- Robert Kennicott
Robert Kennicott (
November 13 ,1835 -May 13 ,1866 ) was an American naturalist.Biography
Kennicott was born in
New Orleans and grew up in "West Northfield" (nowGlenview ),Illinois , a town north of the then nascent city ofChicago .In 1853, Kennicott began collecting and cataloguing for the
Smithsonian Institution inWashington DC when he began to correspond withSpencer Fullerton Baird . During 1855 he surveyed and collected on theIllinois Central Railroad Survey. In 1856, he named one of his new snake discoveries "Clonophis kirtlandi" after noted naturalistJared P. Kirtland . Also in 1856 helped found theChicago Academy of Sciences and in 1857 helped found theNorthwestern University natural history museum.In April 1859 he set off on an expedition to collect natural history specimens in the
subarctic boreal forest s of northwesternCanada in what is now the Mackenzie and Yukon river valleys and in theArctic tundra beyond. Kenicott became popular withHudson's Bay Company fur trade rs in the area and encouraged them to collect and send natural history specimens andFirst Nations artifacts to the Smithsonian. He returned to Washington at the end on 1862.From 1862 to 1864, Kennicott became part of the
Megatherium Club a group of young naturalists guided bySpencer Fullerton Baird andWilliam Stimpson . Robert and his younger brother lived in the Smithsonian Castle during the American Civil War along withEdward Drinker Cope and other noted naturalists.While working at the
Smithsonian Institution under Assistant Secretary Spencer F. Baird, Robert Kennicott wrote the original descriptions of many new snake taxa brought back by expeditions to the American West. [Adler, K. 1989. "Contributions to the History of Herpetology". Society for the Study of Amphibians & Reptiles. pp.41-42.] [Kennicott, R. 1861. On three new forms of rattlesnakes. "Proceedings of the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia" 13:206-208.]In 1864 the
Western Union Telegraph Expedition was mounted to find a possible route for a telegraph line between North America andRussia by way of theBering Sea . Kennicott was selected as the scientist for this expedition, and the party of naturalists sent to assist him includedW.H. Dall .The expedition arrived in
San Francisco in April, but disagreements between its leaders meant that little was achieved. The party moved north toVancouver where Kennicott suffered a period of ill health. After his recovery they moved north again toAlaska . Kennicott died of congestive heart failure while traveling up theYukon River . To commemorate his efforts on behalf of scienceKennicott Glacier ,Kennicott Valley , and theKennicott River were named after him.Some of his papers are maintained at
Northwestern University , others at his family home where his grave remains in the Kennicott Family plot in Glenview, Illinois at The Grove, which is aNational Historic Landmark .References
*"Audubon to Xanthus: The Lives of Those Commemorated in North American Bird Names" - Mearns and Mearns ISBN 0-12-487423-1
Notes
External links
* [http://vertebrates.si.edu/fishes/baird/kennicott.html Biography of Kennicott at the Smithsonian Museum]
* [http://www.library.northwestern.edu/archives/findingaids/kennicott_bannister.pdf Robert Kennicott and Henry M. Bannister Papers, Northwestern University Archives, Evanston, Illinois]
* [http://kmier.net/ecology/publications/1985kennicott.html Robert Kennicott's Letters to Spencer F. Baird, 1853-1865]
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