
Daniel
O. Trainer
1926-
Inducted 2006
"If we don’t start
conserving pretty soon, we won’t
be sustainable as a culture." – Trainer
The smiling face and quick
wit of Daniel O. Trainer have brightened
the lives of many thousands of Wisconsin
residents. In most cases, he also left
them with a lesson or two about conservation.
Trainer
of Stevens Point has been active on a
variety of conservation fronts. He served
as dean of the University of Wisconsin-Stevens
Point College of Resources from 1971-87,
a period that saw the college grow to become
the largest undergraduate natural resources
program in the United States.
That was preceded by a decade of work on the veterinary
faculty at the University of Wisconsin-Madison,
where he earned a reputation as an international
expert on animal diseases. He was also a member
of the Wisconsin Natural Resources Board
from 1980-86. While on the board, he was
especially interested in land purchases
for preservation.
Back home, he was a founder
of Intra-State Recycling, a pioneering
volunteer recycling group in Portage County.
He was also a member of the founding committee
for the 24-mile Green Circle Trail in the Stevens
Point area and helped to establish the Plover
River Alliance, working closely on those projects
with long-time friend George Rogers, an environmentally
minded newspaperman from Stevens Point.
He helped establish or worked on numerous other
local, state and national groups. His wife,
Betty, was also active in community causes,
including the League of Women Voters.
The son of a game warden, Trainer grew up in
Princeton, Wisconsin, where he developed a
love for hunting and fishing and a skill for
dealing with people, learned from his father.
In
his time at UW-Madison, he was among those
who created a graduate program in diseases
of wildlife. The focus of his own work was
disorders in deer. After coming to Stevens
Point, he continued to do research and publishing
in his field, and in 1972 he was named the
third American to receive the Distinguished
Service Award of the Wildlife Disease Association.
With
the environmental movement gaining momentum
in the early 1970s, Trainer was attracted
to the potential of building the Stevens
Point program with Chancellor Lee S. Dreyfus
and other leaders. There were about 500
students when he arrived. When he retired
in 1987, there were 1,600 students. Trainer
sees his own accomplishments through the
lives of those students, who fanned out
across the country and beyond after their
education in Stevens Point. “In
many ways, my impact on the environment
was through the students. We prepared them
to go out and work on the front lines,” he
said. “Those
students were able to go anywhere, and
we took great pride in helping them to
get through school. They’re
like extended family. I never met one who
wasn’t
proud to be a Point graduate.”
Trainer
is also proud that the College of Natural
Resources achieved an often elusive goal
in higher education: “We
took an integrated approach to natural
resources. Everything related to everything
else.”
Looking back on a distinguished career,
Trainer said this: “I’ve
always had the best job in the world
– natural resources and young people,
and all in the state of Wisconsin.”
FACTS
• Built UW-Stevens Point College of Natural Resources
to the largest undergraduate resources program in the
nation
• International expert in wildlife diseases
• Member of DNR Board and other state and national
groups
• Leader in establishing Stevens Point area’s
Green Circle Trail
(Publication of this fact sheet made possible
with assistance from Krause Publications, Iola, Wisconsin.)
For further information on
Daniel O. Trainer, read his Hall
of Fame monograph.
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