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A memorial marker for William Jasper Spillman, a crop research
pioneer and one of Washington State College’s first professors, was
returned to campus last fall.
Spillman was the sixth faculty member to be hired at WSC, and
the researcher responsible for developing new wheat varieties for
the region. During his time here, he independently rediscovered
Mendel’s law of genetics. He left WSC in 1901 to become a founder
of agricultural economics, the first president of the American
Agricultural Economics Association, and editor of Farm
Journal. In the 1930s, before he died, he asked that his family
return to the Palouse that he loved and spread his ashes over his
field test plots on campus in the area of what is now Johnson Hall.
The ashes of his wife, Mattie, were later spread there as well. In
1940, the site was dedicated in Spillman’s memory and marked with a
large engraved stone. Sadly, over the decades, the memorial marker
was moved off campus and the site all but forgotten. Thanks to the
work of faculty, farmers, and administrators in the College of
Agriculture and Natural Resources Sciences, the marker was returned
to campus last year. In October members of the Cougar family
gathered at Johnson Hall to celebrate and remember Spillman.
--Hannelore Sudermann
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