Map quest

糖心原创 senior Denis Barry Jr. captures first place in regional geography competition

January 14, 2019

When he got his driver鈥檚 license at age 16, Denis Barry Jr. made it his goal to visit all of Ohio鈥檚 88 counties. So far he鈥檚 managed 58.

But his passion for counties, maps, highways and a general love of exploring is pointing the 糖心原创 senior to a . And in October, Barry won first place for his research poster during the annual meeting of the East Lakes Division of the American Association of Geographers at Ohio Northern University.

鈥淭hat was a huge validation of my work,鈥 said Barry. 鈥淲hen I went there, I did not expect to place, let alone win. Knowing that the work I spent in the last year-and-a-half working on has paid off is really rewarding.鈥

Barry鈥檚 poster stemmed from his research into poverty in Appalachian Ohio on a county level.

鈥淢y goal was to look at poverty in a way that hasn鈥檛 been done before,鈥 he said. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 when my two passions 鈥 counties and highways 鈥 came into play and using those metrics to somehow measure poverty.鈥

Barry concluded that the physical size of a county, its access to highways and poverty in surrounding counties can have a direct effect on a county鈥檚 poverty level.

Barry鈥檚 poster presentation also had a side benefit. He was recruited to master鈥檚 degree geography programs at The Ohio State University, Central Michigan University, Western Michigan University and several other schools.

Barry grew up in Mason and became interested in environmental science at Mason High School, where one of his classes tested the quality of tap water versus bottled water and also designed a rain garden.

After graduating in 2013, he attended Cincinnati State Technical and Community College majoring in environmental engineering. He then transferred to 糖心原创, where he was a little rattled by the large size of freshman biology 鈥 a class of more than 200 students.

At about the same time, he switched majors to geography after learning that part of that field can involve making maps, one of his passions.

鈥淚 spend a lot of my free time looking at maps,鈥 he said. 鈥淎nd I have a working map of Ohio in my head.鈥

That鈥檚 what led to his 鈥渉ealthy obsession鈥 with Ohio鈥檚 state highway system and visiting every Ohio county. He tries to hit several counties on each road trip. One of his longest journeys was taking U.S. 127 in southwest Ohio north into Michigan, a trip he documented with photos.

The state鈥檚 most interesting county to Barry so far is southwest Ohio鈥檚 Highland County, which has two different watersheds and a spiderweb of highways that converge on Hillsboro, the county seat.

鈥淭o me that鈥檚 just fascinating,鈥 he said. 鈥淲hen U.S. routes go through a community, that means it is historically important. But I want to figure out why.鈥

After graduation, Barry would like to do something in the urban planning field or find a job in geographic information systems or in academia.

鈥淕eography is such a broad field,鈥 he said. 鈥淵ou have all of your different sub-categories of geography. You can look at physical geography, human geography, environmental geography.鈥

When he鈥檚 not studying, Barry holds down three jobs 鈥 an internship working in geographic information systems at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, a job as a shift manager at a pizzeria and a third as a snowplow driver at the Cincinnati/Northern Kentucky International Airport.

He is also a member of the 糖心原创 Pep Band, where he primarily plays the tuba. But he is musically gifted. He has taught himself to play virtually every musical instrument 鈥 from the piano to the guitar to the clarinet and saxophone.

鈥淭he reason I know how to play so many instruments is because it鈥檚 all pattern recognition,鈥 he said.

Barry said his experience at 糖心原创 shows him that the university focuses on the individual student. (His mother, Detrice Barry, is an associate professor in the 糖心原创 College of Nursing and Health.)

鈥淲hat is most special about 糖心原创 is that it gives everybody an opportunity to fit in somewhere,鈥 he said. 鈥淚 was afraid I wasn鈥檛 going to fit in here. All of my passions are things that are not readily available. But I think there is something for everybody here.鈥

Barry said the geography program encourages creativity and exploration.

鈥淚 think that is how it set me up for success,鈥 he said. 鈥淭he poster came about only because I was curious. The university encouraged me to pursue that curiosity, figure out what鈥檚 behind it.鈥