John Victor Skiff Explained

J. Victor Skiff
Birth Date:23 July 1908
Birth Place:Gainesville, New York
Death Place:Castleton-on-Hudson, New York
Children:3

J. Victor Skiff (July 23, 1908 – September 15, 1964) was a prominent New York State conservationist and career public servant. Public service positions in NYS included Superintendent of Inland Fisheries, Deputy Commissioner of Conservation, and acting Commissioner of Conservation.

Childhood

J. Victor Skiff was born July 23, 1908, to John Milton Skiff and Winifred E. Hughes, in Gainesville, NY. Victor's Mother, Winifred, died in 1917 at the age of 38. John M. Skiff was the editor of the Gainesville Press, and died of pneumonia following Spanish influenza, in 1918, orphaning Victor at the age of 10. He was then cared for by his uncle, Arthur Garfield Adams, and aunt, Minerva Adams (Skiff). As an adult, at a talk presented to Scouters of the Adirondack Council, he shared that "his boyhood experience in a Scout Troop in Ithaca had developed his interest in the out-or-doors and led to his work in conservation."[1] In 1926, at the age of 18, Victor married Kay Marie Sweeney.

Education

Vic attended Ithaca Public Schools for 7th and 8th grade, finishing in 1922.

For high school, he attended the world-renowned Starkey Seminary (later renamed Lakemont Academy for Boys[2]), located on Seneca Lake near Watkins Glen, NY, graduating in 1925.

He began his undergraduate studies at Cornell University, in the fall of 1925. In his junior and senior year of college, he qualified for the finals of the 19th and 20th Annual Eastman Stage Contest, respectively, a public speaking contest held in connection with the annual Farm and Home week of the Agricultural College, speaking on the subject "Will History Repeat?" and "Getting Your Money's Worth" as a junior and senior, respectively.[3] [4] He graduated with a B.S. from the Agricultural College at Cornell in 1929.

Early career

He taught general science for three and a half years, from 1929 to 1932.[5] During this period he was also active with the Boy Scouts. The summer after graduating from Cornell in 1929, he served as head of the Naturalists' Division of Camp Rodney in Maryland.[6] He served as Scoutmaster of Troop No. 46 in Scotia, NY, from the fall of 1929 to the spring of 1930.

Public career

J. Victor Skiff was a career man in the New York State Department of Conservation, entering the department as a game research investigator in the Bureau of Game in 1933.[7] He served as a game research investigator until 1937 when the position Assistant Superintendent of Game was created, and he was appointed to it. In 1938 he became Superintendent of Inland Fisheries. In 1941 he served as one of three commissioners from NYS on the Atlantic States Marine Fisheries Compact Commission.[5] In 1941 he also represented the NYS Conservation Department as a New York-Rhode Island Boundary Commissioner.[5] In 1944 he was appointed Deputy Commissioner under the Republican administration of Thomas E. Dewey.[8] He served as acting Commissioner after the death of then Commissioner John A. White on December 31, 1944, at age 43[9] until Governor Thomas E. Dewey appointed Perry Duryea as Commissioner in 1945.[10] He was retained as Deputy by the newly appointed Commissioner Perry Duryea. In 1954, when Democrat W. Averell Harriman was elected as governor, Skiff resigned and served as a GOP legislative consultant.[11] In 1959, when Republican Nelson Rockefeller took office as governor, Victor was reappointed as Deputy Commissioner, a position he served in until his untimely death in 1964.

Personal life

He was a member of the Fort Orange Club. He was one of the first vestrymen at St. David's Church in East Greenbush.

Death

J. Victor Skiff died on September 15, 1964, after suffering a heart attack, at the age of 56.

Memorials to J. Victor Skiff

Publications by J. Victor Skiff

Articles

Book sections/chapters

Books

J. Victor Skiff in the news

Superintendent of Inland Fisheries (July 6, 1938 – 1943)

Deputy Commissioner of Conservation (February 1, 1944 – December 31, 1944)

Acting Commissioner (January 1, 1945 – April 10, 1945)

Deputy Commissioner of Conservation (April 11, 1945 – 1953)

GOP Legislative Consultant (1954-1958)

Deputy Commissioner of Conservation (1959-1964)

Obituaries (1964)

Notes and References

  1. "Scouters Review Past Year; Hear Talk by Victor Skiff", Adirondack Daily Enterprise, Thursday, May 24, 1962, p.12
  2. "Academy is 126 Years Old", The Geneva Times, Monday, October 17, 1966, p.10
  3. Cornell Alumni News, Vol, XXX, No. 13, December 22, 1927, p. 163
  4. The Cornell Daily Sun, February 8, 1929
  5. Francis P. Kimball, "The Capital Region of New York State: Crossroads of Empire," Vol. 3, Lewis Historical Publishing Company, New York, 1942, p.271
  6. Cornell Alumni News, VOL. XXXI, No. 34, May 30, 1929
  7. The State Employee, Volume 13, January 1944
  8. Science, January 21, 1944, p. 57
  9. "John A. White, Conservation Head, Dies", Utica Daily Press, January 1, 1945, p. 12.
  10. The State Employee, Volume 14, June 1945
  11. "Victor Skiff, Conservation Officer, Dies". Amsterdam Evening Record, September 15, 1964
  12. The Saratogian, October 26, 1964
  13. "Spire and Carillon Dedicated at E. Greenbush". The Albany Churchman, 21(5), January, 1967, p. 4