Emeritus Professor of Sociology Bob Herman ’51, an expert on urban issues who wrote the definitive downtown Los Angeles walking guide, died April 9 of complications following a recent fall. He was 92.
A railroad enthusiast and long-time Claremont booster, Herman began taking groups of students on bus tours of Los Angeles neighborhoods in the late 1980s, and he made it his personal mission to introduce skeptical suburbanites to the hidden wonders of L.A.’s under-appreciated downtown.
Herman’s love for cities, trains and suburban Claremont all came together in the early ’90s when the new Metrolink commuter train, with a station just blocks from Â鶹´«Ă˝â€™s campus, whisked riders to Union Station. As his son, Paul Herman, recounts, the professor raced into the kitchen and gleefully announced to his wife, Carol, “This is the greatest day of my life!"
Robert Dunton Herman was born in 1928 in Champaign, Illinois, and spent most of his childhood in Hillsdale, Michigan, where his father taught sociology at the local college. And it was in Hillsdale (and especially on train trips between Hillsdale and his mother's hometown of Dundee, Illinois) that Herman first developed the love of railroads and passenger trains that stayed with him throughout his life.
During World War II, the family moved twice more: first to Tucson, Arizona, and finally to Redlands, California, where Herman graduated from high school. He served two years in the Navy, working as an electrical specialist on the still-new technology of radar, before enrolling at Â鶹´«Ă˝ in 1948.
At Pomona, Herman studied sociology under professors Alvin Scaff and Ray Baber and sang in the college glee club and choir. As a chorister with a fine bass voice, Bob first met and fell in love with Carol Baber, a glee club and choir member and Pomona classmate who also happened to be his academic advisor’s daughter. Following graduation in 1951, Bob and Carol were married in the Mabel Shaw Bridges Hall of Music on the Â鶹´«Ă˝ campus before moving to Madison, Wisconsin, where Bob completed a doctorate in sociology at the University of Wisconsin.
After a five-year stint in Ames, Iowa, where Herman taught at Iowa State University, Bob and Carol returned to Claremont in 1960 when he was hired to fill the seat recently vacated by his father-in-law’s retirement. A year later, the couple settled into the same Claremont home where they raised three children and lived together for the next 60 years.
Herman taught sociology at Â鶹´«Ă˝ for four decades. He ​loved teaching, served for many years as the chair of the Sociology Department, and was well-known among fellow faculty for his warm collegiality. Above all, Herman was passionate about mentoring students and he was honored with the Wig Award for excellence in teaching in 1991. His genuine interest in getting to know people led Herman to develop friendships with many students, several of whom became lifelong friends.
A tall man with a long, distinctive gait and a ready wave, Herman was a familiar figure around Claremont. Friends and neighbors initially dubbed him the "Jolly Green Giant" due to his habit of jogging through town in an old green sweatsuit, and later nicknamed him "IronMan Bob" as he continued to run daily around Claremont’s Memorial Park well into his 70s. Locals also came to know Herman as a popular tour guide who led countless walking tours of The Claremont Colleges and the Village, during which he shared his deep knowledge of the town and region with an infectious enthusiasm.
His interests reached into Los Angeles in the 1980s and, over time, student tours of L.A. neighborhoods ​expanded into bus and walking tours ​for alumni, faculty, and a variety of civic and professional groups. Herman published Downtown Los Angeles: A Walking Guide in 1996, not long before retiring. It filled a niche, and Herman went on to give hundreds of tours of the Civic Center, Bunker Hill and other downtown districts.
He would start at Union Station, which combined his love of the city and trains, and Herman would point out the1939 station's optimistic architecture, full of arches and color. “It just tells you you’re in a different place,’’ he said in an interview. “This is California. Your life is going to be transformed here.”
Herman was in the lead in foreseeing the transformation of L.A.’s core: “It’s finally happening,” he said in 2007. “We’re getting a lot of people moving downtown. I’ve been waiting for it all my life.”
Beyond cities and trains, Herman loved Baroque music, and his wife Carol's long career as a Baroque cellist and viola da gambist delighted him, noted his son, Paul. Bob and Carol were married for 69 years.
In addition to his wife Carol, Herman is survived by his sister, Eleanor Kemp of Redlands, his three children (David, Molly and Paul), their spouses, and five grandchildren.
In the last four years of his life, Herman received incredible care and assistance from his daily caregiver and friend, Dia Hakinna, notes the Herman family, which extends its deepest gratitude. Additionally, the family would like to thank Tina Obi of Trinity Hospice, who guided Herman ​and his family ​through his final weeks with compassion and ​grace.
Details of an eventual memorial service will be announced when COVID-19 restrictions allow.