| Abstract: | Murlyn B. Dickerman (1912-2000) served as United States Forest Service deputy chief of research. As a representative of the Society of American Foresters, Dickerman led the United States Forestry Team delegation to the People's Republic of China in 1980. |
| The collection includes correspondence, itineraries, reports, papers, and articles concerning forestry in China and a 1980 trip of a United States Forestry Team, led by Murlyn B. Dickerman, to the People's Republic of China. In 1979, when the United States granted official diplomatic recognition to China, the two governments agreed to exchange ideas, information, scholars, and students in order to promote increased knowledge in the fields of science and technology. Forestry teams from both countries studied breeding and cultivation of improved tree varieties, reforestation, lumber practices, erosion control, and forestry education practices of the other country. | |
| Title: | Murlyn Bennet Dickerman Papers, 1924 - 1983 |
| Creator: | Dickerman, M. B. (Murlyn Bennet), 1912- |
| Repository: | Forest History Society Library and Archives |
| Call Number: | 3920 |
| Language of Material: | Material in English |
| Extent: | 1.5 linear feet (1 record carton) |
Murlyn B. Dickerman (1912-2000) served as United States Forest Service deputy chief of research. As a representative of the Society of American Foresters, Dickerman led the United States Forestry Team delegation to the People's Republic of China in 1980.
In 1979, the United States granted official diplomatic recognition to the People's Republic of China (PRC), thus opening lines of communication between the two countries. On January 31, 1979, the governments of the United States and the PRC signed a cooperative agreement to exchange ideas, information, scholars, and students in the scientific and technological fields for the benefit of each country and all mankind. The intellectual exchange was to operate for a period of five years unless extended further through amendment to the official signed agreement. Other countries were invited to participate in a minimal capacity and encouraged to prepare their own cooperative agreements with the government of the PRC.
One of the areas of shared investigation was forestry. As per the agreement, the PRC's Ministry of Forestry sent a number of delegations to the United States during the five-year period. Their primary goal was to study forest management and improvement in America. Specifically, they studied such topics as breeding and cultivation of improved tree varieties; reforestation of hills and barren areas; log handling, skidding, and transportation; integrated use of forest products; and forestry education. Likewise, the United States sent a number of delegations to China over the allotted period to study China's current forest genetic and breeding practices, nursery management, reforestation, erosion control, and forest product handling and use.
Murlyn Dickerman, as a representative of the Society of American Foresters, led the 1980 U.S. Forestry Team delegation to the PRC. Other members of the team included: Donald P. Duncan, Dean of the University of Missouri's School of Forestry, Fisheries and Wildlife; Douglas R. Leisz, Associate Chief of the U.S. Forest Service; James G. Yoho, a representative of the International Paper Company; John C. Gordon, Dean of Oregon State University's Department of Forest Science; F. Bryan Clark, Director of Timber Management Research for the U.S. Forest Service; and Carl Reidel, a representative of the American Forestry Association.
The collection includes correspondence, itineraries, reports, papers, and articles concerning forestry in China and a 1980 trip of a United States Forestry Team, led by Murlyn B. Dickerman, to the People's Republic of China. In 1979, when the United States granted official diplomatic recognition to China, the two governments agreed to exchange ideas, information, scholars, and students in order to promote increased knowledge in the fields of science and technology. Forestry teams from both countries studied breeding and cultivation of improved tree varieties, reforestation, lumber practices, erosion control, and forestry education practices of the other country.
A number of photographs taken during Dickerman's 1980 trip to the PRC were removed from this collection and placed in the Forest History Society's Photograph Collection. The photographs are housed in a subfile marked "U.S. Forestry Delegation Trip, 1980" in the main file labeled China.
1. Materials Related to Forestry in China, 1924-1983
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[Identification of item], Murlyn Bennet Dickerman Papers, Library and Archives, Forest History Society, Durham, NC, USA.
Processed by Michele Justice, May 1991
Encoded by Amanda Ross, January 2009
Funding from the National Historical Publications and Records Commission supported the encoding of this finding aid. Support for digitization and outreach provided by the Alvin J. Huss Endowment.