Sherret S. Chase Papers
Scope and Contents
Most of the records in this collection were generated by Dr. Sherret S. Chase, primarily from his time in various capacities as research geneticist, international maize breeder and international seed operations director for DeKalb Agriculture Association, Inc. (later DeKalb AgResearch). Included are also family papers and those of his wife. Series I consists of biographical material related to Dr. Chase and his family, including Chase’s personal memoirs and the final draft of his autobiography. These papers were given to the Regional History Center when the first accession from the bulk collection was donated in July 2015. Series II is DeKalb Correspondence and pertains to letters of Sherret S. Chase during his research at university and his association with DeKalb. The correspondence is from circa 1945 to 1998 and is particularly strong in the years from 1962 to 1968. Series III is Dekalb Research and contains Dr. Chase’s files from the mid-1950s to 1980.
Dates
- created: 1945+
- Other: Majority of material found in 1960s-1980s
- Other: Date acquired: 07/14/2015
Conditions Governing Access
There are no restrictions on access to the collection.
Conditions Governing Use
Property rights to the materials belong to the Regional History Center; literary rights in the collection are dedicated to the public.
Biographical or Historical Information
Sherret S. Chase was born on June 30, 1918 in Toledo, Ohio. His family moved to Wayne, Pennsylvania in 1922 where he graduated from Radnor High School in 1935. He began his higher education studies at the University of Arizona in the fall of 1935 but soon transferred to Yale University the following year. The summer of 1936 was spent backpacking in the Klinaklini glacier area of British Columbia where Chase was part of the Munday/Hall Mountaineering Party who were the first to ascended Silverthrone Mountain. Chase earned his B.S. (major in botany) in 1939 from Yale.
Chase then attended Graduate School at Cornell University in the fall and majored in plant cytology and genetics and minored in philosophy. On December 7, 1942, Chase was called for military service where he served as a second lieutenant and air navigator for the Army Air Force. He flew over fifty combat missions and was awarded the Distinguished Flying Cross during his service. During wartime, he married Catherine Ross Compton on November 27, 1943. Chase returned home on September 19, 1944 where he continued his service as a first lieutenant at the Navigation School at Ellington Field in Houston, Texas. Chase was released from service after the birth of his first daughter in August 1945. He returned to Cornell that fall and graduated with a Ph. D. in 1947.
Chase accepted an Assistant Professor position at Iowa State College where he continued his research on the plant genus Najas as well as parthenogenesis and monoploids of maize. Chase and his wife Catherine Ross (Compton) Chase had five children by 1953–three girls and two boys. At Iowa State, Chase developed the ‘monoploid method’ for producing homozygous diploid lines of maize and was awarded Associate Professor status. In 1953, Chase accepted a research geneticist position with DeKalb Agriculture Association, Inc. (later DeKalb AgReseach) in DeKalb, Illinois. Chase further developed his monoploid method and was successful in using it as a practical tool for plant breeding. DeKalb adopted the innovation, and thus expanded its corn breeding research and development program. Chase was appointed international maize breeder and then director of international seed operations for DeKalb where he worked with associated companies in Argentina, Australia, France, Italy, India, and Spain.
In July 1966, Chase resigned from his position at DeKalb in order to return to university and public service, but he remained a consultant with the company. He was awarded Fellowships at Harvard University where he continued his studies of tree breeding, genetics, and reproductive forest tree biology.
Chase accepted a Professor position in the Biology Department at New York State University College (SUNY) at Oswego where he taught genetics, cytogenetics, and economic botany. He resigned from SUNY in 1981 after several more years of research in maize genetics and the plant genus Salix.
In the year of his retirement from SUNY, Chase was appointed Director of Plant Breeding for the International Plant Research Institute (IPRI) in San Carlos, California. In 1983, he became the Director of Plant Breeding for the DNA Plant Technology Corporation (DNAP) in Cinnaminson, New Jersey where he remained until September 1987.
Chase continued private corn breeding and research in Ulster County, New York and maintained his consultant status with multiple international companies, including those in Haiti, Indonesia, and Thailand. Chase continues his involvement in several professional societies, community groups, and public activities. His most recent achievement was as founder of the Catskills Center for Conservation and Development (New York) where he has served for over forty years in one capacity or another, including Director, Chairman, and Board Member.
Note written by
Extent
6.50 Linear Feet
Language of Materials
English
Arrangement Note
The collection is separated into several subject series and arranged in alphabetic and then chronological order within each series.
Source of Acquisition
Sherret S. Chase
Method of Acquisition
Donation came by way of donor. The papers were kept at Chase's home in Askokan, New York. The initial donation came to the Northern Illinois Regional History Center was in July 2015. A second donation was made in September 2015. A subsequent donation of the rest of the papers will be recieved later was made in Novemeber 2015.
Accruals and Additions
A second donation was made in September 2015. A subsequent donation of the rest of the papers was made in Novemeber 2015.
Other Descriptive Information
Dr. Sherret S. Chase hired an archivist from the State University of New York at Oswego to process his papers. The collection was separated into several subject series and arranged in alphabetic and then chronological order within each series. These series have been maintained with exception of the addition of Series I (Biographic Materials) as these materials were given by Dr. Chase to the Regional History Center.
Subject
- Chase Family (Family)
- Chase, Sherret S. (Person)
- DeKalb AgResearch (Organization)
- DeKalb Agriculture Association (Organization)
- Title
- Archon Finding Aid Title
- Description rules
- Describing Archives: A Content Standard
- Language of description
- Undetermined
- Script of description
- Code for undetermined script
- Language of description note
- eng
Repository Details
Part of the Northern Illinois University Repository
Founders Memorial Library
Northern Illinois University
DeKalb IL 60115 US
815-753-9392
rhcua@niu.edu