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  • Cornell Cooperative Extension
  • PRO-DAIRY
  • Animal Science
  • Dairy

Four Cornell CALS senior undergraduate students received Richard Popp Scholarship Fund awards, presented by Cornell Animal Science professor Michael Van Amburgh at the 2024 Northeast Dairy Management Conference on March 6. 

This scholarship was established in 1997 by family, friends and colleagues ​in memory of Richard Popp '61. Popp was a Western, New York, progressive dairy farmer who was active in his community and known for his integrity, grit, conviction and leadership.

“I want to thank the Popp family for this scholarship," Van Amburgh said. "It’s an endowment now.”

Scholarship recipients were selected for their impressive academic leadership and as bright examples for the next generation in agriculture. 

2024 scholarship recipients:

  • Danielle Herrick, Bliss, New York — an interdisciplinary studies major, with a concentration in agricultural sciences, environmental sciences and pre-law. Herrick plans to attend Vermont Law School, concentrating in environmental law with the hopes of becoming an agricultural lawyer.
  • Lainey Koval, Stillwater, New York — an agricultural sciences major, with a concentration in business management, and a minor in animal science. Koval plans to work in the field of agricultural finance with hopes of returning to the family dairy farm in the future.
  • Lucas Walley, Walton, New York — an interdisciplinary studies major, with a concentration in dairy management. Walley plans to enter the industry in dairy management.
  • Sophia Woodis, Dewittville, New York — an environment and sustainability major, with a concentration in sustainable agriculture, and a minor in animal science. Woodis wants to work in dairy farm human resource management and eventually return to the family dairy farm in Western New York.

For more than three decades, the biennial Northeast Dairy Management Conference has brought together progressive dairy farmers from across the Northeast to engage and learn about the latest developments and topics in the dairy industry. The conference is a collaboration with Cornell CALS PRO-DAIRY and the Northeast Dairy Producers Association (NEDPA). PRO-DAIRY is a nationally recognized extension and applied research leader serving dairy farms for more than 35 years.

About the Richard Popp Scholarship Fund

The Richard Popp Scholarship Fund was established in 1997 by his family, friends and colleagues. He was co-owner of Southview Farm of Castile and Groveland, New York, and achieved a local and national reputation as a creative, progressive and successful dairy farmer. 

Popp was born in Buffalo, New York, and spent most of his formative years in the Castile, New York, area. He graduated from Letchworth Central School in 1957 and four years later from the Cornell College of Agriculture and Life Sciences, where he was a member of Alpha Zeta Fraternity. His first job was as a Cooperative Extension educator in St. Lawrence County.

In 1964 Popp returned to Wyoming County, New York, to join James VanArsdale in a partnership in Southview Farm. Under Popp's leadership, the farm grew steadily.

Popp was involved in many agricultural organizations. He was a former president of Wyoming County Cooperative Extension, president of the National Dairy Herd Improvement Association, and served as a director of the Farm Bureau, the Advisory Council of the Cornell College of Agriculture and Life Sciences, and the Northeast Dairy Producers Association.

But Popp's activities were not limited to dairy farming. He was involved in the Business Development Council of Wyoming County. In 1988 he was appointed director of the Buffalo Branch at the Federal Reserve Bank and was former president of the Letchworth Central School Board. He also served on the BOCES School Board of Livingston and Wyoming Counties.

Popp was past president of the First Baptist Church at Castile, where he also served as a trustee and deacon. He gave his financial expertise as a director of the Erie Niagara Insurance Company.

Popp was best known as an innovative, aggressive and enthusiastic dairy farmer. Through the years, he welcomed many groups and individuals to Southview Farm. He loved to share ideas, gain new insights and optimistically discuss the future and challenges of the dairy industry. He absolutely loved what he did, and it was obvious to all who knew him.

This scholarship is awarded in the spring to a senior undergraduate student in good academic standing who has spent all four years at Cornell in the College of Agriculture and Life Sciences;  who has a major in either agricultural, resource and managerial economics, or in animal science; and who is preferably from Western New York or from a rural area.

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