Cenizo Journal Winter 2011 | Page 8

AYN FOUNDATION (DAS MAXIMUM) ANDY WARHOL “And some rin up hill and down dale, knapping the chucky stanes to pieces with hammers, like sae many road makers run daft. They say it is to see how the world was made.” – Sir Walter Scott, St. Ronan’s Well, 1824 MARIA ZERRES THE LAST SUPPER SEPTEMBER ELEVEN Brite Building, 107-109 N Highland, Marfa Open weekends noon to 5pm or by appointment. Please call 432.729.3315 for more information. Green Works ARCHITECTURAL AND CONSTRUCTION PHASE SERVICES Adobe Restoration Sustainable Architectural Design Rainwater Catchment Design Handicapped Accessible Design Solar/Wind Energy Consulting Photo courtesy Martha MacLeod Mike Green, AIA, Texas License #10917 LEED Accredited Professional 646-256-8112 [email protected] Box 97, Marfa, TX 79843 On Bill MacLeod by Jean Hardy Pittman B a facility of the Chihuahuan Desert Research Institute Est. 1974 botanical gardens open year-round! cactus & succulent greenhouse hiking trails located on ST HWY 118 outdoor & indoor exhibits 4 mi. S. of Fort Davis nature shop closed major holidays workshops & programs Open 9-5, Mon.-Sat. citizen science opportunities www.cdri.org school & tour groups welcome 432-364-2499 8 ill MacLeod first showed up at Front Street Books in 1998, not long after he and his wife, Martha, moved to Alpine from Houston. Bill would buy the local newspa- pers every Thursday, chat about the news and fre- quently ask me, “Well, how are things, Mrs. Hardy?” And if he didn’t get a satisfactory response, he would press, “Well, and how are things?” I learned he was teaching computer courses at the university part-time, that he was semi-retired and had been a business professional in Houston. Later, when he began asking if there was any market for a guidebook on the geology of the Big Bend, I perked up. That’s when I learned he was a bona fide geologist, too. This man has some- thing up his sleeve, I thought. Indeed. Between 2003 and August 2010, MacLeod personally wrote, edited, published, dis- tributed and promoted five books – two were expanded revisions of earlier works – on the geol- ogy of the Big Bend area. He also he wrote a guidebook on Palo Duro Canyon in the Texas Panhandle. William MacLeod was born July 5, 1938, at Strathnaver, in the sparsely populated northern reaches of Scotland. His parents, Daisy and Donald MacLeod, were crofters, raising sheep on a small farm. The boy did well in school and went to Aberdeen University to study geology, graduat- Cenizo First Quarter 2011 ing in 1960. MacLeod’s first job took him to the newly independent state of Nigeria, where he worked in the oil and gas fields. During a vacation to Amsterdam, he met a young American woman, Val Pierpont, who became his wife. After the couple wed in 1963, they returned to Nigeria. They lived there until the bloody Nigerian Civil War broke out. They fled the vio- lence with their by-then two young children in 1966, Bill taking a job as a mining engineer near Johannesburg, South Africa, at the world’s largest platinum-mining complex. But political unrest during South African anti-apartheid struggles caused them to return to the United States in 1969. They settled in Boston, and Bill made a sharp career turn by taking a job as a computer pro- grammer. The Scotsman soon sought and obtained American citizenship. In 1974, he applied to Harvard University and earned his MBA degree in 1976. At 38, with his geology and fresh business cre- dentials, MacLeod eyed Houston, where he went to work for several oil-related firms. In 1980 or so, he created his own business called Rosail Minerals (Rosail is a Scottish place name), importing and exporting minerals such as gyp- sum for large companies. In 1986, Bill and Val’s marriage ended in divorce. Some time later, Bill met Martha Klein through mutual friends. They married in 1992 and remained in Houston until 1998, when Bill retired. Tired of big city life, they moved to Alpine and into the heart of a geological wonderland. Not one to be idle, Bill took the teaching job at Sul Ross and found a renewed interest in geology, and Martha, formerly a reading tutor, started graduate study at Sul Ross to become a certified speech therapist. The same day Bill and Martha came to town, a young geologist named Blaine Hall arrived too. The two men also started teaching at Sul Ross on the same day, and they hit it off from the beginning. Bill discovered that Hall knew the geology behind the scenery of Big Bend and was willing to share his knowledge. “Bill had not used his geology for some time, but he was a really good geologist,” said Hall. “He and I went all over the area, and I showed him my favorite places and taught him what I knew.” It was not long before MacLeod’s vision of geology guidebooks for the general public began to take shape. He studied every relevant geologi- cal paper he could get his hands on, Hall said. “He mastered the material.” Blaine Hall became a steady sounding board for Bill throughout the course of the next decade. He was closely involved in the research for Bill’s first book, Big Bend Vistas, which ultimately covered the features along the major highways of the Big Bend area. MacLeod began the road log 22 miles south of Fort Stockton on Hwy. 385, at the Sierra Madera mountain range. This is where a traveler from the east, dropping down from Interstate 10, would first see a genuine mountain up close.