James Rodney Hastings papers

MS 716
Image
James Rodney Hastings and two fellow researchers gaze at plants in the Arizona desert.

James Rodney Hastings and two fellow researchers gaze at plants in the Arizona desert. 

Collection area: History of Science

Collection dates: 1923 to 2000

About this collection

Papers of meteorologist and mayor Rodney Hastings contains correspondence, newspaper clippings, articles, unpublished writings, photographs, and documents relating to Hasting’s life. The correspondence includes letters both to and from Hastings, covering his academic career at the University of Arizona as a meteorology professor, and his brief political career as the mayor of Hayden, Arizona. It includes frequent letters to Bernard and Erna Hennessy and an exchange with Stewart Udall. A portion of the collection consists of newspaper clippings and articles that Hastings collected concerning the town of Hayden, covering topics such as its relationship with Kennecott Copper, property assessment trends, town taxes, and the town’s incorporation. Also included are some of Hasting’s personal papers, including published and unpublished articles he had written, personal documents concerning his life, his time as a high school history teacher, and his time as a university professor, and several photographs. This collections spans 1923-2000, with the bulk of the papers spanning 1954-1974.

Historical background

James Rodney Hastings, often called Rod or Rodney, was a meteorologist that studied the effects of rainfall on plant growth in arid regions. Born in Hayden, Arizona on November 30th, 1923, Hastings served in the Army during World War II as a private. He attended Kenyon College, the University of Chicago, and then the University of Arizona, where he graduated with a bachelor’s degree in history in 1951, and a Ph.D. in history and a minor in meteorology in 1963. Hastings taught History at Hayden High School and was elected to be the first mayor of the town of Hayden, after it was incorporated in 1956. In 1962, he took a teaching position in in the Atmospheric Sciences Department at the University of Arizona. He co-authored two books, The Changing Mile, and The Changing Mile Revisited. James Rodney Hastings died on June 30th, 1974, following complications from open heart surgery.

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