Jerry Franklin was highly influential as a leader of the Andrews Forest program and in regional, national, and global forestry issues while he was a Forest Service scientist and then as a professor at University of Washington. In this 1991 lecture on the occasion of his retirement from the Pacific Northwest Research Station of the Forest Service, Franklin describes the major accomplishments and lessons learned during his career spanning 34 years to that point. He describes his nine professional lives (i.e., the major themes of research and outreach during his career), but he had to stretch it to eleven areas of major accomplishments.
Recording made by Fred Swanson for addition to the H.J. Andrews Experimental Forest Oral History Collection (OH 28), Special Collections and Archives Research Center, Oregon State University Libraries.
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