Roland Clement
Roland Charles Clement was an American environmentalist who worked for two decades at the National Audubon Society where he served many roles including staff biologist, staff ecologist, and Vice President. He was also a key figure in helping to ban DDT.
Early life and education
Roland C. Clement was born in 1912 in Fall River, Massachusetts, the oldest child of Germain A. and Angelina Clement. He attended a two-year business college from 1928-1930 and worked as a bookkeeper for twelve years. In 1934, during the Great Depression, he was able to pursue his interest in ornithology when he began banding birds with Maurice Broun at the O.L. Austin Ornithological Research Station on outer Cape Cod. In 1938, Clement returned to school. He attended a two-year vocational program in Wildlife Management at the University of Massachusetts, Amherst, graduating in 1940.In 1943, he enlisted in the Air Force where he worked as a weather observer from 1943 to 1946. He trained in Illinois, Louisiana, and Colorado. After training he was assigned to the Goosebay Station in Labrador where he remained from September, 1943 to August, 1944. After being promoted to Technical Sergeant, he was asked to take charge of weather duties at the remote George River's Indian House Lake in the interior of Labrador. While at Indian House Lake, he extensively studied birds and small mammals and later published two life histories based on these studies. He later returned to Labrador to spend six weeks for more detailed studies in 1957 and in 1958.
After the war, Clement matriculated at Brown University where he majored in botany and minored in geology graduating in 1949. He then pursued graduate study in wildlife conservation at Cornell University graduating with a MS in Wildlife Conservation in 1950.