Edward P. Hogan Papers

Identity elements

Reference code

SDSU-Archives UA 053.017

Level of description

Papers

Title

Edward P. Hogan Papers

Date(s)

  • 1960-2014, undated (Creation)

Extent

7.42 linear feet (7 record boxes, 1 document case)

Name of creator

(1939-)

Biographical history

Edward Patrick Hogan was born in St. Louis, Missouri, the eldest of five children of Edward W. Hogan and Dorothy Fehrenbach Hogan. He attended St. Gabriel the Archangel Grade School and graduated from Bishop Du Bourg High School. He earned a B.S. in 1961, an M.A. in 1962, and a Ph.D. in 1969, all from Saint Louis University in St. Louis, Missouri.

Dr. Hogan joined the faculty of South Dakota State University in 1967 as a member of the Geography Department, where he was responsible for developing South Dakota’s only geography program. Over the course of his career at SDSU, he held several leadership positions, including Head of the Department of Geography from 1973 to 1991, Associate Dean of the College of Arts and Sciences from 1977 to 1983, and Coordinator of Student Academic Affairs within the same college from 1983 to 1991. From 1991 to 1999, he served as Assistant Vice President for Academic Affairs. In December 1999, he was appointed Associate Vice President for Academic Affairs and Chief Information Technology Officer. He also served as Coordinator of Faculty Development and Articulation, and Director of Summer Term.

Dr. Hogan received numerous honors throughout his career, including the Distinguished Teaching Award from the National Council for Geographic Education and the Distinguished Service Award from the Defense Mapping Agency. He was listed in multiple biographical directories such as Who’s Who in the Midwest, Who’s Who in the World, and International Who’s Who. He was also featured in Leaders in American Geography, a publication profiling seventy-nine individuals who have had a major influence on geographic education in the United States. In 1991, Governor George S. Mickelson named him the State Geographer of South Dakota.

Dr. Hogan is married to Joan Ford Hogan. They have five children: Bridget, Edward Jr., Timothy, Erin, and Molly.

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Scope and content

The Ed Hogan Papers span from 1960 to 2014 and document the career, scholarship, and public service of Edward P. Hogan, geographer, faculty member, and academic administrator at South Dakota State University. The collection offers comprehensive insight into Hogan’s leadership in building South Dakota’s only geography program and advancing public understanding of the state’s demographic, educational, and regional development challenges. It includes appointment books, correspondence, clippings, certificates, photographs, academic writings, public testimony, and conference presentations, as well as research materials gathered during Hogan’s studies on out-migration, urban planning, geography education, aging populations, and political and cultural identity in South Dakota.

The papers contain personal and professional correspondence (1966–2003), academic and administrative files related to Hogan’s tenure in the Department of Geography and in central administration, and extensive documentation of the Center for Public Higher Education, particularly its efforts to expand university access in Sioux Falls. Drafts, reports, grant proposals, articles, and manuscripts authored or co-authored by Hogan are present throughout, reflecting his long-standing interests in house typology, rural development, internal migration, and geography curricula. Materials also include course files, lecture notes, and notebooks from his studies at Saint Louis University, along with SDSU governance records such as restructuring proposals, diversity council materials, and long-range planning documents. Additional content includes retirement tributes, family history files, and writings related to Hogan’s Irish heritage and public outreach.

This collection is a resource for understanding the development of geography as a discipline at SDSU and within South Dakota’s public higher education system. Hogan’s scholarship on population trends, particularly youth out-migration and community planning, informed both policy and pedagogy across academic and civic contexts. His administrative leadership, especially through the Center for Public Higher Education, provides documentation of institutional responses to changing educational access and demographic needs. The collection supports research in geography education, rural sociology, state policy, migration studies, and the political culture of twentieth-century South Dakota.

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Languages of the material

  • English

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    Copyright and Use Statement

    In Copyright This Item is protected by copyright and/or related rights. You are free to use this Item in any way that is permitted by the copyright and related rights legislation that applies to your use. For other uses, you need to obtain permission from the rights-holder(s).

    Materials in this collection may be subject to Title 17, Section 108 of the United States Copyright Act. Users are responsible for ensuring compliance with copyright, privacy, trademark, and other applicable rights for their intended use. Obtaining all necessary permissions is the user's responsibility. Written authorization from the copyright and/or other rights holders is required for publication, distribution, or any use of protected materials beyond what is permitted under fair use.

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