词条 | John Sterling Kingsley |
释义 |
| name = John Sterling Kingsley | birth_name = | imagesize = | caption = | birth_date = {{birth date|1854|4|7|df=y}} | birth_place = Cincinnatus, New York, United States | death_date = {{death date and age|1929|08|29|1854|4|7|df=y}} | death_place = Burial at sea, Pacific Ocean: {{coord|34|27|N|156|54|E}} | spouse = Mary Emma Reed | fields =Zoology | yearsactive = }} John Sterling Kingsley (1854–1929) was an American professor of biology and zoology. Early lifeJohn Kingsley was born on 7 April 1854 at Cincinnatus, New York son of Lewis and Julia A. (née Kingman) Kingsley.[1][2] His father, who was then County Judge and Surrogate, moved to Norwich in 1856 where Kingsley was raised and received his early education at private schools. From his earliest years he took a keen interest in science, especially chemistry. After attending schools in Norwich, Connecticut and Cincinnatus he decided to become an engineer. He refused an appointment to the United States Naval Academy at Annapolis, and chose instead to attend Brooklyn Polytechnic Institute. The death of his father forced him to leave the Institute before earning his degree. The engineering training he did receive though enabled him to earn enough money to resume his education in 1873 with the junior class at Williams College. It was around this time that he took a side interest in medicine, devoting much his spare time to the subject when not engaged his normal class work. His connection with the Natural History Society of the college, however, caused him to decide upon biology as his life study; and upon his graduation in 1875 enrolled at the Peabody Academy of Science at Salem, Massachusetts, where he studied with Alpheus Spring Packard. Here his work was entirely in the line of systematic zoology, especially on crustaceans, that he published a number of papers on.[3] CareerIn 1878 Kingsley moved to Providence, Rhode Island, to work as an assistant on the newly formed United States Entomological Commission. The following year he attended the Philadelphia Academy of Natural Science, where he studied general morphology. During this time he supported himself by drawing scientific illustrations and writing articles for various science journals. Kingsley then attended Princeton University, receiving his Doctorate of Science in 1885. In 1887 he was named Professor of Zoology at the University of Indiana and two years later accepted the chair of Biology at the University of Nebraska. He resigned in 1891 to take a year off to study in Europe, primarily at the University of Freiburg under Dr. Robert Wiedersheim. Upon his return in 1892, Kingsley was offered the chair of Biology at Tufts College where he would write nearly all the biological articles for Johnson's Universal Cyclopaedia. From 1913 to 1921 Kingsley served as professor of zoology at the University of Illinois.[4][5] Over his career Kingsley would author over three-hundred scientific articles and numerous books on such subjects as vertebrae zoology, comparative zoology and the anatomy of vertebrates. In 1902 he translated German zoologist Richard Hertwig’s ein Handbuch der Zoologie. Kingsley was one-time editor of the publications Standard Natural History (1884), and The American Naturalist (1886–96).[2] He had served over the years as president of the Nebraska Academy of Sciences at Lincoln,[6] and the American Morphological Society at Johns Hopkins University,[7] and held memberships in a number of other scientific organizations both nationally and internationally.[5] MarriageJohn Kinsgley married, on 31 January 1882, Mary Emma Read of Salem, Massachusetts. She was the daughter of a Salem produce dealer who several years after her birth served in the American Civil War.[2][8][9] Kingsley's only child, Mary Winship, was born in 1883 at Melrose, Massachusetts.[5][10] DeathJohn Sterling Kingsley died of a heart attack on 29 August 1929 while traveling with his daughter aboard the S.S. President Taft. At the time of his death the ship was some three days away from docking at Yokohama, Japan and the decision was made to commit his remains to the sea.[11] Works
References1. ^US Passport Application - August 14, 1907 2. ^1 2 Twentieth Century Biographical Dictionary of Notable Americans, Johnson, Rossiter, editor 3. ^"History of Tufts College, 1854-1896", published by the class of 1897, editor-in-chief Alaric Bertrand Start, 1896, pp. [https://archive.is/20120713053436/http://dl.tufts.edu/view_text.jsp?pid=tufts:UA069.005.DO.00091&chapter=c4s19 138–140] 4. ^Elliott Coues: naturalist and frontier historian By Paul Russell Cutright, Michael J. Brodhead 5. ^1 2 The semi-centennial alumni record of the University of Illinois By University of Illinois (Urbana-Champaign campus) 1918 6. ^The Naturalists' directory (1896l) 7. ^Science, Volume 13 By American Association for the Advancement of Science (1901) 8. ^1860-1870 US Census Records 9. ^Massachusetts Army-Navy Records (1861-1865) 10. ^US Passport Application (Mary Winship Kingsley) October 16, 1912 11. ^Reports of Deaths of American Citizens Abroad - September 6, 1929 External links{{wikisource author}}
15 : 1854 births|1929 deaths|People from Cortland County, New York|American biologists|American zoologists|American carcinologists|Tufts University faculty|University of Illinois faculty|Williams College alumni|Polytechnic Institute of New York University alumni|Princeton University alumni|University of Nebraska faculty|Indiana University faculty|Academic journal editors|Scientists from New York (state) |
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