Clarence C. Gordon
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Clarence C. Gordon | |
|---|---|
| Born | July 26, 1928 |
| Died | July 12, 1981 (aged 62) |
| Alma mater | University of Washington (B.S., 1956), Washington State University (Ph.D., 1960) |
Clarence C. "Clancy" Gordon was born in Seattle, Washington, on July 26, 1928. After earning his bachelor's of science from the University of Washington in 1956 and his Ph.D. from Washington State University in 1960, Gordon became a professor in the Department of Botany at the University of Montana. Gordon, an outspoken and influential, albeit at times controversial, environmental activist in Montana during the 1960s and 1970s, died on July 12, 1981, at the age of 53 after a two-year battle with cancer.[1]
Clarence Gordon was born in Seattle, Washington, on July 26, 1928. While growing up in Seattle during the Great Depression and World War II, Gordon's family had very little money and he was in and out of school during most of his youth. He favored hunting, fishing and other outdoors activities over spending time in the classroom, and this preference often resulted in suspensions and even expulsion. Despite these common absences and disciplinary problems, Gordon graduated from public high school in Seattle at the age of seventeen. He spent the next four years of his life as a commercial fisherman in Alaska, and then was drafted for a brief stint in the Korean War. Upon release from his military service, Gordon returned to commercial fishing until he met his future wife, Nancy Ward, while taking vocational training in seamanship. Deciding that commercial fishing would not be a favorable career for a married man with a family, Gordon enrolled at the University of Washington in Seattle.[1]
After two years in pre-medicine at the University of Washington, Gordon switched his major to Mycology, the study of fungus, graduating with a bachelor's degree in 1956. Gordon continued his education when he was accepted for graduate study at Washington State University in Pullman, where he remained until receiving a Ph.D. in Plant Pathology in 1960.[1]