- Henry Gannett
Henry Gannett, M.E.; LL.D. ((August 24, 1846 - November 5, 1914) was an American geographer who is described as the "Father of the Quadrangle (geography)" which is the basis for topographical maps in the United States.
Life
He was born in Bath, Me., graduated with a B.S. at Harvard in 1869 and at the Hooper Mining School in 1870 also at Harvard.
In 1871 he was almost simultaneously offered positions with
Charles Francis Hall on what would become the ill-fatedPolaris Expedition or going withFerdinand Vandeveer Hayden to surveyYellowstone National Park . He chose the Hayden adventure and would map the wester portion of the Hayden's division until 1879.On July 26, 1872 while climbing the then unnamed highest mountain in the
Gallatin Mountains , he and his party experience electric shocks following alightning event near the summit. He was to name the mountainElectric Peak .He married Mary E. Chase on November 24, 1874.
The Father of Government Mapmaking
In 1879 he was among those lobbying for centralizing the mapping functions into one government agency. Previously individual mapmakers and agencies had to compete for money from Congress for funds for projects.
He lobbied to call the new organization "United States Geological and Geographical Survey" although the name
United States Geological Survey would officially be approved.His first job in the new organization under its first director
Clarence King was geographer of theUnited States Census, 1880 . He laid out 2,000 enumeration districts with such precision that for the first time each census enumerator knew in advance the metes and bounds of his particular district. The completion of this work on July 1, 1882 is considered the start of true topographical work in the United States and the birth of the quad. He was promoted to Chief Geographer for the Geological Society byJohn Wesley Powell and would hold the position until 1896.In 1883 Gannett was one of founding members of the
National Geographic Society . He would become serve as it first secretary, then treasurer, then vice-president, and finally president in 1909.In 1884 he published his first "Dictionary of Altitudes" which listed all known survey altitudes in the United States as well as the source of the survey. He was to perusade various organizations doing the surveys including the railroads to begin using similar datums so the data could interconnect.
In 1885 he published "Boundaries of the United States and of the Several States and Territories, with a Historical Sketch of the Territorial Changes," which was the first attempt to standardize the history of the boundaries in the country.
He was chief geographer for the
United States Census, 1890 andUnited States Census, 1900 In 1890 he and
Thomas Corwin Mendenhall of theU.S. National Geodetic Survey campaigned to establish theUnited States Board on Geographic Names to create official names for locations in the United States.In 1893 "A Manual of Topographic Methods" which was the basis for standardizing survey and mapping processes.
In 1896 in his last year with the USGS, he started the use of the
Benchmark (surveying) .In 1904 he was among the founders of the
American Association of Geographers .In 1906
Gannett Peak , the highest peak inWyoming , was named for him.In 1909 he was named chairman of a special committee to examine and verify the records of
Robert E. Peary in the controversy withFrederick Cook over who was the first to reach theNorth Pole .He was assistant director of the census of the Philippines (1902) and of
Cuba (1907-08). From 1897 to 1909, he was a vice president of theAmerican Statistical Association .Publications
* "A Manual of Topographic Methods" (1893)
* "Dictionary of Altitudes" (third edition, 1899)
* "The Building of a Nation" (1895)
* "Gazetteer of Cuba" (1902)
* "Gazetteer of Texas" (1902)
* "Origin of Certain Place Names in the United States" (1902)References
* [http://www.amerisurv.com/content/view/4519/ The Father of Government Mapmaking: Henry Gannett by Jerry Penry - American Surveyor - October 27, 2007]
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