Occupants of Hopkins Investigator Rooms

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Occupants of Hopkins Investigator Rooms HOPKINS SEASIDE LABORATORY OF NATURAL HISTORY:DRAFT Occupants of Hopkins Seaside Laboratory Investigator Rooms During the twenty-five years Hopkins Seaside Laboratory was positioned at Lovers Point in Pacific Grove, a significant amount of research was conducted by members of the Stanford University and visiting scientists from other institutions who took the opportunity to reserve private investigator rooms. Among the latter were Jacques Loeb from the University of Chicago, Bashford Dean and William K. Gregory both from Columbia, Wesley R. Coe from Yale University, Ida H. Hyde of the University of Kansas, Howard Ayres, Director of Lake Laboratory, Milwaukee, Wisconsin, Franz Doflein of Freiberg, Germany, Charles Manning Child, Assistant Professor of Zoology, University of Chicago, and Cornelia M. Clapp, Professor of Zoology, Mt. Holyoke College. Below is a list of Stanford students, faculty and visiting scientists from around the world who occupied the investigator rooms of the Hopkins Seaside Laboratory from 1892 through 1912. 1892 Leverett M. Loomis, Tryon City, N. C. 1893 Dr. Howard Ayres, Director of Lake Laboratory, Milwaukee, Wis. Prof. Chase W. Treat. Prof. Nat. Sci. Napa College, Calif. 1894 Dr. Harold Heath, Instructor of Histology, Stanford University Leverett M. Loomis, Curator of Mammals, Calif. Acad. Science Mr. De Alton Saunders, Instructor in Botany, University of Nebraska 1895 Prof. Bradley M. Davis, Prof. Biology, Butler University, Indiana Mr. De Alton Saunders, Teacher High School, Lincoln, Nebraska Copyright © 2013 Donald G. Kohrs HOPKINS SEASIDE LABORATORY OF NATURAL HISTORY:DRAFT 1896 C.L. Anderson, M.D. Physician, Santa Cruz, Calif. Bashford Dean, Ph.D. Adj. Prof. of Zool. Columbia University, N.Y. City Herbert P. Johnson, Ph. D. Asst. Prof. of Biology, University of Calif. William E. Ritter, Ph. D. Asst. Prof. of Biology, University of Calif. De Alton Saunders, Prof. of Botany, University of South Dakota W.M Wheeler, Ph. D. Asst. Prof. of Embryology, University of Chicago 1897 C.L. Anderson, M.D. Physician, Santa Cruz, Calif. Herbert P. Johnson, Ph. D. Asst. Prof. of Biology, University of Calif. Frank M. MacFarland, Ph. D. Assoc. Prof. of Histology, Stanford University George A. Talbert, Teacher of Science, High School, West Superior, Wis. 1898 James Francis Abbott, Student in Zoology, Stanford University Franz Doflein, Ph. D. Privat Docant, University of Munich Arthur White Greeley, A.B. Student in Zoology, Stanford University Louis Samuel Kroeck, A.M. Instructor in Biology, University of the Pacific Jacques Loeb, M. D. Assoc. Prof. Physiology, University of Chicago Henry F. Nachtrieb B. S. Prof. Animal Biology, University of Minnesota Benjamin Thomas, A. B. Grad Student in Physiology, Stanford University Clement A. Whiting, M.S., Prof. Nat. History, University of Utah 1899 Bashford Dean, Ph. D., Adjunct Professor in Zoology, Columbia University. Lewis Lindsay Dyche, M. S., Professor of Zoology, University of Kansas. C. N. E. Eliot, A. M., Secretary of the British Legation, Washington. William King Gregory, Susan Dychman Scholar in Zoology, Columbia University. Nettie Maria Stevens, A. B., Student in Physiology, Leland Stanford Junior University. Clara S. Stoltenberg, A. B., Instructor in Physiology, Leland Stanford Junior University. Copyright © 2013 Donald G. Kohrs HOPKINS SEASIDE LABORATORY OF NATURAL HISTORY:DRAFT Benjamin Thomas, A. M., Student of Medicine, University of California. Harry Beal Torrey, M. S., Instructor in Biology, University of California, Charles B. Wilson, A. M., Prof. of Nat. Science, State Normal School, Westfield, Mass. 1900 William Fitch Allen, A. B., Student in Zoology, Leland Stanford Junior University. Robert J. Terry, M. D., Prof. of Anatomy, Washington University, St. Louis, Missouri. Herbert Parlin Johnson, Ph. D., Assistant Professor of Zoology, University of California. Nettie Maria Stevens, A. M., Student in Physiology, Leland Stanford Junior University. 1901 William Fitch Allen, Student In Zoology, Stanford University. Anton Julius Carlson, A.B. Student in Physiology, Stanford University* Wesley R. Coe, Ph. D. Asst. Prof. Comparative Anatomy, Yale University* Philip Kingsnorth Gilman, A.B. Student in Physiology, Stanford University* Harold Heath, Ph. D. Asst. Prof. Zoology, Stanford University* Robert J. Terry, M. D., Prof. Of Anatomy, Washington University, St. Louis, Missouri. Herbert Parlin Johnson, Ph.D., Assistant Professor Of Zoology, University Of California. Nettie Maria Stevens, A.B., Student In Physiology, Stanford University William Albert Setchell, Ph.D. Prof. Botany, University of California 1902 William Fitch Allen. A. B., Student in Zoology, Stanford University. John Samuel Burcham, A. B., Student in Zoology, Stanford University. Anton Julius Carlson, A. M., Student in Physiology, Stanford University. Newton Cleaveland, A. B., Instructor in Physiology, Stanford University. W. E. Garrey, Ph. D., Professor of Physiology, Cooper Medical College. Charles Wilson Greene, Ph. D., Professor of Physiology, University of Missouri. Harold Heath, Ph. D., Associate Professor of Zoology, Stanford University. Oliver Peebles Jenkins, Ph. D., Professor of Physiology, Stanford University. Frank Mace MacFarland, Ph. D., Associate Professor of Histology, Stanford University. Copyright © 2013 Donald G. Kohrs HOPKINS SEASIDE LABORATORY OF NATURAL HISTORY:DRAFT Helen Hall Mills, A. B., Graduate Student, Stanford University. Flora Albertine Randolph, A. B., Student of Botany, Stanford University Edwin Chapin Starks. Curator in Zoology, Stanford University 1903 Dr. Alonzo E. Taylor, Prof. Pathology, University of California* Dr. G. Bullot, Asst. in Physiology, University of California* Dr. J. M. Flint, Prof. Anatomy, University of California* Prof. Jacques Loeb, Prof. Physiology, University of California* Dr. A. J. Carlson, Research Assistant, Carnegie Institution* 1905 James E. Benedict, Curator of Marine Invertebrates, United States National Museum. John Samuel Burcham, A. B., Graduate Student in Zoology, University. Louis Samuel Kroeck, A. M., Professor of Biology, University of the Pacific. 1906 William R. Allen, A. M., Pacific Grove, Cal. Charles Manning Child, Ph. D., Assistant Professor of Zoology, University of Chicago. Peter Frandsen, A. M., Professor of Biology, University of Nevada. Charles Wilson Greene, Ph. D., Professor of Physiology, University of Missouri. Patrick Beveridge Kennedy, Ph. D., Professor of Botany, University of Nevada. 1907 William Austin Cannon, Ph. D., Desert Botanical Laboratory, Tucson, Arizona. Ida Henrietta Hyde, Ph. D., Professor of Physiology, University of Kansas. 1908 William George Bateman, A. B., Instructor in Chemistry, Stanford University Cornelia M. Clapp, Ph. D., Professor of Zoology, Mt. Holyoke College Copyright © 2013 Donald G. Kohrs HOPKINS SEASIDE LABORATORY OF NATURAL HISTORY:DRAFT Milo Herrick Spaulding, A. B., Assistant Professor of Zoology, Montana State College of Agriculture and Mechanic Arts. Robert Eckles Swain, Ph. D., Associate Professor of Chemistry, Stanford University 1909 Wilfred Allen, Graduate University of Nebraska Ralph V. Chamberlin, Ph.D., Professor of Zoology, Brigham Young College, Provo, Utah. George B. Culver, A. B., Professor of Biology, Los Angeles High School. Samuel J. Holmes, Professor of Zoology, University of Wisconsin, Madison, Wis. 1910 Harold Heath, Professor of Zoology, Stanford University George C. Price, Professor of Zoology, Stanford University William F. Thompson, Assistant in Entomology and Bionomics, Stanford University 1911 W. S. Allen, Graduate Student, University of Illinois Rollo J. Beck, Assistant in Ornithology, Alexander Museum of Vertebrate Zoology, University of California Charles Henry Gilbert, Professor of Zoology, Leland Stanford Jr. University Professor Charles W. Greene, University of Missouri Dr. Nettie M. Stevens, Bryn Mawr College, Pa. George T. Kline, Biological Artist and Technician, University of Missouri H. Y. Judy, Artist of the Brooklyn Institute Museum, Brooklyn, N. Y. 1912 Wilson Parliam Gee, Fellow in Zoology, University of California Louis Samuel Kroeck, Professor of Biology, College of the Pacific John N. Loshinski, Assistant in Zoology, University of California Dr. Eberhard Stechow, Assistant in Zoological Museum, University of Munich William Francis Thompson, Assistant in Zoology, Stanford University Copyright © 2013 Donald G. Kohrs .
Recommended publications
  • Download Download
    — OLIVER PEEBLES JENKINS Bantam, Ohio. Palo Alto, California. November 3, 1850. January 9, 1935. Perhaps few of us recall Dr. Jenkins—what a splendid teacher he was! An active mind—original, enthusiastic, and inspirational and a fund of humor were out- standing characteristics. Who could not profit from his instruction? To those of us who were much with J him he was a delightful companion and a lovable friend, in addition to his being a great naturalist. He was born at Bantam, Ohio, November 3, 1850, and died at Stanford University January 9, 1935 in his eighty-fifth year. He was buried at Palo Alto, California. He married Elizabeth R. Hester, formerly of Brookville, Indiana, where the writer and his wife, Mary Reynolds, attended Brookville College with her. His widow and two sons survive. He graduated from Moores OLIVER PEEBLES JENKINS Hill (now Evansville) College in 1869 and, after serving as teacher, high school principal, and superintendent in the public schools of Indiana, Wisconsin, and California, he returned, in 1876, to Moores Hill College as professor, where he remained for twelve years. That institution con- ferred upon him advanced and honorary degrees; he was also honored with a degree from Indiana University. He became a member of the faculty of the Indiana State Normal School, at Terre Haute in 1883, and left there to become Professor of Biology at DePauw University in 1886. He remained at DePauw until 1891, when he became a member of the faculty of Leland Stanford Jr. University at the time of its founding. He remained in this position until he retired as Professor Emeritus of Physiology in 1916.
    [Show full text]
  • Midpacific Volume31 Issue1.Pdf
    Vol. XXXI. No. 1. Lii3ky January, 1926 !A'lt 1Priqralli HMLTN CLOS ED DU 62() M5 ITED STATES AUSTRALASIA HAWAII ORIENT JAVA News Co. Gordon & Gotch Pan-Pacific Union Kelly & Walsh Javasche Boekhandel Trans-Pacific Transportation The Matson Navigation Company is palatial steamers between Honolulu and planning big things for Hawaii in many Los Angeles. The steamers visit Hilo ways. It is behind the great new Royal for the Volcano trip. The B. F. Dilling- Hawaiian Hotel at Waikiki, and is en- ham Co., Ltd., are Honolulu agents for thusing the people of Honolulu to re- the Los Angeles Steamship Company, at newed efforts to place their attractions Fort and Oueen Sts., and here may be before the people of the mainland. arranged passage direct to Los Angeles, The Company is also inducing the and beyond by rail, or you may .arrange people of Hawaii to visit California and to ship your auto or general freight. become acquainted with the people of the' scenic beaches of that state. The Mat- The Oceanic Steamship Company, son Navigation Company maintains a with head offices in San Francisco, and tourist information bureau at its main Brewer & Company as agents in Honolulu, office in the Matson Building in San maintains a fleet of swift palatial steamers Francisco, as well as in the Castle & between San Francisco, Hawaii, and Aus- Cooke Building in Honolulu, where tralia, visiting Fiji and Samoa en route. tours of the Hawaiian Islands may be This is the ideal passage to the South Seas booked. via the sunshine belt to Australasia.
    [Show full text]
  • Bulletin of the United States Fish Commission Seattlenwf
    A CATALOGUE OF THE SHORE FISHES COLLECTED BY THE STEAMER ALBATROSS ABOUT THE HAWAIIAN ISLANDS IN 1902. By JOHN OTTERBEIN SNYDER, Assistant Professor 0./ Zoology in Leland StanfordJunior Unil1ersity. This paper contains a list of the species of fishes obtained by the United States Fish Commission steamer Alba,f'ro88, Chauncey Thomas, commander, in the shore and reef work about the Hawaiian Islands during the spring and summer of IHO~, under the general direction of Dr. David Starr Jordan and Dr. Barton Warren Evermann, In addition to the fishes collected from the tide pools and from the shallow water neal' shore, a few are included which were taken from depths of 75 fathoms or more, while some have come from near the surface far out at sea. Several species occurring in the rivers and ponds are also noted. Many of the rarer forms, which arc only occasionally caught by the fishermen, were secured through the kindly Interest of Mr. E. Louis Berndt, inspector of fisheries in Honolulu. The writer takes pleasure in expressing his obligations to Dr. Charles H. Gilbert, who had immediate supervision of the zoological work of the AI1Jatro.~8, and also to Dr. Jordan, for much help and for many valuable suggestions in the preparation of this paper. Dr.•Jordan's advice has been followed in all matters of nomenclature. The following genera and species, believed to be new to science, are described: Veternio, new genus of Leptocephalida-, Gymnothorax berndti. Apogon erythrinns, Collybus, new genus of Bramidee, Gymuothorax mucifer. Cirrhilabrus [ordani, Careharias insularum, Gymnothorax xanthostomus. Pseudojulis cerasina.
    [Show full text]
  • Oliver P. Jenkins Papers
    http://oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/kt3d5nf2vx No online items Guide to the Oliver P. Jenkins Papers Daniel Hartwig Stanford University. Libraries.Department of Special Collections and University Archives Stanford, California October 2010 Copyright © 2015 The Board of Trustees of the Leland Stanford Junior University. All rights reserved. Note This encoded finding aid is compliant with Stanford EAD Best Practice Guidelines, Version 1.0. Guide to the Oliver P. Jenkins SC0957 1 Papers Overview Call Number: SC0957 Creator: Jenkins, Oliver P., (Oliver Peebles), 1850-1935. Title: Oliver P. Jenkins papers Dates: 1869-1930 Physical Description: 0.75 Linear feet Summary: Papers include personal correspondence, 1891-1928; letters of introduction and reference, 1869-1888; reports of his field trips (primarily on fish), 1885-1904; and published and unpublished addresses, pamphlets, and essays, including one on children’s nature study, circa 1920, and one on a visit to California in 1873. Language(s): The materials are in English. Repository: Department of Special Collections and University Archives Green Library 557 Escondido Mall Stanford, CA 94305-6064 Email: [email protected] Phone: (650) 725-1022 URL: http://library.stanford.edu/spc Administrative transfer, 1965. Information about Access This collection is open for research. Ownership & Copyright All requests to reproduce, publish, quote from, or otherwise use collection materials must be submitted in writing to the Head of Special Collections and University Archives, Stanford University Libraries, Stanford, California 94304-6064. Consent is given on behalf of Special Collections as the owner of the physical items and is not intended to include or imply permission from the copyright owner.
    [Show full text]
  • Hopkins Seaside Laboratory of Natural History
    HOPKINS SEASIDE LABORATORY OF NATURAL HISTORY CHAPTER 2 DAVID STARR JORDAN, M. D., Ph.D., LL.D. David Starr Jordan was born on January 19, 1851, in Gainesville, New York. His father, Hiram Jordan, was born in Moriah, New York, his mother Huldah Hawley, was born in Whitehall, New York.1 It is said David Starr Jordan chose “Starr” for his middle name for two reason; to honor his mother's great admiration for the writings of Unitarian and Universalist minister, Thomas Starr King and for his love for astronomy.2 He was raised on a farm in Gainesville, New York, where early on Jordan showed his love for nature.3 His father, Hiram Jordan, was active on behalf of all educational movements, serving for a long time as a trustee of the public school of his district, and as a teacher, locally noted for his skill in instruction and maintenance of order. His mother, Huldah Hawley Jordan, was also a successful teacher, which enabled his parents, for some time after their marriage, to maintain on the farm, a private school with a few resident pupils.4 THE EDUCATION OF DAVID STARR JORDAN At an early age Jordan’s attention was directed toward botanical studies, and to satisfy this interest he prepared for college, taking his first lessons at the Gainesville Female Seminary.5 In 1869, having won a scholarship to Cornell, Jordan entered the University to begin his college education.6 The following year (1870), women, for the first time, were admitted to Cornell and among the three who enrolled was David Starr Jordan's sister, Mary Jordan.
    [Show full text]
  • Walker Collection Catalog
    WALKER COLLECTION Catalog of Texbooks PUBLISHED IN HONOR OF Benjamin F. Walker Professor Emeritus Indiana State University Edited by David E. Vancil Friends of the Cunningham Memorial Library Terre Haute, 2001 Copyright © 2001 by Indiana State University Electronic Edition For Educational Purposes Only Not To Be Sold Contents Preface ............................................................................................ v Introduction .................................................................................. vii Use of the Catalog ......................................................................... ix Acknowledgments ....................................................................... xiii Entries A...........................................................................................................................................1 B.........................................................................................................................................11 C.........................................................................................................................................27 D.........................................................................................................................................41 E .........................................................................................................................................49 F .........................................................................................................................................59
    [Show full text]
  • Proceedings of the Indiana Academy of Science
    22 Proceedings of Indiana Academy of Science THERE WERE GIANTS IN THOSE DAYS Will E. Edington, DePauw University We are assembled today to honor the founders and charter mem- bers of our Academy. We are happy, indeed, to have with us several of our charter members, and in their presence I realize the inappropriate- ness and possibly the foolhardiness of my attempt to trace and discuss the influences and motives that led to the founding of the Academy. However, it is hardly to be expected that our honored guests, our charter members who are with us today, should be charged and burdened with their own entertainment. On the other hand, it certainly is fitting that the present generation of young Indiana scientists should be made familiar with the early history and development of science in Indiana, and it is with this thought in mind that I have undertaken to outline briefly the struggles and failures of the early scientists to form organ- izations for the mutual exchange of ideas and to secure greater in- spiration to carry on under adverse circumstances, which finally culmi- nated in the founding of the Academy. But it is my intention to trace the history of early organization only so far as they seem to have had some influence in preparing the way for the Academy through their membership. The history of science in Indiana, and in the midwest for that matter, properly begins in 1825 at New Harmony, on the Wabash River in Posey County. To be sure, the great ornithologist, John James Audu- bon, had floated down the Ohio River in 1808 and had settled at Louis- ville with his young wife and had set up a store.
    [Show full text]
  • Charles Bradford Hudson (1865-1939), Artist, Author, Army Officer, with Special Notice of His Work for the United States Fish Commission and Bureau of Fisheries
    Drawn to the Sea: Charles Bradford Hudson (1865-1939), Artist, Author, Army Officer, with Special Notice of His Work for the United States Fish Commission and Bureau of Fisheries Item Type article Authors Springer, Victor G.; Murphy, Kristin A. Download date 30/09/2021 13:54:51 Link to Item http://hdl.handle.net/1834/26288 Drawn to the Sea: Charles Bradford Hudson (1865-1939), Artist, Author, Army Officer, with Special Notice of His Work for the United States Fish Commission and Bureau of Fisheries A Special Issue of the Marine Fisheries Review Preface second marriage, Claire Hudson Brett. Thus began a period of years during which we exchanged information about her father. She encouraged me to prepare a detailed biography of him, but to her disappointment, I was too busy with my ichthyological research to do that, and we ceased contact in the The biography of Charles Bradford cuss the files with my supervisor, who mid 1990’s. When I retired in 2005, I Hudson that follows this preface had urged me to produce a museum exhibit returned to the subject and contacted its seeds about 1965 when I (VGS) was of original fish illustrations. This I did, Claire’s son, Hudson Brett, and we casually examining the extensive files selecting 200 of the illustrations repre- began to exchange information about of original illustrations of fishes stored senting 21 artists, including, of course, Hudson (Claire was not well at that in the Division of Fishes, National Hudson. As part of the text for the time). Gradually, I decided to prepare Museum of Natural History, Smithson- exhibit, Drawn from the Sea, Art in the the Hudson biography with the help of ian Institution.
    [Show full text]
  • The Jenkins Family Genealogy
    THE JENKINS FAMILY GENEALOGY JOHN JENKINS LINE If 1774 - - - - 1924 A SEF 6 ~ 1935 JEit U74 CALVIN COOLIDGE MEMORIAL FUND PURCHASED SEP 6 -1935 •*3nZ*%$51K^»m THE JENKINS FAMILY GENEALOGY JOHN JENKINS LINE 1774 - - - 1924 -vOMSV BENJAMIN BARTON STEWART in collaboration with MRS. ANN ELIZA DENNIS—born JENKINS and MISS ELLA WILLIAMS FOREWORD From childhood to old age reminiscence is as natural as life itself. From moment to moment, Today is ours, Tomorrow is a mystery, Today we are in strenuous action. "In the sweat of thy brow shall thou eat bread all thy days." When the day is over, we rest and ruminate. Our joy is in—what has been—in our lives. The child of three years, disquieted at home, thinks of the "good time" he had in his Grand Mother's home. "Men and women are only Boys and Girls grown tall—hearts don't change much, after all." The older we grow, the more we like to look back, even to our early childhood. In memory we pass the wayside stations of Joy and Sorrow. We fain would linger at the one and hurry past the other. Blest is he, that looking back, Along life's mazy checkered track, Sees only—pleasant places. Forgetting all that passed between, Remembering where the spots were green And only—Happy Faces. "Betsy Barton"—born Elizabeth Jenkins—was my Grand Mother. Memories sweet and tender, encircle her in my thought. Hence this effort to write up the genealogy of the Jenkins Family. I am indebted to Mrs. Ann Eliza Dennis and Miss Ella Williams, both of Williamsburg, Ohio, for most of the details.
    [Show full text]
  • CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS Vol XI
    CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS VoL XI. No 15 Ithaca, N. Y., January 13, 1909 Price 10 Cents HISTORIANS AT DINNER. F. H. Hodder, G. M. Dutcher '97, UNIVERSITY CONFERENCE. F. S. Crofts '05, W. H. Mace, W. C. Abbott, F. H. Severance '79, D. C. Eminent Educators Gather at Cornell—Cel- Sixth Annual Meeting of Cornell Men at Knowlton '98, Max Farrand, G. W. ebrate President AngelΓs 80th Birthday. the Richmond Convocation. Scott and P. O. Ray. Other Cornell men who attended Seventeen universities were repre- The custom of holding a Cornell the sessions were A. V. Babine '92, sented at the tenth annual convention dinner in connection with the annual A. C. Howland '9-3, W. L. Whittle- of the Association of American Uni- meetings of the historical associa- sey, W. H. Glasson '96, T. B. Little versities, held at Cornell on Thurs- tions was continued this year. Sev- '02 and W. J. Norton '02. Women day and Frilday of last week. Only enteen men, present and former stu- who attended the sessions were Mrs. one member of the association, Clark dents and teachers in the President F. H. Severance 79, Miss R. Put- University, was not represented. White School, dined together at the nam '78, Miss C. C. Jackson '79, The presidents of nine—Chicago, Commonwealth Club in Richmond on Miss L. W. Johnson '02, Miss H. G Cornell, Harvard, Illinois, Michigan, December 31. They had been in Preston '98, Miss L. F. Brown '03, Minnesota, Missouri, Wisconsin and attendance at the meetings of the Miss A. H. Abel and Miss E.
    [Show full text]
  • Memorial to Olaf P. Jenkins 1889-1983
    Memorial to Olaf P. Jenkins 1889-1983 GORDON B. OAKESHOTT 3040 Totterdell Street, Oakland, California 94611 Olaf Pitt Jenkins, for many years chief geologist and state mineralogist of California, died at his home in Pacific Grove on October 19, 1983, at age 94, of the complications of extreme old age. Olaf was born on February 9, 1889, in Green- castle, Indiana. However, within two years the family moved to Stanford University in California. Professor Oliver Peebles Jenkins, Olaf’s father, was one of David Starr Jordan’s “old guard,” joining him at Stanford University in 1891, the year of the founding of the university, as head of the Department of Physiology. Life there, at Cedro Cottage, the former summer home of Mrs. Leland Stanford, Jr., is charmingly recounted by Olaf in his M em oirs (1975). The family moved onto the Stanford Campus in 1904. From childhood, the boy was interested in the outdoors; everything in nature was interesting and good. Fortunately, there was every opportunity to indulge this love, for he was close to the science of his father and to his father’s colleagues in geology and the biological sciences at the university. In the summer of 1904 he joined a scientific expedition, from the university, to study the source and origin of the golden trout in the wild upper Kern River in the Sierra Nevada. The members of the expedition climbed Mt. Whitney, from the west; one man in their party was killed during a lightning storm on the summit. In retrospect, Olaf’s lifelong career as a geologist was set when he joined Robert Anderson and Robert Pack of the U.S.
    [Show full text]
  • Hopkins Seaside Laboratory of Natural History
    HOPKINS SEASIDE LABORATORY OF NATURAL HISTORY CHAPTER 7 INITIAL FUNDING As previously mentioned, as soon as the intention of establishing a seaside laboratory became known, the city of Pacific Grove contributed $300 to the initiative. To this sum, the Pacific Improvement Company contributed $500 and offered free lease of the land for the use of a seaside laboratory. Besides these contributions, Timothy Hopkins donated $1,000, then through his encouragement, the Pacific Improvement Company increased the amount of land provided and gifted this property to Stanford University in the form of a deed. With the property and funds in hand, the directors constructed the first building, furnished the laboratories, plumbed the structure, built a seawater storage tank, and engineered a gas powered pump to distribute seawater throughout the building. The year following the opening of the laboratory, a severe winter storm damaged the building, to which Mr. Hopkins contributed $255 for its repair. Beyond this amount, Timothy Hopkins contributed $5000 for the construction of a second laboratory building on the property and an additional $5000 for the purchase of books on the subject of biology.1 81 Copyright © 2013 Donald G. Kohrs HOPKINS SEASIDE LABORATORY OF NATURAL HISTORY LIMITED FINANCIAL RESOURCES BEYOND THE INITIAL FUNDING In 1905, a letter written to President David Starr Jordan outlining the activities and accomplishments of the seaside laboratory, from the Directors of the Hopkins Seaside Laboratory, CH Gilbert and OP Jenkins, mentioned the source of financial support beyond the initial funding: The class of investigators [Stanford faculty and visiting scientists] were given the use of the laboratory and its equipment free of all expenses.
    [Show full text]