology
position vacated when Lloyd Warren became director of the Experiment
Station. Mark Mayse filled the position of survey entomologist.
Donald Johnson assumed extension responsibilities in 1979. Gerald
Musick replaced Floyd Miner as department head in 1979.
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| J.R.
Phillips |
David
Foster |
In the 1980s,
Donn Johnson, Paul McLeod and Tim Kring joined the department, bringing
expertise in insect behavior, vegetable entomology and biological
control, respectively. Dayton Steelman returned to a research program
in livestock entomology. John Bernhardt and Tina Gray Teague accepted
research positions in Stuttgart and Jonesboro, respectively, in
the late-1980s. Musick became Dean and Director in 1986, and J.
R. Phillips and W. C. Yearian served as interim Department Heads
in 1987 and 1988, respectively. David Foster was hired as Head in
1987 and served one year in that capacity until he moved to Little
Rock as Director of the Arkansas Cooperative Extension Service.
William C. Yearian
served as Department Head from 1989 to 2001. The department experienced
significant expansion of academic capacity in the early 1990s. Don
Steinkraus and Gary Felton (1990), and Jim Whitfield (1992), added
nationally respected capacity in insect pathology, insect-plant
interactions, and molecular systematics. Gerald Musick returned
to the department as a teacher and researcher in the mid 1990s and
worked to establish a B.S. program in Pest Management. During the
1990s, several changes were also made in extension and off-campus
positions. Gus Lorenz became IPM Coordinator for the Pest Management
Section of the Cooperative Extension Service, and Glenn Studebaker
and Charles Allen filled off-campus extension positions in Southeast
and Northeast Arkansas.
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| Fred
Stephen |
The early 2000s
were again a time of transition. Gary Felton left the department
to become Department Head at Penn State, and Jim Whitfield moved
to the University of Illinois. With Yearian’s retirement,
Fred Stephen was interim head from 2002-2005. Jeff Barnes became
curator of the Entomological Museum in 2000 and instructor for
insect systematics. Randy Luttrell joined the department in 2001
after a period as Associate Dean of the College. Allen Szalanski
and Fiona Goggin (2001) brought expertise in genetics and insect-plant
interactions. John Hopkins and Kelly Loftin were appointed as
extension specialists. Donald R. Johnson retired as Extension
Section Leader; Gus Lorenz assumed leadership of extension entomology,
and is currently Associate Department Head for extension programs.
Jeremy Greene filled the Monticello position when Allen left in
2000 (Greene recently returned home to a position with Clemson
University -- a search is underway to fill the position). Extension
faculty were moved under the Department’s umbrella in 2003.
Robert
N. Wiedenmann, formerly of the Illinois Natural History Survey,
became Head of the Department in early 2005. He is the first department
head to have statewide responsibilities for all entomology programs
of the Division of Agriculture, including those of the Arkansas
Cooperative Extension Service and the Arkansas Agricultural Experiment
Station. The Department currently includes 11 on-campus and 6 off-campus
faculty members, 12 staff members and 16 – 20 graduate students.
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