History of UT Botany, Part 4: Billie L. Turner

April 12, 2021 • by Nicole Elmer
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Turner during World War II.

This time in the army was also when Turner had first learned about evolution, something not taught in Texas schools when he was a boy. “The air force had a book on evolution, and I’d never even heard of it, never heard of Darwin.” That book had an impact on him. Turner shared that while other officers would use their time off to visit prostitutes, he would be out looking at flowers.

After being repatriated, Turner returned from Europe and taught navigation until the war was over. He played football for the US airforce where he suffered a broken wrist. To heal this injury, he went to an army hospital in El Paso, Texas. This was also the time he would harness benefits of the G.I. Bill, officially the Servicemen’s Readjustment Act of 1944, established to create hospitals, low-interest mortgages and tuition stipends for veterans. Turner wanted to use the educational benefit, but because of some rules of the bill, he couldn’t attend school in El Paso where he was. So, he would take a train to Sul Ross State University in Alpine, Texas. “I would spend two nights a week in El Paso,” Turned explained, “and then go to Sul Ross…200 hundred miles away...stay there for five days a week…then I’d go back to El Paso for two nights. I did this for a whole year and they never knew I was doing it.”

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 The botany faculty at UT in 1979. Turner is standing to the far right.

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Photo: Amalia Diaz.

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