Bryan P. Glass | |
Birth Date: | August 21, 1919 |
Birth Place: | Mandeville, Louisiana |
Death Place: | Perkins, Oklahoma |
Field: | Mammalogy |
Work Institutions: | Oklahoma State University |
Alma Mater: | Baylor University (B.A. 1940), Texas A&M University (M.A., 1946), Oklahoma A&M University (Ph.D, 1952) |
Bryan Pettigrew Glass (August 21, 1919 – August 27, 2010) was an American mammalogist.
The son of Baptist missionaries Wiley B. Glass and Jessie Pettigrew Glass, Bryan Glass was raised in China. He had three sisters and a brother.[1] Lois and Eloise became missionaries; Eloise was also author.[2] Trudy joined the staff of the United Nations.[3] Bentley became a noted geneticist and educator.
Glass was a graduate of the China Inland Mission School in Chefoo. He continued his education in the United States, earning his Bachelor's from Baylor University in 1940, his Master's from Texas A&M in 1946, and his Ph.D. from Oklahoma A&M in 1952.[4]
During World War II, Glass served as a captain in the Army Air Corps and as an intelligence officer in the Office of Strategic Services (OSS).[5]
Glass joined the Oklahoma State University (OSU) faculty as a zoology professor in 1946 and taught at the university until his retirement in 1985.[6] Glass received OSU's Outstanding Service and Outstanding Teacher Award (1965 and 1966, respectively). In 1966, Glass became Director of the University Museum.[7] He was committed to developing the museum's collection. During the 1960s, Glass and Robert Ingersoll collected 1,200 mammalian specimens from Ethiopia's Harar region. Their contribution represents over 10% of OSU's collection of mammals.[8]
Though he did some work in Ethiopia and Brazil, Glass's scientific interests were largely focused upon species in Oklahoma, particularly Microchiroptera.[9] His research program—involving Oklahoma, Seminole, and Mexican free-tailed bats—was the subject of an Army training video.[10]
Glass served as the Secretary-Treasurer of the American Society of Mammalogists (ASM) from 1957 to 1977, a period during which membership more than doubled.[11]
In 1946, Glass married Carolyn Smith, who at various points worked for the U.S. Department of Agriculture, OSU, and ASM. They had two daughters, Janis Elizabeth and Peggy Lee.[12] Glass was active in his church, served on the organizing board for the Cooperative Baptist Fellowship of Oklahoma, and was elected Second Vice President of the Oklahoma Baptist Convention.[13]