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UW-Stevens Point emeritus professor, conservationist to be honored

July 12, 2024
UW-Stevens Point Professor Emeritus Bob Freckmann leads an interpretive hike on behalf of the North Central Conservancy Trust (NCCT).
UW-Stevens Point Professor Emeritus Bob Freckmann leads an interpretive hike on behalf of the North Central Conservancy Trust (NCCT).


A University of Wisconsin-Stevens Point emeritus biology professor and founding member of a local conservation organization will be honored for his lifelong environment work on Wednesday, July 17.

Professor Emeritus Robert Freckmann will be presented the 2024 Harold “Bud” Jordahl Lifetime Achievement Award by the North Central Conservancy Trust (NCCT) and Gathering Waters, Wisconsin’s Alliance for Land Trusts. The ceremony will be held Wednesday, July 17, at 4:30-7 p.m. at Schmeeckle Reserve in the Pankowski Friends Amphitheater, 2419 North Point Drive, Stevens Point.

Freckmann taught plant taxonomy and agrostology at UW-Stevens Point for 32 years before his retirement in 2001. He and Professor Frank Bowers began a herbarium collection of plant and grass specimens in 1969, which was named the Robert W. Freckman Herbarium upon his retirement. It includes a quarter of a million specimen records and is the second largest herbarium in Wisconsin.

He was a founding member of the NCCT, which has protected more than 5,000 acres of land in eight counties, creating conservation easements that are protected from development. Freckmann and his late wife, Sally, created a protected easement on their property that served as an outdoor classroom for his biology students. He continues to serve on the NCCT Properties Committee and conduct botany surveys for landowners interested in conservation easements.

“Bob has dedicated his life to conservation and contributed to the scientific body of knowledge and he is still curating today,” said Chris Radford, NCCT executive director. The lifetime achievement award shows the organization’s gratitude towards Freckmann for his decades of service leading interpretive hikes for the public, identifying native plant species and sharing resources, he said.