Reinhart Langer

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Born
Reinhart Hugo Michael Langer

(1921-01-17)17 January 1921
Upper Silesia, Germany
Died3 August 2018(2018-08-03) (aged 97)
Christchurch, New Zealand
Spouse
Hilary Joan Wilton
(m. 1951)
Reinhart Langer
Born
Reinhart Hugo Michael Langer

(1921-01-17)17 January 1921
Upper Silesia, Germany
Died3 August 2018(2018-08-03) (aged 97)
Christchurch, New Zealand
Alma materUniversity of Durham
Spouse
Hilary Joan Wilton
(m. 1951)
Children3
Scientific career
FieldsBotany, plant physiology
InstitutionsGrassland Research Institute, UK
Lincoln College
Thesis (1951)
Doctoral studentsBrian Molloy

Reinhart Hugo Michael Langer OBE (17 January 1921 – 3 August 2018) was a New Zealand botanist. He was an academic at Lincoln College (now Lincoln University) for over 25 years, and served as its acting principal from 1984 to 1985.

Born in Upper Silesia (at that time part of Germany, now in Poland) on 17 January 1921, Langer grew up in Berlin where he moved with his mother and two siblings after the death of his father, a judge, when Reinhart was aged three years.[1][2] In 1939, Langer fled to England with his sister.[1] He worked as a veterinary assistant in Tewkesbury, Gloucestershire, for a year, before spending the remainder of World War II working on a mixed cropping dairy farm.[1]

Langer won a scholarship to the University of Durham, and began studying agricultural science there in late 1945.[1] After graduating Bachelor of Science with honours, he continued on to doctoral studies, completing his PhD in 1951.[1] He was then appointed to a research position at the Grassland Research Institute (GRI), where he had spent time as a research assistant during his university studies.[1] It was at GRI that Langer met his future wife, Hilary Joan Wilton, a biometrician, and they wed in September 1951.[1] The couple went on to have three children.[1]

Academic career

In late 1958, Langer was appointed to the faculty of Lincoln College, near Christchurch, in New Zealand, where his research in the plant science department centred on increasing yields from crop and pasture plants.[1] He was particularly interested in plants suited to Canterbury's dry summers, including white clover, subterranean clover, and lucerne.[3] He also conducted research into wheat, and served as a member and chair of the national Wheat Research Committee.[3]

Langer was the foundation professor in plant science at Lincoln, and authored more than 60 books and scientific papers.[1][4] With George Hill he wrote the book Agricultural Plants, published in 1982, that became a standard text for the teaching of plant science.[1] He was also active in the administration of Lincoln College, serving as vice-principal, and as acting principal for 15 months in 1984 and 1985 between the tenures of Sir James Stewart and Bruce Ross.[1][3][4] Langer served on the University Grants Committee, and was appointed Lincoln's public orator in 1978.[3]

When he retired from Lincoln in March 1985, Langer was conferred the title of professor emeritus.[4]

Later life and death

Honours and awards

References

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