In Memoriam
Edward Smith Gilfillan III
Ed passed away
after a brief illness on Dec. 14, 2017.
Ed is survived by his wife of 53 years, Katherine (Kathie).
Ed was born on June 1, 1941, to Edward Gilfillan II and Ruth Chadderdon Gilfillan and grew up in Manchester, Mass. He graduated in 1959 from Manchester High School.
At Yale University, he majored in zoology and earned a bachelor's degree in 1963, followed by MSc (1966) and PhD (1970) degrees at the University of British Columbia, where he studied zooplankton ecology.
In 1970-1971, Ed was a postdoctoral fellow at
the University of Massachusetts Marine Station, and from 1971 to 1974 he
was a senior research associate there. He then went on to be a
researcher at the Bigelow Laboratory of Ocean Sciences in Boothbay
Harbor. He joined the Bowdoin faculty in the fall of 1977 as adjunct
professor of chemistry and lecturer in environmental studies, becoming
director of the Bowdoin Marine Research Station at Bethel Point the
following year.
Ed joined with Professors David Page and the
late Dana Mayo to engage in collaborative research in response to a
critical need for scientific information on the complex interactions of
petroleum and toxic metals in the marine environment. This unique
partnership featured the involvement of Bowdoin students who studied the
effects of petroleum and other pollutants on marine life. This research
generated important scientific data for other researchers, policy
makers, the oil industry, and government agencies charged with
environmental protection and public safety. It also gave Bowdoin
students the opportunity to participate in real-world projects.
The oil-spill research took Ed around the
world, and he coauthored more than 70 papers on the environmental
impacts of oil spills, from incidents in the Gulf of Maine to the
significant releases of oil from the grounding of the Amoco Cadiz on the
coast of Brittany in 1978 and the 1989 Exxon Valdez accident in Prince
William Sound, Alaska. Ed and his colleagues received support from the
National Science Foundation, the National Research Council of Canada,
the State of Maine, the American Petroleum Institute, the Mobil
Foundation, the ExxonMobil Foundation and many other public and private
agencies for their pioneering research.
Ed's professional commitment to environmental protection also extended
to public service as well; he served on the Marine Research Board, the
Casco Bay Estuary Partnership, the Research Excellence Partnership
Advisory Board of the Maine Science and Technology Commission, and on
the Research Advisory Committee of the Wells National Estuarine Research
Reserve, the Maine Maritime Museum and others.
Ed taught in the Environmental Studies Program at Bowdoin for 24 years. He was a natural teacher. He brought his extensive experience, natural curiosity and passion for the environment into the classroom and lab. He engaged young people in his work at many levels. In the field, he brought alive the wonders of the marine environment. In the classroom and lab, he brought his real-world experience to engage the interests of his students.
He had many Bowdoin students over the years working with him in the field on real oil-spill studies in Alaska, Puerto Rico and many coastal locations in New England. There are many Bowdoin graduates who are doing what they're doing now because of their experience with Ed.
Upon his retirement in 2001, he was elected an honorary member of the Bowdoin Alumni Association. His colleagues in the chemistry department and his students remember Ed's many kindnesses and the Labrador retrievers who often accompanied him in Cleaveland Hall.
After his retirement, Ed remained active
professionally and focused his energies on travel, his passion for
learning as a voracious reader, the outdoors as an avid hunter and
engagement with his large network of friends, family and former
students. He and Kathie took particular joy in keeping up with former
students, being Host Parents for current Bowdoin students from away and
participating in the Society of Bowdoin Friends.
Andy Barclay remembers:
“Ed and I were in Berkeley together and had many uproarious times, much to the dismay of the Master. Ed had a fascination with weapons and owned some interesting pieces including a .350 Nitro Express which he used to test-fire in the second floor shower!! My favorite Ed story, though, was when we were in a bar in Gloucester, a notoriously tough fishing town, and we were approached by a seedy-looking character who pulled out a straight razor and flicked it open at us. He said, ‘You guys got anything to beat this?’ Ed said, ‘Yeah,’ and pulled out his .357 which he always carried. ‘Well,’ said the dude, ‘beats me,’ and slunk away. Ed and I finished our beers. I always felt safe with Ed.”