By Dr Joe Brady, UCD
The Geographical Society of Ireland honoured Dennis Pringle with a lifetime contribution award at an event held in the Geography Department, Maynooth University on Thursday, 15 September, 2016. Dennis was one a small group of young geographers who joined university departments in Ireland in the 1970s. He was quick to get involved in the Geographical Society of Ireland, where he and others set about the business of the society with energy, enthusiasm and innovation. The latter was not always appreciated by the ‘senior’ members but it is ensured that the Society was lively. It was also busy with a programme of meetings each year, which were generally well attended, fieldtrips and the production of Irish Geography. Dennis was soon a member of the committee and then Secretary and ultimately President. He learned that the Society operated on a shoestring; in fact it did not own a shoestring. Since there was no money, everything was done by the individual labour of the members of the committee.
GeoNews is an excellent example of his work, enthusiasm and dedication to the Society. It would have remained unsung, and even taken for granted, was it not for the excellent idea of a lifetime contribution award.
He took over as editor of GeoNews in 1987 for issue 21 and continued in that role until issue 36. Afterwards he remained a valued adviser to his successors. We are fortunate that he decided to write a short piece on the occasion of the Society’s 75th Anniversary, A Short History of Geonews. It is online at http://eprints.maynoothuniversity.ie/2918/1/DP_GeoNews09.pdf. In it, he describes the production process and you just marvel at the ingenuity, craftiness and dogged determination that ensured a quality production which appeared on time. Nothing was straightforward and all unnecessary expense had to be avoided; this required the unwitting assistance of the Maths Department and their laser printer.
The account will raise a smile but it also says much about Dennis and why it is fitting that he was honoured by the Society.
GeoNews is an excellent example of his work, enthusiasm and dedication to the Society. It would have remained unsung, and even taken for granted, was it not for the excellent idea of a lifetime contribution award.
He took over as editor of GeoNews in 1987 for issue 21 and continued in that role until issue 36. Afterwards he remained a valued adviser to his successors. We are fortunate that he decided to write a short piece on the occasion of the Society’s 75th Anniversary, A Short History of Geonews. It is online at http://eprints.maynoothuniversity.ie/2918/1/DP_GeoNews09.pdf. In it, he describes the production process and you just marvel at the ingenuity, craftiness and dogged determination that ensured a quality production which appeared on time. Nothing was straightforward and all unnecessary expense had to be avoided; this required the unwitting assistance of the Maths Department and their laser printer.
The account will raise a smile but it also says much about Dennis and why it is fitting that he was honoured by the Society.
ps:
Prof Gerry Kearns also pays homage to Denis and the Awards event, hosted in Maynooth here