William was born to Daniel Schlich and Charlotte Frank. Both parents came from
Hessian families and Daniel was a Lutheran pastor or
Kirchenrat. His early education was at Flonheim and then at Langgöns and other schools in Hesse where the family moved. Schlich attended the Gymnasium in
Darmstadt (1851). In 1855, he entered the
University of Giessen, where he studied under
Gustav Heyer (1826-1883). Graduating in 1862, he joined the Hesse forestry service and was appointed
Oberförster in Homberg in 1865. He received a doctoral degree in 1867 from Giessen. The Austro-Prussian War of 1866 forced him to move, and, on Heyer's recommendation, he entered the British Imperial
Indian Forest Service. Arriving in India in February 1867, his first posting was in Burma. He was promoted and worked in
Sindh and later
Bengal, becoming Conservator of Forests in 1871, and Inspector-General of Forests in 1883, succeeding his mentor
Dietrich Brandis. He developed forest management and education programmes and spent 19 years in India, helping to establish the journal
Indian Forester in 1874 (becoming its first honorary editor) and the school at
Dehradun in 1877. In 1885 Schlich moved to England to take up the pioneering post of Professor of Forestry at the
Royal Indian Engineering College at Cooper's Hill, near
Egham, Surrey, the first formal forestry course in England. He became a British citizen in 1886. In 1905, upon the closure of the college at Cooper's Hill, he moved to
Oxford, to found Oxford's forestry programme. He retired on 1 January 1920 and lived on at Oxford where he died on 28 September 1925 from a bronchial infection. He is buried at Wolvercote. SAF presented the first Sir William Schlich Memorial Award to
Franklin D. Roosevelt in 1935 and the second Schlich Memorial Award to
Gifford Pinchot in 1940. ==Works==