- George Switzer (mineralogist)
George Shirley Switzer (
June 11 1915 –March 23 2008 ) was an Americanmineralogist who is credited with starting theSmithsonian Institution 's famed National Gem and Mineral Collection by acquiring theHope Diamond for the museum in 1958.cite news |first=Dennis|last=Hevesi|title=George Switzer, 92, Dies; Started a Gem Treasury |url=http://www.nytimes.com/2008/04/06/us/06SWITZER.html?ref=us|work=The New York Times |publisher=|date=2008-04-06 |accessdate=2008-04-09] cite news |first=Joe |last=Holley|title=George Switzer; Got Hope Diamond for Smithsonian |url=http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2008/03/26/AR2008032603029.html|work=The Washington Post |publisher=|date=2008-03-27 |accessdate=2008-04-13] Switzer made the arrangements when renownedNew York City jeweler Harry Winston decided to donate the Hope Diamond to the Smithsonian.Switzer was also known for his analysis of
moon rock s which were brought back byNASA missions to theMoon .Today, the National Gem and Mineral Collection at the
National Museum of Natural History currently contains over over 15,000 individual gems in the collection, as well as 350,000mineral s and 300,000 samples of rock andore specimens. Additionally, the Smithsonian's National Gem and Mineral Collection houses approximately 35,000meteorite s, constituting what is considered to be one of the most comprehensive collections of its kind in the world.Early life
George Switzer was born in
Petaluma, California onJune 11 1915 . He was the son of Albert and Charlotte Ryan Switzer.Switzer first attended
Santa Rosa Junior College before earning hisbachelor's degree from theUniversity of California, Berkeley in 1937. He then obtained his master's degree inmineralogy fromHarvard University in 1939. He continued at Harvard and earned hisdoctorate from the University in 1942.He worked as a
professor both atStanford University from 1939 to 1940, and at Harvard University from 1940 to 1945. Switzer tried to enlist in theUnited States military duringWorld War II , but a recruiter reportedly told him that his years of education could be put to better use elsewhere. So during the war, he also worked as acrystallographer for Majestic Radio & TV Corp., where he worked keeping aircraft radio frequencies up and running.mithsonian
Switzer first joined the staff of the Smithsonian's
National Museum of Natural History in 1948. He initially worked as an associatecurator of the museum's Division ofMineralogy andPetrology , a position which he held from 1948 until 1964. He was later promoted to Chairman of the Smithsonian's Department of Mineral Sciences from 1964 to 1969. He remained at the Smithsonian as the curatoremeritus until 1975.Switzer was a major force behind the museum's research division. He applied for and received a grant from NASA, which allowed the Smithsonian to obtain a
electron probemicro-analyzer for minerals during the 1970s. The micro-analyzer allows scientists to determine the origin of a given mineral. From 1972 until 1973, Switzer and other mineralogists used the micro-analyzer to examine samples of rock from the Moon which were brought back by the crews of theApollo 15 andApollo 16 missions. The U.S. military had hoped to finddiamond s,plutonium anduranium in the samples. Instead, Switzer's analysis showed that the Moon had never had either anatmosphere similar to Earth's or water on its surface. Switzer's research put the National Museum of Natural History at the forefront ofgeology .Switzer also worked with other scientists to identify and name five minerals, which were all new to
science , during his career. In his honor, three prominent mineralogists -Peter B. Leavens ,John S. White andPier F. Zanazzi - proposed naming a mineral after Switzer. The mineral in question consisted of pale browncrystal s, composed ofmanganese phosphate , and was first discovered inNorth Carolina . In 1967 theInternational Mineralogical Association approved the name designationSwitzerite , in honor of George Switzer.Switzer later served as director of research for the
Gemological Institute of America and as aU.S. Geological Survey minerologist.Hope Diamond
Switzer, who was working as an associate curator at the time, first approached
jeweler Harry Winston about donating theHope Diamond to the Smithsonian for a proposed national gem collection to be housed at the museum. Winston had purchased the Hope Diamond, which has been nicknamed the "King of Diamonds," in 1949 from the estate ofEvalyn Walsh McLean , whose father had become wealthy during the gold rushes of the 1800s.Winston was persuaded by Switzer's argument, and agreed to his proposition. He donated the 45.52-carat, blue Hope Diamond to the Smithsonian in 1958. Winston mailed the Hope Diamond to the Smithsonian wrapped in brown paper. The
postage to send the Hope Diamond from New York City to its new home at the Smithsonian cost $145.29. Winston's wife,Edna Winston , later more formally presented the blue diamond to Switzer andLeonard Carmichael , the secretary of the Smithsonian at the time, onNovember 10 1958 . The Hope Diamond was placed on display, surrounded by a pendant of 16 white diamonds on anecklace containing over 45 other white diamonds.The acquisition of the Hope Diamond by the Smithsonian, "...started the national collection.", according to
Sorena Sorensen , the current chairwoman of the Smithsonian's mineral sciences department. Sorensen also stated that, "The idea for the national collection at the Smithsonian was a collaboration between Harry Winston and George (Switzer)."Switzer reportedly began to wonder if there was some truth to the supposed Hope Diamond curse during a trip with the Diamond to the
Louvre for the "Ten Centuries of French Jewelry"exhibition in April 1962. The Smithsonian had determined that secrecy was the best defense against the potential theft of the Hope Diamond. Switzer traveled toParis with the Hope Diamond inside avelvet pouch, which had been specially sewn by his wife, Sue. The Hope Diamond was placed inside the pouch and then pinned inside Switzer's pants pocket.Switzer's plane, Pan American Flight 116, which was supposed to fly first from Baltimore Friendship Airport, with several refueling stops, and continuing onto
Paris , made a "hard landing" in Philadelphia, which nearly tore the plane's wing off. (Please note that some reports state that the hard landing was actually made in Pittsburgh, so there is some discrepancy.) Switzer's next flight arrived in Paris nearly nine hours late on the day that the Hope Diamond was supposed to go on exhibition. Switzer's car then got into a minor fender bender while traveling from the airport to the Louvre.Retirement
George Switzer retired from the Smithsonian in 1975 as the curator emeritus. He used his
retirement to pursue his hobby,azalea propagation . His hobby became a serious occupation when he served as the director of theAzalea Society of America and became assistant editor of the "Azalean" publication. He was credited with describing and naming a new variety of azaleacultivar , "Nannie Angell ", in 1992.Switzer authored a
textbook ongemology in 1979.Death
George Switzer died in
Solomons, Maryland at the Hermitage at St. John's Creekassisted living facility, at the age of 93 onMarch 23 2008 . The cause of his death waspneumonia . He was a resident ofPort Republic, Maryland at the time, and had formerly lived inBethesda, Maryland . Switzer was survived by his wife, Sue Joan Bowden Switzer, to whom he had been married for 68 years, as well as his two sons, eight grandchildren and twelve great-grandchildren.References
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