Bolley, truly one of the pioneers of plant pathology, also worked
extensively behind the scenes to promote the USDA barberry eradication
program. It was ND that first legislated a state eradication
program, legislation that was penned by Bolley (1916-17). He
had established the importance of the link to barberry by screening
domestic and exotic wheat germplasm, some collected by him in
Russia, in a barberry thicket. Late in life, Bolley commented
that he felt this to be his most important contribution to science
and society.
Ever a sportsman, he enjoyed hunting and fishing
as well as two stints as the football coach at the college,
instituting the team in 1890. A story is passed down from Rodney
Hastings, a former Seed Commissioner appointed by Bolley as
his successor, about Bolley's coaching. Bolley considered it
the lowest point in his career when at a game against the University
of North Dakota, the other state college from 70 miles to the
north, he lost his composure. The score was tied. It was late
in the game. A North Dakota halfback came around the end and
broke into the clear. Bolley screamed at his team to catch him.
When it became apparent that no one would, Bolley took control
of the situation. He ran onto the field himself and demonstrated
a perfect coaching example of an open field tackle of the opponent.
The officials conferenced for a considerable time and finally
decided to award a touchdown to North Dakota, giving them a
win in the game by the margin of that score.
Bolley continued teaching and research until his retirement
in 1945. The highest degree Bolley had earned was a Master of
Science from Purdue in 1888. He was granted Honorary Doctor
of Science degrees from Purdue in 1938 and NDAC in 1939. Bolley
passed away in 1956 and is interred at Riverside cemetary in
Fargo.
A large collection of Henry Luke Bolley's papers were saved
from destruction in the early 1960's by Bolley's successor as
Station Botanist, O.A. Stevens. The collection, which is housed
in the Special Collections and Archives of the NDSU Libraries,
consists of 102 boxes of papers, 4 boxes of photos, and 4 files
of oversize material.
Wanda Weniger
Wanda Weniger was born in Milwaukee, Wisconsin on December
5, 1895. She received her Bachelor of Science degree from Oregon
State University in 1915 where she majored in Home Economics,
Botany, and Plant Pathology. She returned to the Midwest for
graduate study, earning her Master of Science in 1916 from the
University of Wisconsin, studying Botany and Plant Pathology.
Weniger earned her PhD in 1918 from Univiversity of Chicago,
Botany, Magna Cum Laude at the age of 22.
She was appointed plant pathologist with the ND Agricultural
Experiment Station in October of 1918, serving until 1925. She
was forced to leave her faculty position due to her marriage
to another faculty member, William Brentzel, who succeeded her
in this position. At the time of her appointment she was the
first women faculty member of the ND Agricultural Experiment
Station and may possibly have been the first woman plant pathologist
associated with any Experiment Station.
While on staff, she researched cereal and forage crop diseases,
contributing regularly to the Annual Experiment Station Reports.
Despite having lost her faculty rank, she continued scientific
study, authoring "Diseases of Grain and Forage Crops in
North Dakota", ND Ag. Exp. Station Bulletin 166, May 1923.
92 pages, and revised it in 1932 (published as Bulletin 255,
Jan. 1932. 97 pages).
In addition to the work listed above, she continued to
be very active in science, despite a lack of formal recognition
from the college. She served as an Abstractor for Biological
Abstracts and as a private researcher on the parasitic fungi
of ND. She was a member of AAAS and became a Fellow of the society
in 1925. She served the Biological Stain Commission, Sigma Xi,
the American Association of University Women (AAUW), and the
Fargo Fortnightly Club (1929-1974). She also developed, with
her husband, a company called Farm Management Service. This
venture was targeted as a service for out-of-state farm operators.
They might now be looked back on as the first agricultural crop
consultants in North Dakota.
Dr. Weniger Brentzel was recognized with many honors, including:
Who's Who in ND, Who's Who in the Midwest, and Who's Who of
American Women; editor and writer of ND Club Women; founder
of ND Mental Health Association (1952); Governor's Committee
for Status of Women (1964); nine years on the Fargo Board of
Education, President 1946-1947. Weniger also initiated a bookmobile
project and got funds for the first Bookmobile in ND (~ 1950),
was on the Advisory Board for the Fargo Nursery School (for
children of working mothers, 1942-1955), and was on the General
Federation of Women's Club Board of Directors where she helped
in the production of a publication entitled "Work in the
Lives of Married Women - Columbia Press, 1957).
Obviously she was a very active woman. In addition to her
professional and community service activities, she was an active
hobbyist. She operated a Federal Bird Banding Station in her
home, banding more than 22,000 birds of 97 species. She was
also a book binder and stamp collector.
The Brentzels had one son, Edward, who completed
college and worked as a mathematician and geologist. Dr. Weniger
Brentzel's brother, Willibald
Weniger, was successful in his own right, becoming Head
of the Physics Department and Dean of the Graduate School at
Oregon State.
Dr. Wanda Weniger Brentzel died 1978.

Harold H. Flor
Harold H. Flor was born May 27, 1900 in St.
Paul, MN. He received his MS Degree from the University of Minnesota
in 1922 and his PhD from the same institution in 1929. He began
his career with the USDA at Washington State University studying
bunt of wheat. He was transferred to the North Dakota Agricultural
College in 1931 to study flax diseases.
Dr. Flor's research on flax rust showed resistance in flax
was dominant to susceptibility and the genes conditioning reaction
occurred as multiple alleles at five loci. He then selfed and
crossed many races of Melampsora lini, the flax rust
fungus, and found virulence to be recessive to avirulence and
inherited independently. His resesarch suggested that for each
gene conditioning resistance in the host, there was a corresponding
gene conditioning pathogenicity in the parasite. Furthermore,
detection of these genes in the host or parasite was possible
only when the other member of the pathosystem was present. Dr.
Flor was the first to study simultaneously the genetics of the
host and parasite, which allowed him to deduce what is popularly
known as the gene-for-gene hypothesis.
Dr. Flor's interpretation of host-parasite genetic interaction
has proven to be a critically important paradigm in plant pathology
and of extraordinary utility in the breeding of disease resistant
cultivars. It has been used extensively to explain genetic relationships
in different rusts and in other diseases, as well as in diverse
symbiotic relationships such as plants and herbivorous insects.
Dr. Flor received many awards for his research contributuions:
the USDA Superior Service Award in 1957, Outstanding Achievement
Award from the University of Minnesota in 1962, and Doctor of
Science from North Dakota State University in 1963. From the
American Phytopathological Society, he received the Ruth Allen
Award in 1966, the Stakman Award in 1967, and the Award of Distinction
in 1980. He was named Fellow in 1965 and elected President of
APS in 1968. A listing of Dr. Flor's publications can be found
here.
Upon retirement from this position in 1969, Dr. Flor created
an endowment fund for the Department of Plant Pathology to be
used in the furtherance of science. Harold Flor passed away
on August 3, 1991. The H.H. Flor Reading Room in the Department
of Plant Pathology was dedicated June 23, 1993.

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Richard L. Kiesling
The Plant Pathology Department was formally established
July 1, 1960. As professor and chair, Dr. Richard L. Kiesling
was instrumental in making the department what it is today.
Dr. Kiesling was born November 20, 1922 in Illinois. He
graduated from high school in Rockford, IL in 1941. While serving
in the US Army from 1943-46, during World War II, Kiesling was
stationed in Europe. Kiesling attended the University of Wisconsin,
Madison where he received his B.S. in Plant Science, with minors
in Entomoloty and Agronomy, in 1949. In 1951 he received his
M.S. in Plant Pathology, and in 1952 his Ph.D., both from the
University of Wisconsin. From there Kiesling went to Michigan
State University where he held a position as Assistant Professor
of Botany and Plant Pathology from 1952-57 and Associate Professor
from 1957-60. While at Michigan, Kiesling and another scientist,
John Grafius, were responsible for the development of two new
varieties of oats, Coachman
and AuSable. The varieties were made available for the 1965
growing season.
It was in 1960 that Kiesling came to NDSU as chair and
professor of the newly created Plant Pathology Department. This
coincided with the change from North Dakota Agricultural College
to North Dakota State University. The department consisted of
two state faculty: Dr. Al Benson, potato diseases; and Dr. Donald
Morton, fungal disease of barley. Three USDA plant pathologists
were also associated with the department: Dr. R. Timian, viral
disease of barley; Dr. H.H. Flor, flax rust; and Dr. F. Gough,
stem rust of cereals.
No curriculum, either graduate or undergraduate, existed
at that time. Prior to this, a few courses has been offered
by the Botany department. Under Kiesling's leadership, B.S.,
M.S., and Ph.D. programs were developed in 1960-61. A department
curriculum of eight courses was created, including 21 credits
of graduate/undergraduate courses and five credits of undergraduate
courses. Additional greenhouse space was completed in 1960 and
Walster Hall, the present location of the department was completed
in 1962. Only H.H. Flor remained in the office, greenhouse,
and lab space he had occupied since 1931. The first extension
plant pathologist was also hired in 1962. It is clear that the
first few years in which Kiesling was at NDSU were a major turning
point. The road was being paved to make the department a world
leader in teaching and research.
Throughout his career at NDSU, Kiesling was involved in many research projects:
- Epidemiology of barley covered smut
- Genetics of barley X barley covered smut interactions
- Black point of durum - epidemiology and resistance
- Root rot of wheat and barley - epidemiology and resistance
- Pinto bean disease - bacterial blight assay
- Potato virus disease indexing
- Establishment of pine in heavy alkaline soils in Cass County
- Root rot of wheat and barley
Kiesling also was very involved in teaching, and throughout his career was an advisor
to over twenty M.S. and Ph.D. candidates. He developed and taught many courses, including:
- Diseases of Horticultural Crops
- Bacterial & Fugal Diseases of Plants
- Plant Pathology: Priciples and Practices
- Fungal Genetics
- Introductory Plant Pathology
Kiesling was active in University Governance as a member
of the University Senate, the University Senate Research Committee,
University Senate Curriculum Committee, University Senate Faculty
Affairs Committee, Graduate Council, Graduate Faculty, and the
Institute of Genetics. He was also a member of the College of
Agriculture Greenhouse Committee, Greenhouse Building Committee,
and an ad hoc commitee of the College of Agriculture to get
department secretaries reclassified upward. Kiesling was an
active member of the American Phytopathological Society, and
held the office of president in 1963. He brought the annual
meeting to Fargo that year, the first time the society had ever
met in North Dakota. From 1970-73, he was on the APS genetics
committee. Kiesling also was active in the Gateway Lions Club,
Fargo, and held offices as Newsletter Editor, President, and
Secretary.
Kiesling retired in 1988 after 28 years of service to NDSU.
He and his wife, Fran, are both Retired Associate Faculty members
of the University of Florida. They presently reside in Gainsville,
Florida where he is President of the Community Association and
head of the grounds in the condo development where they reside.

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