
About
the Ryckman Lecture Series:
DeVere W. (Rick) Ryckman* was a man of many capabilities, the foremost of
which was his ability to inspire others. Rick served as the catalyst for
attracting distinguished scholars and built a top program in environmental
engineering at Washington University in the mid 1950s. The program flourished
even prior to the recognition of the importance of environmental engineering,
and
predating the first “Earth Day” celebrations in 1970. The ENVIRSAN program,
recognized for its outstanding laboratories, was one of the first accredited
environmental engineering graduate programs in the U.S.
The lecture is a tribute to all the faculty and students who helped start the
original program: Drs. D. W. Ryckman, Ed Edgerly, Nathan
Burbank, H. D. Tomlinson, Rolf Skrinde, and Jim Buzzell, and an
acknowledgement to Betty Ryckman, who generously opened her home to the many
students of this program and their families.
| YEAR |
PRESENTER |
| 2003 | Inaugural Ryckman Lecture, Dr. Perry McCarty, Stanford University |
| 2004 | Dr. Charlie O'Melia, Johns Hopkins University |
| 2005 | |
| 2006 |
*A Brief Biography of
Dr. D.W. (Rick) Ryckman
DeVere W. "Rick" Ryckman,
was the founding director and responsible
for setting up the environmental engineering science department at Washington
University. He died Tuesday, Sept. 14, 2004 of complications of lymphoma at St.
John's Mercy Medical Center in Creve Coeur. He was 80 at the
time of his death and a resident of Ballwin, MO.
Mr. Ryckman was brought up on a farm in South Boardman, Michigan. He attended
the University of Maine before enlisting in the Navy as a member of the
Construction Battalion, stationed in the Pacific while serving in World War II.
After his military service,
Mr. Ryckman earned a bachelor of science degree from Rensselaer Polytechnic
Institute in Troy, N.Y., one of the nation's oldest technological universities.
Mr. Ryckman received a master's degree from Michigan State University and a
doctorate of science from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in
environmental engineering.
In 1956, Mr. Ryckman moved to St. Louis, where he was in charge of setting up a
new department in environmental engineering at Washington University. The
Program was established with Drs. Edgerly, Burbank, Tomlinson, and Skrinde. He
would teach there for the next 15 years. At the university, Mr. Ryckman was the
A.P. Greensfelder professor of engineering.
In 1962, Mr. Ryckman helped organize a graduate program at the University of
Hawaii.
From 1963 to 1975, Mr. Ryckman was a partner in the environmental consulting
firm RETA (Ryckman, Edgerley Tomlinson and Associates). In 1975, he founded
REACT (Ryckman, Emergency, Action and Consulting Team) which continues today on
Sixth Street. His son, Stewart Ryckman of Ladue, is president of the company.
His other son, Mark D. Ryckman of Atlanta, is the principal engineer of Remtech
Engineers, another engineering consulting firm in Marietta, Ga.
Mr. Ryckman was a member of the First Congregational Church of Webster Groves,
St. Louis downtown Rotary Club, the Engineers Circle Club and the Washington
University Eliot Society. He served on the board of the Salvation Army.
Recently, the environmental engineering science department at Washington
University in St. Louis established the Rick and
Betty Ryckman lecture series that is supported by an
endowed fund. The annual lecture series invites individuals to further
promote environmental engineering science education.
If you are interested in supporting the
Ryckman Lecture Series and would like to contribute to the Ryckman Fund - please
contact Libby Gutberlet