All about dr thomas p lecky biography

  • Patricia deleon
  • International scientist
  • Jamaica red
  • Dr. Thomas Lecky developed three breeds of cattle suited to the tropics- Jamaica Hope, Jamaica Red, and Jamaica Black. His particular cattle breeding technique forms the basis for breeding experiments worldwide.

    Thomas Phillip Lecky was born on December 31st 1904 in Portland, Jamaica. He grew up on the slopes of the Blue Mountains and saw his neighbours struggle with poverty and poor farming practices. He knew he wanted to make a difference in his community.

    At age 17, he attended the Government Farm School (Jamaica School of Agriculture) on scholarship. He worked as a bench chemist and then a livestock foreman at Hope Farm. He obtained a Diploma in Agriculture from MacDonald College, McGill University, Canada, and a Bachelor of Science from Ontario Agricultural College (University of Guelph).

    In 1934, he set up his own farm in Jamaica, breeding pigs and poultry but felt he was not using the full potential of his scientific training. Later, as Inspector of Livestock, Lecky propos

    Thomas Lecky

    Jamaican scientist

    The Honourable

    Dr. Thomas Phillip Lecky

    phDO.M.OJOBE

    Born(1904-12-31)December 31, 1904

    Swift River, Portland, Colony of Jamaica, British Empire

    DiedMarch 11, 1994
    Alma materMcGill
    Ontario Agricultural College
    University of Edinburgh
    Known forJamaica Black cattle breed
    AwardsJamaica Order of Merit
    Scientific career
    FieldsAnimal husbandry

    Thomas Phillip Lecky, known as T.P. Lecky (1904-1994), was a Jamaican scientist who developed several new breeds of cattle. Lecky is known as one of Jamaica's earliest environmentalists, and a strong advocate for conservation of hillsides.[1] His research in boskap breeding led to the development of three breeds suited the tropical climate: Jamaica Hope, Jamaica Red, and Jamaica Black. Jamaica Hope was the first breed of cattle indigenous to Jamaica. He is remembered as the Father of the Jamaican Dairy Industry.[1]

    Early life and

    Thomas Phillip Lecky: The unnamed hero

    Chronic short-sightedness is one of our biggest Achilles heels. It is an open secret that our growth and development are being severely retarded by an oversupply of myopic thinkers whose default position is “It can’t be done,” or “It will never work.”

    It is not an exaggeration to say that far too many who have been entrusted with great power and responsibility over many decades have totally failed to embrace and facilitate timely innovation.

    Professor Patrick Lumumba, renowned African scholar and director of the Kenya School of Law, in one of his famous public lectures, submitted that if African societies are to be successfully reimagined, given the burden of colonialism, it fryst vatten absolutely necessary to ask: Whose box is this? Where did it come from? And, why? Translated, he means African peoples have to begin to think differently, unconventionally, and from new perspectives.

    I agree.

    Here at home we nee

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