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  1. E.C. Stakman was born May 17, 1885 in Algoma, Wisconsin to Frederick and Amelia Stakman. The family moved to Brownton, Minnesota when Stakman was five. When Stakman’s father died in the late 1890s, Stakman, his sister Edna, and his mother moved to St. Paul, where Amelia was employed as a teacher. Stakman graduated from Cleveland High School ...

  2. Scholars Walk is a prominent pathway spanning nearly 2,200 feet, celebrates the research and classroom accomplishments of the University of Minnesota’s award-winning faculty, alumni, and students.Gifted to the University by the University Gateway Corporation in 2006, Scholars Walk is lined with 40 bur oak trees, lighted monuments, and includes the Wall of Discovery, a 253-foot-long artistic ...

  3. May 17, 1885-January 22, 1979. BY C. M. CHRISTENSEN. ELVIN CHARLES STAKMAN was born May 17, 1885, on a farm near Ahnapee, Wisconsin, a small town on the west shore of Lake Michigan, the eastern terminus of the twenty-three-mile-long Green Bay and Ahnapee Railroad. Later the name of the town was changed to Algoma, which is listed officially as ...

  4. www.apsnet.org › Pages › StakmanElvinCharlesElvin Charles Stakman

    Elvin Charles Stakman, 1885–1979. Stakman received an M.A. degree from the University of Minnesota in 1910 and a Ph.D. degree in 1913 under the direction of E. M. Freeman. In 1913, Stakman became head of the Section of Plant Pathology and Agricultural Botany at the University of Minnesota, a position he held until his retirement in 1953.

  5. American. Scientific career. Fields. Phytopathology. Academic advisors. Conway MacMillan, Harry Marshall Ward. Notable students. Elvin C. Stakman [1] Edward Monroe Freeman (February 12, 1875 – February 5, 1954) [2] was an American botanist .

  6. Elvin C. Stakman receives an M.A. Degree under Dr. Edward Freeman. Stakman worked on germination of smut fungal spores from cereal grains. 1911. New University President George E. Vincent transforms the University. He doubles appropriations for the new division. Vincent’s wit and energy were contagious.

  7. Bio: Elvin Charles Stakman was an American plant pathologist who was a pioneer of methods of identifying and combatting disease in wheat. Elvin C. Stakman on Wikipedia Suggest an edit or a new quote

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