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Finding Aid
Andy Hopp Papers
SDSU-Archives MA 091 · Papers · 1988-2018

The Andy Hopp Papers document the academic, professional, and research activities of Andy Hopp, primarily in the fields of geography, cartography, environmental studies, and geographic information systems (GIS). The collection spans undergraduate and graduate coursework, professional conference participation, internship experiences, thesis research, and subject reference material. It provides insight into the development of geographic knowledge and pedagogical approaches at South Dakota State University and within professional geographic organizations.

Materials include extensive coursework in physical and human geography, GIS, remote sensing, ecoregions, biogeography, geomorphology, and historical geography, as well as history, math, statistics, speech, and criminal justice. The collection also includes academic products such as projects, maps, assignments, and digital files. Conference materials represent multiple meetings of the Association of American Geographers, including regional and national events.

Additional materials document Hopp’s internship at the SDSU GIS Center of Excellence and his involvement with the National Snow and Ice Data Center. Collected reference materials cover U.S. census maps, environmental topics, and South Dakota wildlife. His thesis research addresses pheasant hunting, bison-cattle comparisons, bird conservation, and tourism in rural and agricultural landscapes.

The collection offers researchers documentation of early 21st-century geographic education and research practices, especially in the Northern Plains region, and for its value in exploring conservation and land-use debates in South Dakota.

Hopp, Andy
Charles F. Gritzner Papers
SDSU-Archives UA 053.029 · Papers · 1871-2014

The Charles F. “Fritz” Gritzner Papers span 1871 to 2014 and document his career in geography and geographic education, including teaching, service to professional organizations, curriculum and standards work, and outreach to K–12 educators. The collection contains annotated calendars (1987 to 2008), professional activity and experience lists (1984 to 2009), an honors and awards list (1980 to 2010), and phone, letter, and activity logs covering 1979 to 2006. Awards and recognition are represented through certificates and plaques, including the South Dakota State University Distinguished Professor plaque (1993) and additional teaching and service awards.

The collection includes substantial organizational records from the Association of South Dakota Geographers and Planners dating primarily from 1981 to 1990. These files include constitutions and bylaws, mailing lists, newsletters and newsletter items, presidential notebooks, and related administrative records, as well as materials associated with the GIFT (Geographic Information For Teachers) program. Extensive records of the National Council for Geographic Education span the 1960s through 2011 and include minutes, executive board agendas, constitution and governance materials, officer and committee files, membership documentation, newsletters, reports, correspondence, planning calendars, publications, and historical data, including a file on Gritzner’s involvement with the organization.

Geography standards and social studies materials document work on national and state standards and related curriculum efforts. These files include publications such as Geography for Life: National Geography Standards (1994), guidelines for geographic education, national assessment framework materials, documentation of other states’ standards, and South Dakota geography standards files dating from the 1990s into the 2000s. Additional standards-related records include working papers and resource materials spanning multiple decades.

A large portion of the collection documents the South Dakota Geographic Alliance and its programs from the late 1980s through 2011. These records include administrative, grant, budget, and fundraising files; correspondence; newsletters; meeting files; teacher lists; institute and workshop materials; evaluations; field trip documentation; and materials related to Geography Awareness Week. Program files also cover teacher-focused offerings such as summer geographic institutes, seminars, and short courses, and include extensive documentation related to Advanced Placement Human Geography initiatives, including promotional materials, teaching packets, course descriptions, and institute records. Related materials include student correspondence and ephemera associated with “Adventures with Boov,” along with photographs and a photo album.

South Dakota Geographic Bee materials span 1987 to 2013 and include media coverage, participant and program files, winners lists, and annual state-level competition kits from 1989 through 2013, as well as later archival and history files. Additional topical groupings include records related to the Rocky Mountain Region Japan Project, including correspondence, course materials, newsletters, resource files, and travel documentation.

Instructional materials document geography courses and teacher training offerings and include syllabi, exams, lecture notes, handouts, and reference files for subjects such as climatology, conservation, Latin America, the Caribbean, and other regional and thematic topics. Research files are extensive and organized by geographic region and subject area, with materials spanning the mid-twentieth century through the 2000s and including maps, clippings, tear sheets, correspondence, and reference literature. Writings and publishing files include drafts, proofs, correspondence, and agreements for works produced for a range of publishers and projects, including contributions associated with “Panorama” and book-length and instructional publications.

Visual materials consist largely of slides, with sets documenting geographic regions, landforms, maps, travel, and instructional topics, including both undated groupings and dated series from the 1960s through the 1990s. Photographs and related visual documentation are also present within program files and outreach activities. Together, the records provide documentation of geographic education initiatives, professional service, instructional practice, and related research and publishing activity.

Gritzner, Charles F.
Edward P. Hogan Papers
SDSU-Archives UA 053.017 · Papers · 1960-2014, undated

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.

Hogan, Edward Patrick 1939-2025
Geography Department Records
SDSU-Archives UA 006.13 · Records · 1973-2021, undated

The Geography Department Records are composed of materials documenting the academic, administrative, and outreach activities of the Geography Department at South Dakota State University. The collection includes departmental budgets, internal and external program reviews, institutional self-studies, and graduate program self-studies, reflecting the department’s development and evaluation over time. It also contains newsletters, correspondence, and materials related to academic events, including lectures, conferences, and the Geographic Information Science Center of Excellence. Of note are files related to Dr. Edward P. Hogan and a booklet on graduate studies in geography, as well as local research materials such as House Types in Brookings, SD: A Visible History. These records provide insight into curriculum development, departmental planning, and the promotion of geographic research and education.

This collection documents the growth and professionalization of the Geography Department at SDSU, including its engagement with national geographic organizations, its role in regional research, and its contributions to geographic education and applied science. Materials related to the Geographic Information Science Center of Excellence and the honoring of Dr. Hogan highlight both technological innovation and individual scholarly impact within the department.

South Dakota State University. Department of Geography