Printed: 2013-05-25
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Verner, Coolie
Identity area
Type of entity
Person
Authorized form of name
Verner, Coolie
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Description area
Dates of existence
1917-1979
History
Coolie Verner was born on April 25, 1917 in Portsmouth, Ohio, the son of an American military officer. His family were old-established tobacco farmers in Virginia. Verner attended the College of William and Mary in Virginia, receiving an A.B. in 1937 and an A.M. in 1950. He received his M.A. and Ed.D. from Columbia University, New York in 1951 and 1952 respectively. Verner spent two years studying art in Paris as well as one year at the University of London on a Fulbright Fellowship, 1952-1953. Between 1942 and 1947, Verner served in the U.S. Army advancing from private to captain. During his service in the Army he became an expert in bomb disposal and is said to have been personally thanked by Queen Elizabeth for defusing a bomb in the crypt of St. Paul's Cathedral in London. Verner taught adult education at the University of Virginia from 1947-1950. From 1953- 1961 he was Professor of Adult Education at Florida State University. He joined the Faculty of Education, UBC in 1961 where he taught adult education until his retirement in 1977. Professor Verner died on Oct. 12, 1979 at his home on Mayne Island, B.C.
Verner's contributions to scholarship lay in three fields of endeavour: adult education, rural sociology and the history of cartography and carto-bibliography. As an adult education professor Verner helped to create and develop the field as an academic discipline. He wrote over 170 works and lectured on the subject in Canada and the U.S. as well as in countries as far away as Australia and New Zealand. Under his guidance UBC became recognized as one of the major centres for adult education in the world. As a rural sociologist, Verner directed studies for the Canadian government on the Okanagan and on declining rural life in Canada. He also acted as a consultant to countries overseas, and he was a Canada Council Fellow 1968-1969. Equal if not greater than his interest in these two areas, was Verner's passion for the history of cartography and carto-bibliography. His first publications in the field were studies in the 1950s on the early maps of Virginia. His last book was an historical cartographic work, "The Northpart of America". Verner collected maps and kept detailed carto-bibliographic descriptions of them and many of the thousands of other maps he examined in his research. He was particularly interested in developing research methodology for the study and description of early printed maps.
Verner's contributions to scholarship lay in three fields of endeavour: adult education, rural sociology and the history of cartography and carto-bibliography. As an adult education professor Verner helped to create and develop the field as an academic discipline. He wrote over 170 works and lectured on the subject in Canada and the U.S. as well as in countries as far away as Australia and New Zealand. Under his guidance UBC became recognized as one of the major centres for adult education in the world. As a rural sociologist, Verner directed studies for the Canadian government on the Okanagan and on declining rural life in Canada. He also acted as a consultant to countries overseas, and he was a Canada Council Fellow 1968-1969. Equal if not greater than his interest in these two areas, was Verner's passion for the history of cartography and carto-bibliography. His first publications in the field were studies in the 1950s on the early maps of Virginia. His last book was an historical cartographic work, "The Northpart of America". Verner collected maps and kept detailed carto-bibliographic descriptions of them and many of the thousands of other maps he examined in his research. He was particularly interested in developing research methodology for the study and description of early printed maps.
