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John
Edward "Jack" Estes was born in San Diego, California, July
21, 1939. He earned a Bachelor's and a Master's Degree in Geography
from San Diego State University. Estes' first job after getting his
Master's degree in Geography was with the CIA. On July 20, 1963 - the
day after their wedding - Jack and Claire drove across United States
to Washington, D.C., in a Dodge Dart with no air conditioning. "Some
honeymoon," quipped Mrs. Estes, remembering the long hours on the
road in sweltering heat. (1) Estes studied
aerial photos of the Soviet Union. The salary was $6,000 per year.
Estes had taken Russian at San Diego State. The CIA boosted his language
skills. Years later, his knowledge of Russian and of the Soviet Union
paid off with a free trip. The UCSB Alumni Association was planning
a tour of the Soviet Union; Estes was invited to go in exchange for
giving several lectures to the tour group. To prepare, the Alumni Association
sent Dr. and Mrs. Estes on a scouting trip. While in Moscow, the government
restrictions on movement were extreme. They limited experiencing the
real Russian people, living conditions, and landscape, and they made
the couple uneasy. They returned safely, but, due to international tensions,
the tour itself was cancelled. (1)
After nearly a year with the CIA, Texas Instruments (TI) offered Estes
a job doing remote sensing and air photo interpretation - TI didn't
just make calculators then - for a third more money. The $8,000 per
year was a significant improvement. The Estes lived in Dallas from June
1964 to July 1965, until Mr. Estes got a fellowship at UCLA to begin
his PhD. (1)
Estes
had an extra challenge that wasn't publicized in professional journals:
health. For years, Estes was sick enough with asthma to end up in hospital
emergency rooms, and he struggled with ulcerated colitis. But in spite
of health problems, Estes studied furiously. He was determined to get
the PhD. While still working on the PhD in Winter 1969, he commuted
to Santa Barbara to teach a night class in aerial photography and remote
sensing for the UCSB Geography Program. Also adding to the intensity
of this period of life, Estes' first son, John, was born March 21. The
family lived in five different apartments by the time the baby was 10
months old. One of those moves was to Santa Barbara in December 1969,
not long after receiving his doctorate. The Estes family bought a home,
in which Mrs. Estes still lives, and Dr. Estes taught at UCSB for 31
years - finally some stability in location at least! (1)
In
1971, Estes' health brought him to a halt. Surgeons removed his colon
and rectum. From then on he lived with a bag, as substitution for organs.
But he hardly slowed, working on grant proposals while just beginning
recovery. Soon thereafter, he returned to the classroom. And, also in
1971, he established the Remote Sensing Research Unit (RSRU). In the
midst of getting the Research Unit rolling, Estes' second son, Tom,
was born February 20, 1973. (1)
By 1975, much due to RSRU, Geography Department extramural research
funds reached $650,000 annually. Over the years, RSRU worked "with
geologists, engineers, physicists, chemists, computer scientists, and
environmental scientists, on remote sensing projects around the world
which focused on forests, oceanography, farming, water resources, soils
and similar phenomena." (2) And it
offered many graduate students the opportunity to work on exciting projects
and earn degrees that bought them excellent jobs. (1)
Estes described what excited him about his career:
"I
became a university professor because I wanted to do research, and
for me the freedom of a university environment provided the best place
to do it. In particular, I'm interested in the many ways that civilization
is affecting the Earth. In my research, I use low- and high-flying
aircraft and spacecraft as remote platforms from which to study the
Earth's environment by means of pictures and images taken by cameras,
lasers and other sensing devices.
"More specifically, my research, using remote sensing instruments,
is directed at producing more accurate information concerning the
location and dynamics of the Earth's resources than has been possible
before. For example, images from satellites are being used to map
mineral formations and agricultural crops, chart demographic trends,
detect infestations of pests in forests, and monitor wilderness areas
over large areas of the globe.
"Developing new techniques to produce and analyze information
on major scientific questions is exciting. Our work, for example,
on mapping the extent and determining the biomass of boreal forests
is important in improving our knowledge of the Earth's carbon cycle.
"We are not a traditional 'names and places' geography department.
The faculty at UCSB is pushing the limits of research to improve our
understanding of spatial patterns that we perceive around us. It is
exciting to be here." (3)
Besides being an academic, Estes worked for NASA and for the U.S. Geological
Survey (USGS). Some of this extra work was packed into summers, some
during leaves of absence. For instance, from 1992 to 1995, the family
lived in the Washington, D.C., area, while Estes was employed by the
mapping division of the U.S. Geological Survey. (1)
Professor Keith Clarke, UCSB Geography Department, recounted some of
Estes extramural accomplishments in an article he wrote following Estes'
death from cancer in 1991:
"Dr.
Estes had extensive experience in the federal government and in private
industry. During his tremendous career, he maintained many consulting
contacts. Dr. Estes conducted extensive contract and grant research
on both the fundamental and applied aspects of the use of remote sensing
and geographic information systems. This work included studies for
the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) on land use
change, crop identification, water demand modeling and advanced soil
moisture conditions, among others. He also worked with the U.S. Forest
Service on fire fuels monitoring and modeling; the United States Geological
Survey and National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration on the
detection of marine oil pollution. Work conducted for other federal
agencies included the U.S. Environmental Protection agency, Department
of Energy, and Department of Defense, emphasizing hazard and pollution
detection and modeling and resources management. Two recent accomplishments
were: successfully working toward NASA's WORF, an optical quality
window in the International Space Station that allows remote sensing
and that was successfully tested on the last Space Shuttle mission;
and the Global Map project, for which Dr. Estes chaired the International
Steering Committee." (4)
Mrs. Estes summed up her husband's professional zeal succinctly: "He
worked like a dog." (1) She thought
a factor in his relentless pace was childhood experiences. His father
died when he was 10. His mother, due to family circumstances, had not
finished high school. With few marketable skills and no prior job experience,
she struggled to keep the family fed and housed. Personally, she valued
education, and she strove to give her children the opportunities she
had been denied. Doing his part, Estes always had a job. As a professor,
he wanted to be sure his students would have stimulating and remunerative
careers. Mrs. Estes, again: "His students were so important to
him. For them to get a good job after completing their studies meant
a lot to him. He thought of them as his children." (1)

Some of Jack's students, past and present, photo taken at Jack's
Memorial Celebration
at the UCSB Faculty Club, April 17, 2001
Estes was known to have a temper. Mrs. Estes thought health problems
exacerbated the tendency. (1) His students,
who were deeply grateful for his advocacy and respectful of his accomplishments,
forgave Estes the fiery outbursts. Now that he has passed on, they warmly
tell "Jack" stories.
Graduate student Jeff Hemphill recalled the Sunday morning at 6:30
A.M. when Estes, who had been working in RSRU all night, woke him up
with a phone call. Estes boomed, "The printer's not printing! The
computer's broken! The network's down! I've got to print this document
NOW!" (5) Hemphill dutifully vacated
his warm bed, drove the 20 miles to UCSB, and entered RSRU. Examining
the printer, the sleepy graduate student saw it was out of paper. He
refilled the tray and asked Estes to print. Out spit the document. Jack,
strung out from too many all-nighters, apologized, "Sorry, but
I had to have this." (5)
Karen Kline, another graduate student, recalled an episode in an airport,
where she witnessed how Mrs. Estes dealt with her husband's outbursts.
She simply turned away as if she didn't know the man. Mrs. Estes confirmed
this was her solution when he'd blow up in public places. (6)
Estes traveled all the time: Italy, England, Norway, Japan - all over
the world. What was ironic was that, as a young man, he was terrified
of travel. When he had to fly to Washington, D.C., to interview with
the CIA in 1963, at the airport his mother, aunt, and fiancée
were all crying. Jack was crying. They waved goodbye as if they'd never
see him again. It wasn't airplanes, per se. The drive across the United
States to take the job was just as traumatic. Mrs. Estes understood:
"When Jack was ten, his father became very sick and Jack was sent
to live with his aunt and uncle. The fact that his father was dying
was kept a secret. When Jack came home, Dad was dead, gone." (1)
Leaving home became terrifying. There's a medical name for that now:
Post Traumatic Stress Syndrome.
Over the years, with all the required business travel, Estes became
at ease. Mrs. Estes called him a "fly-boy." He logged over
a million miles on United Airlines, alone. For shear pleasure, Dr. and
Mrs. Estes planned to travel all over the United States during retirement.
They had begun preparations by buying a new, feature-loaded Volvo. But
Estes died March 9, just three months before he was scheduled to retire.
(1)

Claire and Jack Estes at Cold Springs Tavern, Santa Barbara County,
November 1996
Estes' professional accomplishments are prodigious. "Jack has
been a driving force in the advancement of remote sensing science, technology,
and applied program development worldwide," wrote an editor of
the GAP Analysis Bulletin Board. (7) The
International Steering Committee for Global Mapping praised Estes' 5-year
Chairmanship: "Under his leadership, Global Mapping Project has
reached to its utmost achievements
. No person has made such a
unique and distinctive contribution to our community than Professor
Estes." (8)
Perhaps Jeff Dozier, from UCSB, and Ghassem Asrar, of NASA Headquarters,
best summed up Estes' contributions in the tribute they wrote after
his death. The article was published in Physics Today:
"[Estes] was a pioneer in promoting innovative applications
of space-based Earth observations and geospatial information by cartographers
and geographers. Jack had extensive experience in the federal government,
mainly with NASA and the US Geological Survey (USGS). The 1969 oil
spill in the Santa Barbara Channel led him to work on the detection
of marine oil pollution, and from the early 1970s to the time of his
death, he conducted studies for NASA on land-use change, crop identification,
water-demand modeling, and soil moisture conditions. Initially, in
the 1970s, his primary regional focus was the southern San Joaquin
Valley, but the work was of such wide applicability that, during the
1980s, he and his students extended it worldwide. He also applied
remote sensing technology to fire fuels monitoring and modeling, hazard
and pollution detection, and resources management.
"Jack had an exceptional ability to lead and guide graduate
students, rather than direct them, in pursuit of their education and
research objectives. More than 50 of his students received degrees
and are now employed in prominent positions in various professional
fields. His strength in teaching both undergraduate and graduate students
lay in his thorough knowledge of his subject, his ability to organize
and present complex materials, his sense of humor, and his sincere
interest in his students' well-being. He had a splendid sense of loyalty
to his colleagues and students, and he made many lifelong friends.
"Jack's significant, generous contributions to the remote sensing
and geographic information systems communities went far beyond academia.
In the 1990s, he took extended assignments of several years' duration
with both the USGS and NASA to assist in formulating national and
international programs and policies for space-based Earth observations.
Before his death, he had been the chair of the international steering
committee for global mapping since its establishment by the United
Nations in 1996, and he served on NASA's international space station
science utilization advisory committee. On the NASA committee, he
successfully worked to secure the Window Observation Research Facility,
an optical-quality window in the space station that allows Earth remote
sensing and that was successfully tested on a space shuttle mission
in 2000.
"As an outgrowth of his research, Jack published widely in a
variety of venues. His work covered such fields as monitoring marine
oil spills, analyzing agricultural crop identification and water demand,
preserving biological diversity, and integrating remote sensing information
with expert systems. He was the editor of the interpretations and
applications volume of the Manual of Remote Sensing (2nd edition,
American Society of Photogrammetry, 1983). With Daniel Botkin, he
edited Changing the Global Environment: Perspectives on Human Involvement
(Academic Press, 1989), and with Jeffrey Star he wrote Geographic
Information Systems: An Introduction (Prentice Hall, 1990).
"Jack received the 1999 William T. Pecora Award, presented jointly
by NASA and the US Department of the Interior to recognize outstanding
contributions by individuals or groups toward an understanding of
Earth by means of remote sensing. In 2001, NASA awarded Jack the Distinguished
Public Service Medal in recognition of his pioneering achievements.
"For more than three decades, Jack helped those who study and
manage the Earth to realize the tremendous potential of emerging geospatial
and information system technologies, and he promoted this goal through
his teaching and practice in modern geography. Jack will be missed
greatly, though his legacy lives on through his numerous valuable
national and international scientific contributions and his students."
(9)

Jack Estes in South Africa, March 2000
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Sources:
(1) Interview with Claire Estes, March 3, 2003, and email, March 13,
2003
(2) Paragraphs by Robert Kelley in
Transformations: UC Santa Barbara 1909-1979, published by the
Associated Students, 1981, Page 118
(3) Paragraphs archived in RSRU and originally published in the 1985
UCSB General Catalog
(4) Memorial article
written by colleague Prof. Keith Clarke shortly after Estes' death March
2001
(5) Conversation with Jeff Hemphill, March 4, 2003
(6) Conversation with Karen Kline, March 2003
(7) Article
written by editor in the Gap Analysis Bulletin Board and posted on this
USGS website
during summer 2001 then copied to UCSB Geography website
(8) Memorial page on
ISCGM website
(9) Article
in Physics Today posted on their website summer 2001
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