PACIFIC?GROVE, CA – Richard "Dick" Gooch Beidleman – beloved husband, father and professor at The Colorado College – passed away on August 7, 2014. His battle with cancer ended at his home in Pacific Grove, with family members at his side. He was 91.
Dick was born on June 3, 1923, in Grand Forks, North Dakota, the only child of Fred Allen Beidleman and Olive Gooch Beidleman, who retired to Pacific Grove. He studied for a year at Brown University, before answering the call to serve in the U.S. Navy as a gunnery officer in the Pacific Theatre during World War II.
After the war he married Reba Ethel Rutz in her home town of Albuquerque, New Mexico. The couple moved to Fort Collins, Colorado, where Dick started his teaching career as an Assistant Professor of Zoology at Colorado State University 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 his growing family to Colorado Springs, where he filled teaching positions at Colorado College as Assistant, Associate, and then Full Professor of Biology. He also served as Chairman of the Biology Department during his tenure. He retired as Professor Emeritus in 1988. 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 Aiken Canyon Preserve, Mueller State Park, and Florissant Fossil Beds National Monument, as well as additions to the Garden of the Gods.
Dr. Beidleman's research in the fields of vertebrate zoology, ecology, the history of science, ornithology 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 the 1853 Gunnison Expedition.
After the death of his first wife in Pacific Grove, Dick Beidleman married Linda Havighurst Price in 1991. Together, they enjoyed teaching plant and bird short courses at The Colorado College, the Aspen Center for Environmental Studies, the Rocky Mountain Nature Association, the 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.
Aside from attending musical performances, and singing, 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, he participated every year in the Monterey Peninsula Christmas Bird Count, completing his last one, at age 90, in December 2013 in Carmel Valley. (see photo)
Dr. Beidleman is survived by his second wife, Linda H. Beidleman, of Pacific Grove; his son, S. Kirk Beidleman, and daughter-in-law, Kathy A. Whitacre, of Estes Park, Colorado; daughter, Janet B. Robson of Tasmania, Australia; and daughter, Carol A. Beidleman, and son-in-law, David H. Tiemeyer of Santa Fe, New Mexico (and Estes Park, Colorado).
As was Dick's wish, there will be no funeral service. Instead, 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. His ashes are to be scattered. Condolences may be sent c/o Carol Beidleman, [email protected]. Our gratitude to Hospice of the Central Coast for their caring services at the end of Dick's life.
In keeping with his life dedicated to philanthropy, we ask that any gifts in his memory be made to the "Dr. Richard G. Beidleman Scholarship for Students of Biology" at Colorado College. Gifts may be made by check (Development Office, Colorado College, P.O. Box 1117, Colorado Springs, Colorado 80901-9897); online (http://www.coloradocollege.edu/giving, designate as tribute), or at 1-800-782-6306 (option 3). Please visit www.thepaulmortuary.com to sign Dr. Beidleman's guest book and leave messages for his family.
To plant trees in memory, please visit the Sympathy Store.
Sponsored by Monterey Herald.
3 Entries
Dick Beidleman,PH.D. contributed much to the residents of Albany, Cal. and the Friends of Albany Hill, as the author of the bird list for the Hill and for his many bird walks and lectures that he gave us. His sense of humor and casual and warm personality made him a favorite with young and old.
Carole Fitzgerald
cochair of the Friends of Albany Hill
Carole Fitzgerald
September 17, 2016
Dick was a good friend and a generous colleague and he supported the ecology graduate program at CU Boulder--and the Rocky Mountain Biological Laboratory (Gothic) by inspiring terrific CC undergrads to graduate study.
David Armstrong
August 18, 2014
Dick Beidleman probably did more to teach young people to understand ecology and how important nature is to our survival than anyone I ever met. He helped the newly-formed docents start ecology tours at the Cheyenne Mountain Zoo in 1970. Since then thousands of children and hundreds of docents have learned about nature and how to preserve it. Kathy Loo -Co-Found of the docent program at the Cheyenne Mountain Zoo
August 18, 2014
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