Gladys Elizabeth Baker, 1908–2007

Gladys Baker was born in Iowa City, Iowa, on 22 Jul 1908. She was the second daughter of Richard Phillip Baker and Katherine Riedelbauch. Gladys' father was from England and had matriculated simultaneously at Oxford University and University of London, and he graduated from both in 1887. He had come to explore the United States in 1888 and settled in the exciting frontiers of Texas where he taught secondary school and music while reading for the bar. In 1900 he was living in a boardinghouse in Lamar, Missouri, where he was president and science master of Lamar College. Gladys' mother, a daughter of German immigrants and a Lamar College music teacher, was living in the same boardinghouse. They became engaged and both left Lamar College for Anna Illinois Academy in 1901. Richard and Katherine were married 22 Feb 1902 in Glasford, Illinois. Richard developed a business making and marketing three-dimensional mathematical models for use in teaching. His models are in the collection of the Smithsonian's National Museum of American History in Washington, DC. In 1905 he accepted a mathe matics teaching position at the University of Iowa, simultaneously pursuing a mathematics and physics doctorate at the University of Chicago. While at the University of Iowa, he taught mathematics, continued to build mathematical models and pursued his wide ranging interests. Kate cared for their two daughters, kept house, taught music and grew flowers. Gladys and her sister Frances were raised in this sheltered, but intellectually exciting, environment. Gladys recalled that, "There were always music, books and interesting conversations with the family and visitors, all combining to make it a perfect environ ment in which to grow." Frances received her doctorate at the University of Chicago and went on to teach mathematics at Mount Holyoke College and Vassar College where she served as chairwoman of the mathematics department. Gladys graduated from Iowa City High School with honors in 1926. After graduation she and Frances made a grand tour of Europe. Gladys received a bachelor of arts degree from the University of Iowa in 1930 with majors in history and botany and a minor in zoology. She went on to pursue a master's degree from the University of Iowa under the direction of G.W. Martin, mycologist. She completed her master's in 1932 with a major in mycology and a minor in embryology. Her thesis work, a morphological study of myxomycete fructifi

to teach mathematics at Mount Holyoke College and Vassar College where she served as chairwoman of the mathematics department. Gladys graduated from Iowa City High School with honors in 1926. After graduation she and Frances made a grand tour of Europe.
Gladys received a bachelor of arts degree from the University of Iowa in 1930 with majors in history and botany and a minor in zoology. She went on to pursue a master's degree from the University of Iowa under the direction of G.W. Martin, mycologist. She completed her master's in 1932 with a major in mycology and a minor in embryology. Her thesis work, a morphological study of myxomycete fructifi-   Dodge and Baker (1938). The original plates are in the Farlow Reference Library of Cryptogamic Botany, Harvard Univ., Cambridge, Massachusetts. Used by permission. ments, who, because of heavy teaching schedules, might find it difficult to attract major grant support.
Gladys took research leave from Vassar College for the 1961±1962 academic year to work at the Department of Botany, University of Hawaii at Manoa. She stayed on at the University of Hawaii from 1963 until retirement as emeritus professor in 1973. Gladys had 10 master's degree students and five doctoral students while at the University of Hawaii. Her students worked on projects reflecting the wide breadth of her background experiences in mycology. A major project during this period was the Island Ecosystems Integrated Research Program of the U. S. International Biological Program. Her research was on the soil fungi and phylloplane fungi from Hawaii Volcanoes National Park. Because of her interest in medical mycology she conducted a study with a clinical professor of pediatrics on molds in the homes and environments of asthmatic children. She also did research on the longevity of dermatophytes on the beaches and in the playground sandboxes of Oahu. While in Hawaii Gladys became deeply involved in the culture and natural history of the Pacific Basin. She enjoyed many activities with Beatrice Krauss, the University of Hawaiis expert on Hawaiian ethnobotany. She traveled extensively and collected wood carvings of animals from around the Pacific Basin. She was also actively involved with tropical botanic gardens throughout the basin. She and friends purchased a beautiful old``cottage'' on Lake Geneva, New York, they called Hale Hui. Hale is Hawaiian for home, and Hui is Chinese for family association. Hale Hui became a center for social life during summers and holidays for her and her friends for many years. Hale Hui was noted for good humor, good cooking and good books. In post-retirement conversation with Martin Stoner at her Peoria, Arizona, home, Gladys said she never imagined that she would survive all of her Hale Hui friends.
Gladys needed to build a teaching collection of fungi for her mycology courses at the University of Hawaii. This presented a problem because the agriculture quarantine policies in Hawaii limited entry to only those fungi on the``approved'' list, which was very short. Out of pique she asked Louise Potter and several mycologists and microbiologists from New York, Montana, central Pacific Islands and Japan to swab the bottoms of their shoes before deplaning in Honolulu. She cultured the fungi from these swabs. When the list of fungi of all kinds reached 65 she decided it was time to publish. Thinking the paper would be of little interest, she did not request reprints beyond the gratis 25. How wrong she was! Space exploration researchers overwhelmed her with reprint requests.
She was elected a member of Sigma Xi at Washington University in 1934. She had always kept her father's Sigma Xi pin. In 1938 she was elected a fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science. She was a charter member of the Medical Mycological Society of the Americas. She took great pride in the Martin-Baker Fund, both for having her name associated with her teacher and master's thesis advisor and having the opportunity to help young mycologists start their own research.
In 1973 Gladys retired to Sun City, Arizona, where her home was filled with good books, music, southwestern Indian culture, treasured examples of Chinese art and her gardens. She continued to write, including an autobiography. Don Hemmes reported in Inoculum that``¼ she had written (on an old typewriter) a beautiful letter using such precise and flowery language as``frontispiece'' and``top drawer''. Gladys' students remember her as an effective and enthusiastic teacher, a scientist with the highest integrity, and a warm and caring friend. She was a gracious lady of many interests and talents, all executed with a style consistent with the English traditions of her father. It was a pleasure to have been associated with her.