Maryland
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Interviewee Sort descending | Collection | Description | Interviewer | Date of Interview | Location of Interview | Affiliation |
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Mary Ridgeway | Calvert County Marine Museum Oral History Project |
Mary Ridgeway is a lifelong resident of Tompkinsville, a location situated between Newburg and Rock Point. She is the daughter of Emma M. Jackson and Sankston Walter Jackson, and she grew up in a family of six children, with three brothers and two sisters. Her father was a farmer and a skilled carpenter who also worked the river, while her mother was a homemaker. Ridgeway graduated from high school at the age of sixteen and soon after began working at an oyster house at Rock Point, which was established by Mr. Coulby. |
Carrie Kline, Richard Dodds | Solomons, MD | Talking Across the Lines, Berea College Special Collections & Archives | |
Maureen Kenny | NOAA Heritage Oral History Project |
Captain Maureen Kenny was born in 1953 in Richmond, California. She graduated from Michigan State University in 1975 with a degree in Mathematics, and immediately joined the NOAA Corps when she was twenty-two. After training at Kings Point Maritime Academy, Captain Kenny reported to the NOAA Ship Davidson in Anchorage, Alaska. Her assignments took her all over the country throughout her career. She also attended Naval Postgraduate School in Monterey, California, and earned her master's in Oceanography/Hydrography. |
Molly Graham | Silver Spring, MD | NOAA Heritage Program, National Weather Service | |
Morton J. Rubin | American Meteorological Society Oral History Project |
On December 14, 1991, Gordon D. Cartwright interviewed Morton J. Rubin for the American Meteorological Society's Tape Recorded Interview Project at Rubin’s home in Bethesda, Maryland. The interview explores Rubin’s extensive career in meteorology, beginning with his early life in Philadelphia, his education at Penn State, and his entry into the field through a civil service examination. Rubin recounts his experiences working for the Weather Bureau, including his tenure as a minor observer in Philadelphia and later assignments at Kylertown, Pennsylvania. |
Gordon Cartwright | Bethesda, MD | American Meteorological Society, University Corporation for Atmospheric Research | |
Ola Mae Carter | Calvert County Marine Museum Oral History Project |
Ola Mae Carter was born in Waynesburg, Mississippi, on a small farm with a house that had no roof and hardly a bottom. She was one of six or seven children and started working at a young age, helping a local woman with her garden and cleaning up the yard. When she was still a young girl, she traveled with the woman's daughter who was on her way to California for business. They stopped in St. Inigoes, Maryland, where Ola Mae eventually settled. During their journey, they faced racial discrimination when they were denied accommodation at a hotel because Ola Mae was Black. |
Carrie Kline | St. Inigoes, MD | Talking Across the Lines, Berea College Special Collections & Archives | |
Patricia Clay | Voices from the Science Centers |
Dr. Patricia Clay is a fisheries anthropologist with the Social Science Branch of NOAA, where she has worked since 1993. She has a B.A. in Anthropology and Modern Languages from Notre Dame, and a PhD in Anthropology from Indiana University. She works with the NMFS Northeast Fisheries Science Center in Woods Hole, Massachusetts from the NMFS headquarters in Silver Spring, Maryland. |
Ruth Sando | Silver Spring, MD | NOAA-NMFS, Northeast Fisheries Science Center | |
Rebecca Lent | Voices from the Science Centers |
Dr. Rebecca Lent knew she would study economics in college after taking a course in high school. She obtained her Bachelor degree in Economics from University of California San Diego and her Master’s degree from San Diego State. After graduation, she worked at Oregon State University in the economics of the salmon industry. While there, she pursued a Ph.D. in Marine Economics graduating in 1984. Dr. Lent worked in academia for 10 years in Quebec before beginning her career at NOAA Fisheries in 1992. |
Ruth Sando | Silver Spring, MD | NOAA-NMFS, Northeast Fisheries Science Center | |
Richard Merrick | Voices from the Science Centers |
Dr. Richard Merrick is Chief Science Administrator and Director of Scientific Programs at NOAA Fisheries. He has a B.S. and Master’s from Clemson University, two Master’s from Oregon State University in Marine Resource Management and Biological Oceanography, and finally a PhD in Fisheries from the University of Washington in Seattle. Merrick began his career with NOAA as a contractor in 1983, working in Alaska and the Arctic. He then moved to the Northeast Fisheries Science Center and continued working for the conservation of marine mammals. |
Ruth Sando | Silver Spring, MD | NOAA-NMFS, Northeast Fisheries Science Center | |
Rita Curtis | Voices from the Science Centers |
Dr. Rita Curtis is the Chief of NOAA Fisheries Service Office of Science and Technology, Economic and Social Analysis Division. Dr. Curtis first began working with NOAA in 1999 as an economist for the Office of Science and Technology. In 1999, she completed her PhD in Agriculture and Resource Economics from the University of Maryland. Beforehand, Dr. Curtis worked at the Pacific Islands Fishery Science Center in Hawaii studying the longline fleet. |
Ruth Sando | Silver Spring, MD | NOAA-NMFS, Northeast Fisheries Science Center | |
Robert Hansen | NOAA Heritage Oral History Project |
Mr. Robert Hansen was born in on Earth Day, April 22, 1949, in Bayshore, New York. He was the first in his family to attend college, and earned his Bachelor’s and then a Master's Degree in Geography from the University at Albany. Mr. Hansen came to work for NOAA as a cartographer in Aeronautical Charting. He then worked as a technical information specialist for the National Ocean Service, chief of the NOAA Map Library, constituent affairs specialist, NOAA Historian, and retired as the national outreach coordinator for Education. |
Molly Graham | Silver Spring, MD | NOAA Heritage Program, National Weather Service | |
Roger Griffis | Voices from the Science Centers |
Roger Griffis is a climate change coordinator for NOAA’s National Marine Fisheries Service. He has a B.S. in Biology from Carleton College and a Master’s in Ecology and Evolutionary Biology from UC Irvine. Griffis grew up in Minnesota with a fascination for lakes and streams, and was particularly inspired by the complexity of ecosystems. Wanting to play a role in protecting the environment, he was led to conservation work through the Knauss Sea Grant Fellowship in Washington D.C in 1994. |
Ruth Sando | Silver Spring, MD | NOAA-NMFS, Northeast Fisheries Science Center |