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This article is from the Dictionary of North Carolina Biography, 6 volumes, edited by William S. Powell. Copyright ©1979-1996 by the University of North Carolina Press. Used by permission of the publisher. For personal use and not for further distribution. Please submit permission requests for other use directly to the publisher.

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Stuckey, Jasper Leonidas

by John M. Parker III, 1994

24 July 1891–1 Aug. 1979

Jasper Leonidas Stuckey, geologist, college professor, and state administrator, was born on a small farm in eastern Johnston County. The oldest of seven children, he was the son of John Haywood, a farmer and rural schoolteacher, and Betty Eliza Bunn Stuckey. As a boy he attended local rural schools and worked on his father's farm. He was graduated from Smithfield High School in May 1914 and entered The University of North Carolina that fall. A chance encounter with Professor Collier Cobb directed him from schoolteaching into geology. During 1917–18 he operated a lime plant for the North Carolina Department of Agriculture at Bridgeport, Tenn., where he completed his B.A. degree requirements by correspondence. In 1918 and 1919 he served in France as a rifleman in the American Expeditionary Forces, and in the spring of 1919 he studied at Grenoble UniversityBlack and White portrait of Dr. Jasper Leonidas Stuckey, circa 1940-1949 and circa 1950-1954. Item 0227285, Special Collections Research Center, North Carolina State University Libraries, Raleigh, North Carolina. Used by permission.

Following his discharge in July 1919, Stuckey reentered The University of North Carolina and obtained an M.A. degree in 1920. Colonel J. H. Pratt employed him as an assistant geologist on the North Carolina Geological and Economic Survey during 1920 and 1921 and in the summers of 1922 and 1923; from January to June 1921 Stuckey was also an instructor in geology at the university. In 1921 he entered Cornell University, where he was a laboratory assistant and instructor in geology before receiving a Ph.D. degree in 1924. His dissertation on the pyrophyllite deposits in Moore and Chatham counties was based on field mapping for the state.

Returning to North Carolina, Stuckey was again employed by the state as an assistant geologist, and Raleigh then became his permanent residence. In 1925 he was appointed state geologist in the newly created Department of Conservation and Development, of which he was acting director from August to December 1925.

In September 1926 he resigned the governmental post to accept appointment as associate professor of geology in the Agronomy Department at the North Carolina State College of Agriculture and Engineering. In the following year he became professor of geology and head of the newly formed Department of Geology. Except for student laboratory assistants, he was the sole geology teacher until 1935. Stuckey taught the geology courses for a B.S. degree program in geology and special courses for ceramic and mining engineering students, as well as correspondence and extension courses chiefly for teachers. As staff additions permitted, he concentrated his teaching on economic geology, mineralogy, and petrography. Although he also carried a heavy load of administrative and committee work and was active in college organizations, he continued field investigations of mineral deposits and produced numerous publications. In 1954 the Department of Geology was absorbed into another department, and a year later Stuckey took a leave of absence from the college.

In 1940 he had been asked again to become state geologist, on a part-time basis, a post he resumed full-time in 1955. During the 1940s state financial support of the Division of Mineral Resources was meager. In order to meet wartime requests for information on strategic and critical minerals, Stuckey sought collaboration with other agencies. Cooperative projects arranged with the Tennessee Valley Authority, the U.S. Geological Survey, and the U.S. Bureau of Mines concerned a wide range of mineral deposits as well as groundwater supplies across the state. Stuckey served from 1941 to 1943 as federal emergency coordinator of mines for North Carolina. In 1946 he became the first director of the Minerals Research Laboratory in Asheville, established by the Tennessee Valley Authority and the state to provide mineral beneficiation studies to help the region's industry. His experience and good judgment contributed much to its immediate and continuing success. Though responsibility for the laboratory was transferred in 1954 to the Department of Engineering Research at North Carolina State College, Stuckey continued to influence its operation as a member of its advisory committee for the rest of his life. Under his leadership the Division of Mineral Resources was transformed into an effective and respected state geological survey. Numerous useful reports were published; especially important was the 1958 Geological Map of North Carolina with explanatory text, compiled under Stuckey's immediate direction.

Stuckey retired as state geologist in July 1964 but remained as a consultant until March 1965. He completed his comprehensive North Carolina: Its Geology and Mineral Resources in 1965. During his career he was author or coauthor of more than fifty publications, essentially all of which were devoted to North Carolina geology and nonmetallic minerals. No other person has had so great an effect on promoting knowledge and use of the state's mineral wealth. After his retirement he continued to work at intervals for the Division of Mineral Resources and took on consulting projects, notably regarding groundwater supplies and sites for nuclear power plants.

A member of many professional, civic, and other organizations, Stuckey held local and regional offices in most of them. Among those in which he was most active were the American Institute of Mining and Metallurgical Engineers (chairman, Eastern North Carolina Subsection, 1957 and 1969), Geological Society of America (vice-chairman, Southeastern Section, 1952–53, and chairman, 1964–65), North Carolina Academy of Science (president, 1941), Carolina Geological Society (president, 1947), Society of Economic Geologists, Mineralogical Society of America, Association of American State Geologists (president, 1958–59), Civitan Club of Raleigh (president, 1933–34), Torch Club, and Executives Club. He was a member of Phi Kappa Phi (president, State College chapter, 1934–35), Sigma Xi (president, State College club, 1938–39), Sigma Gamma Epsilon (president, Cornell chapter, 1923–24), Keramos, Sigma Chi, and the Masonic order. He received the North Carolina Distinguished Citizens Award in 1964, was awarded an honorary doctor of science degree in 1965 by North Carolina State University, and was made an honorary member of the Association of Engineering Geologists in 1978. The main building of North Carolina State University's Minerals Research Laboratory in Asheville was dedicated on 2 Oct. 1981 in Stuckey's honor.

After being active in the Methodist church for much of his life, he became converted about 1951 to the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints. After 1962 he was patriarch of the Raleigh Stake, and in 1975–76 he served a missionary term at the Mormon Temple in Washington, D.C.

In 1920 Stuckey married Anabel Stephenson of Smithfield. She died in 1935; they had no children. In 1936 he married Gladys I. Brinkley of Stem. They had one son, William Jasper, born in 1942. Stuckey died in a Raleigh hospital at age eighty-eight following a three-month illness and was buried in Montlawn Memorial Park in Raleigh, survived by his wife, his son, a sister, and a brother.

References:

American Men of Science, 1967 .

John M. Parker III, "Geology at North Carolina State—A History" (typescript, Archives, North Carolina State University, Raleigh).

John M. Parker III and Stephen G. Conrad, "Memorial to Jasper Leonidas Stuckey, 1891–1979," Geological Society of America, Memorials, vol. 11 (1980 [portrait and bibliography]).

Raleigh News and Observer, 7 Aug. 1955, 2 Aug. 1979.

Jasper L. Stuckey Papers (Archives, North Carolina State University, and Files, Geological Survey Section, North Carolina Department of Natural Resources and Community Development, Raleigh).

Who's Who in America, 1966–1967.

Additional Resources:

Conley, James F; North Carolina. Division of Mineral Resources. Geology and mineral resources of Moore County, North Carolina. Raleigh, N.C.: N.C. Dept. of Conservation and Development, Division of Mineral Resources. 1962. https://archive.org/details/geologymineralre1962conl (accessed August 7, 2014).

Elisha Mitchell Scientific Society; North Carolina Academy of Science; University of North Carolina (1793-1962). Journal of the Elisha Mitchell Scientific Society. Chapel Hill, N.C. [etc.] Elisha Mitchell Scientific Society [etc.] 1936. http://dc.lib.unc.edu/cdm/ref/collection/jncas/id/1822 (accessed August 8, 2014).

Elisha Mitchell Scientific Society; North Carolina Academy of Science; University of North Carolina (1793-1962). Journal of the Elisha Mitchell Scientific Society. Chapel Hill, N.C. [etc.] Elisha Mitchell Scientific Society [etc.] 1931. http://dc.lib.unc.edu/cdm/ref/collection/jncas/id/1512 (accessed August 8, 2014).

Parker, John Mason. Geology and structure of part of the Spruce Pine District, North Carolina, a progress report. [Raleigh, N.C.: North Carolina Dept. of Conservation and Development.] 1952. https://archive.org/details/geologystructure1952park (accessed August 7, 2014).

Stuckey, Jasper. L., and Warren G. Steel. 1953. Geology and mineral resources of North Carolina. Raleigh: North Carolina Dept. of Conservation and Development, Division of Mineral Resources. http://catalog.hathitrust.org/Record/001667623 (accessed August 7, 2014).

Stuckey, Jasper. L. (Jaser Leonidas). Pyrophyllite deposits in North Carolina. Raleigh, N.C.: s.n. 1967. https://archive.org/details/pyrophyllitedepo1967stuc (accessed August 7, 2014).

Watts, Gordon P. Fort Branch survey and recovery project. Raleigh [N.C.]: Underwater Archaeology Branch, North Carolina Division of Archives and History, 1979. https://digital.ncdcr.gov/Documents/Detail/fort-branch-survey-and-recovery-project/2143397 (accessed August 7, 2014).

Wilson, William F. Bibliography of North Carolina geology, 1910-1960. Raleigh: North Carolina Dept. of Natual and Economic Resources, Division of Resource Planning and Evaluation, Mineral Resources Section. 1975. https://archive.org/details/bibliographyofno1975wils (accessed August 7, 2014).

Image Credits:

"Jasper Leonidas Stuckey." Black and white photograph. Circa 1940-1949 and circa 1950-1954. Item 0227285, Rare & Unique Digital Collections, University Archives Photographs, Special Collections Research Center, North Carolina State University Libraries, Raleigh, North Carolina. http://d.lib.ncsu.edu/collections/catalog/0227285 (accessed 7, 2014). Used by permission.