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Eugene W. Hilgard

Eugene Woldemar Hilgard (January 5, 1833 – January 8, 1916) was a German-American expert on pedology (the study of soil resources). An authority on climate as a soil forming factor, soil chemistry and reclamation of alkali soils, he is considered as the father of modern soil science in the United States.

Biography edit

Early life edit

Hilgard was born at Zweibrücken, Kingdom of Bavaria, January 5, 1833, the son of Theodore Erasmus and Margaretha (Pauli) Hilgard. His father was a successful lawyer, holding the position of chief justice of the court of appeals of the province of Rhenish Bavaria. His liberally-minded father was displeased by the increasingly reactionary government of Ludwig I, and having secured a letter of recommendation from Lafayette, he resolved to move his family to America.[1] After a 14-day overland trip to Le Havre, followed by a 62-day ocean voyage aboard the ship Marengo, the family arrived in New Orleans, Louisiana, on Christmas Day 1835, then traveled up the Mississippi River to St. Louis, Missouri, finally settling on a farm in Belleville, Illinois.[2] His father had chosen that particular area based on the writings of Gottfried Duden, who had described the area as a sort of El Dorado for German immigrants.[3]

The youngest of nine children,[4] Eugene received his early education under the tutelage of his father.[5] During an epidemic of malaria that killed his eldest sister, Eugene was stricken as well, and the resultant fevers and impaired eyesight plagued him for the next several years of his young adulthood.[6] His mother died in 1842, leaving Eugene's care in the hands of his remaining sisters. He educated himself in the fields of botany, chemistry, and physics, but his continued precarious health led doctors to suggest a change in climate, so in 1848 he traveled to Washington, D.C., with his eldest brother Julius, who was returning to his job at the United States Coast Survey.[7]

Eugene spent four months in Washington, meeting through his brother such noted scientists as Joseph Henry, Spencer Fullerton Baird, and Alexander Dallas Bache. That fall he went to Philadelphia to attend a variety of lectures, and during a visit to the laboratory of James Curtis Booth at the Franklin Institute, it was suggested that he return to Germany to study analytical chemistry. He sailed from New York in March 1849 aboard the steamship Hermann, bound for Bremen and then to Heidelberg to rejoin his brother Theodore, who had gone there in 1846 to study medicine.[7]

Education in Europe edit

At the University of Heidelberg, he began study under Leopold Gmelin and Theodor Ludwig Wilhelm Bischoff but soon became disenchanted with the overall state of instruction at the university. During a summer trip with his brother Theodore to their native province, the turbulence of the Palatinate-Baden rebellion forced the pair to seek safety in Speyer, where their cousin was a government official. At his suggestion, they traveled to Switzerland and enrolled at the University of Zurich. Hilgard spent three semesters at Zurich, studying under notable professors such as Lorenz Oken, Arnold Escher von der Linth, and Carl Jacob Löwig, the latter of whom appointed him as his laboratory and teaching assistant.[8]

In 1850 he left Zurich for the Royal Mining School in Freiberg. Despite a productive period of study under Karl Friedrich Plattner, a recurrence of his health problems, combined with two near-death experiences involving cyanide gas and mercury vapor, led him to conclude he was not cut out for the hazardous world of mining and smelting. Hilgard returned to Heidelberg in 1851, where Robert Bunsen had just succeeded Leopold Gmelin as the chair in chemistry. He soon decided to obtain a Ph.D. with Bunsen as his advisor. For his thesis, Hilgard investigated the constituent parts of a candle flame and was the first to identify four distinct parts and processes, as opposed to the three that had previously been supposed. He received his Ph.D. in 1853.[9]

After graduation, he lived in Spain and Portugal for two years.[10] While in Spain, he met his future wife, Jesusa Alexandrina Bello, the daughter of a colonel in the Spanish Army. He married her in 1860 during a subsequent visit to Spain.[1]

Hilgard's father moved back to Germany in 1855, remarried his niece Marie Theveny, and died in Heidelberg in 1873.[11]

Professional career edit

 
Hilgard as Professor at Berkeley

Returning to America, he served as assistant state geologist of Mississippi from 1855 to 1857; was chemist in charge of the laboratory of the Smithsonian Institution, and lecturer on chemistry in the National Medical College (now part of George Washington University), 1857–1858; state geologist of Mississippi from 1858 to 1866, and professor of chemistry at the University of Mississippi and state geologist from 1866 to 1873. Hilgard was appointed as custodian of the University of Mississippi's buildings for the duration of the Civil War. Under his custodianship, many of the university's buildings were used as hospitals for Union and Confederate soldiers. Some Sisters of Mercy from Vicksburg traveled to Oxford to serve as nurses in these makeshift hospitals.

In 1873 he accepted an appointment at the University of Michigan, where he was professor of mineralogy, geology, zoology, and botany for two years. From 1875 to 1904 he was professor of agricultural chemistry at the University of California, Berkeley and director of the state agricultural experiment station.

He conducted the agricultural division of the Northern Transcontinental Survey, 1881–1883, and made a specialty of the study of soils of the southwestern states and of the Pacific slope in their relation to geology, to their chemical and physical composition, to their native flora, and to their agricultural qualities. He was elected to a membership in the National Academy of Sciences in 1872.

Commemoration and honors edit

Publications edit

He published a report on the agriculture and geology of Mississippi (1860); on the Geology of Louisiana and the Rock-salt Deposits of Petite Anse Island (1869); reports on the Experimental Work of the College of Agriculture, University of California (1877-1898); Report on the Arid Regions of the Pacific Coast (1887); and monographs on Mississippi, Louisiana, and California, in the Report on Cotton Production of the United States Census Report of 1880, which he edited. He prepared for the United States Weather Bureau in 1892 a discussion of the Relations of Climate to Soils, which was translated into several European languages and gained for the author in 1894, from the Royal Bavarian Academy of Sciences, the Liebig medal for important advances in agricultural science. Together with his book Soils (1906), Climate... established the basis for understanding climate as a factor of soil formation in the United States.[13] He also published numerous papers on chemical, geological, and agricultural subjects, in government reports, and in scientific journals both at home and abroad.

  • (1860) Report on the geology and agriculture of the State of Mississippi
  • (1884) Report on the Physical and Agricultural Features of the State of California, with a discussion of the present and future of cotton production in the state.
  • (1885) The Phylloxera at Berkeley
  • (1892) The Relation of Soils to Climate
  • (1906) Soils, Their Formation, Properties, Composition, and Relations to Climate and Plant Growth in the Humid and Arid Regions

Citations edit

  1. ^ a b Wickson 1916, p. 5
  2. ^ Slate 1918, p. 96
  3. ^ Koerner 1909, p. 275
  4. ^ Loughridge 1916, p. 21
  5. ^ Hilgard 1893, pp. 329–330
  6. ^ JSTOR, Hilgard, Eugene Woldemar (1833-1916)
  7. ^ a b Slate 1918, pp. 98–100
  8. ^ Slate 1918, pp. 100–102
  9. ^ Slate 1918, pp. 102–104
  10. ^ White 1909
  11. ^ Baecker & Englemann 1958, p. 87 cited in Krafft
  12. ^ StoppingPoints.com 2010
  13. ^ Hugget 1991 "The role of climate as a soil forming factor was recognized independently in the United States ... by ... Hilgard carried out extensive studies of soils which led him to appreciate that different soils tend to be associated with different environmental conditions. In his monograph on The Relation of Soils to Climate he wrote of a more or less intimate relation between soils of a region and the prevailing climatic conditions, and in his book Soils he recorded the tendency of climate materially to influence the character of soils formed from the same rocks."

References edit

  • Baecker, Gertrud; Englemann, Fritz (1958), Die Kurpfalzischen Familien Englemann und Hilgard, Ludwigshafen am Rhein: Richard Louis Verlag
  • "Hilgard Cut", StoppingPoints.com, July 5, 2010, retrieved 2018-10-19
  • Hilgard, Eugene W. (1893), "Memoir of Julius Erasmus Hilgard 1825-1890", in National Academy of Sciences (ed.), Biographical Memoirs, vol. III, Washington, D.C.: National Academy Press (published 1895), pp. 327–338
  • "Hilgard, Eugene Woldemar (1833-1916) on JSTOR". plants.jstor.org. Retrieved 2021-07-23.
  • Hinsdale, Burke A. (1906), Demmon, Isaac (ed.), History of the University of Michigan, University of Michigan, pp. 248–249
  • Jenny, Hans (1961) E.W. Hilgard and the birth of modern soil science. Pisa, Italy. 144 pp., illus
  • Hugget, R. J. (1991), Climate, Earth Processes and Earth History, Heidelberg: Springer-Verlag Berlin, p. 112, ISBN 978-3642762703
  • Koerner, Gustave P. (1909), McCormack, Thomas J. (ed.), Memoirs of Gustave Koerner, 1809-1896, vol. I, Cedar Rapids, Iowa: Torch Press
  • Krafft, Dean, Krafft Family, retrieved 2008-07-08
  • Langenheim, Ralph L. (1990). "Hilgard, Eugene Woldemar". American National Biography. Vol. 10. Oxford University Press.
  • Loughridge, R.H. (1916), "The Life-Work of Professor Hilgard", in University of California Agricultural Experiment Station (ed.), In Memoriam. Eugene Woldemar Hilgard, Berkeley: University of California Press, pp. 21–31
  • Pittman, Walter E. (1985). "Eugene W. Hilgard and Scientific Education in Mississippi". Earth Sciences History. 4 (1): 26–31. ISSN 0736-623X.
  • Slate, Frederick (1918), "Biographical Memoir of Eugene Woldemar Hilgard 1833-1916" (PDF), in National Academy of Sciences (ed.), Biographical Memoirs, vol. IX, Washington, D.C.: National Academy of Sciences (published 1919), pp. 95–155
  • White, James T. (1909), The National Cyclopaedia of American Biography, New York: J.T. White, p. 308
  • Wickson, E.J. (1916), "Address", in University of California Agricultural Experiment Station (ed.), In Memoriam. Eugene Woldemar Hilgard, Berkeley: University of California Press, pp. 3–21

External links edit

  • The E. W. Hilgard Collection (MUM00569) can be found at the University of Mississippi, Archive and Special Collections.

eugene, hilgard, eugene, woldemar, hilgard, january, 1833, january, 1916, german, american, expert, pedology, study, soil, resources, authority, climate, soil, forming, factor, soil, chemistry, reclamation, alkali, soils, considered, father, modern, soil, scie. Eugene Woldemar Hilgard January 5 1833 January 8 1916 was a German American expert on pedology the study of soil resources An authority on climate as a soil forming factor soil chemistry and reclamation of alkali soils he is considered as the father of modern soil science in the United States Eugene W HilgardBornJanuary 5 1833Zweibrucken Kingdom of BavariaDiedJanuary 8 1916 aged 83 Berkeley California United StatesAlma materRoyal Mining School University of Zurich University of HeidelbergScientific careerFieldsSoil ScienceInstitutionsUniversity of Mississippi University of Michigan University of California BerkeleyDoctoral advisorRobert Bunsen Contents 1 Biography 1 1 Early life 1 2 Education in Europe 1 3 Professional career 2 Commemoration and honors 3 Publications 4 Citations 5 References 6 External linksBiography editEarly life edit Hilgard was born at Zweibrucken Kingdom of Bavaria January 5 1833 the son of Theodore Erasmus and Margaretha Pauli Hilgard His father was a successful lawyer holding the position of chief justice of the court of appeals of the province of Rhenish Bavaria His liberally minded father was displeased by the increasingly reactionary government of Ludwig I and having secured a letter of recommendation from Lafayette he resolved to move his family to America 1 After a 14 day overland trip to Le Havre followed by a 62 day ocean voyage aboard the ship Marengo the family arrived in New Orleans Louisiana on Christmas Day 1835 then traveled up the Mississippi River to St Louis Missouri finally settling on a farm in Belleville Illinois 2 His father had chosen that particular area based on the writings of Gottfried Duden who had described the area as a sort of El Dorado for German immigrants 3 The youngest of nine children 4 Eugene received his early education under the tutelage of his father 5 During an epidemic of malaria that killed his eldest sister Eugene was stricken as well and the resultant fevers and impaired eyesight plagued him for the next several years of his young adulthood 6 His mother died in 1842 leaving Eugene s care in the hands of his remaining sisters He educated himself in the fields of botany chemistry and physics but his continued precarious health led doctors to suggest a change in climate so in 1848 he traveled to Washington D C with his eldest brother Julius who was returning to his job at the United States Coast Survey 7 Eugene spent four months in Washington meeting through his brother such noted scientists as Joseph Henry Spencer Fullerton Baird and Alexander Dallas Bache That fall he went to Philadelphia to attend a variety of lectures and during a visit to the laboratory of James Curtis Booth at the Franklin Institute it was suggested that he return to Germany to study analytical chemistry He sailed from New York in March 1849 aboard the steamship Hermann bound for Bremen and then to Heidelberg to rejoin his brother Theodore who had gone there in 1846 to study medicine 7 Education in Europe edit At the University of Heidelberg he began study under Leopold Gmelin and Theodor Ludwig Wilhelm Bischoff but soon became disenchanted with the overall state of instruction at the university During a summer trip with his brother Theodore to their native province the turbulence of the Palatinate Baden rebellion forced the pair to seek safety in Speyer where their cousin was a government official At his suggestion they traveled to Switzerland and enrolled at the University of Zurich Hilgard spent three semesters at Zurich studying under notable professors such as Lorenz Oken Arnold Escher von der Linth and Carl Jacob Lowig the latter of whom appointed him as his laboratory and teaching assistant 8 In 1850 he left Zurich for the Royal Mining School in Freiberg Despite a productive period of study under Karl Friedrich Plattner a recurrence of his health problems combined with two near death experiences involving cyanide gas and mercury vapor led him to conclude he was not cut out for the hazardous world of mining and smelting Hilgard returned to Heidelberg in 1851 where Robert Bunsen had just succeeded Leopold Gmelin as the chair in chemistry He soon decided to obtain a Ph D with Bunsen as his advisor For his thesis Hilgard investigated the constituent parts of a candle flame and was the first to identify four distinct parts and processes as opposed to the three that had previously been supposed He received his Ph D in 1853 9 After graduation he lived in Spain and Portugal for two years 10 While in Spain he met his future wife Jesusa Alexandrina Bello the daughter of a colonel in the Spanish Army He married her in 1860 during a subsequent visit to Spain 1 Hilgard s father moved back to Germany in 1855 remarried his niece Marie Theveny and died in Heidelberg in 1873 11 Professional career edit nbsp Hilgard as Professor at BerkeleyReturning to America he served as assistant state geologist of Mississippi from 1855 to 1857 was chemist in charge of the laboratory of the Smithsonian Institution and lecturer on chemistry in the National Medical College now part of George Washington University 1857 1858 state geologist of Mississippi from 1858 to 1866 and professor of chemistry at the University of Mississippi and state geologist from 1866 to 1873 Hilgard was appointed as custodian of the University of Mississippi s buildings for the duration of the Civil War Under his custodianship many of the university s buildings were used as hospitals for Union and Confederate soldiers Some Sisters of Mercy from Vicksburg traveled to Oxford to serve as nurses in these makeshift hospitals In 1873 he accepted an appointment at the University of Michigan where he was professor of mineralogy geology zoology and botany for two years From 1875 to 1904 he was professor of agricultural chemistry at the University of California Berkeley and director of the state agricultural experiment station He conducted the agricultural division of the Northern Transcontinental Survey 1881 1883 and made a specialty of the study of soils of the southwestern states and of the Pacific slope in their relation to geology to their chemical and physical composition to their native flora and to their agricultural qualities He was elected to a membership in the National Academy of Sciences in 1872 Commemoration and honors editHilgard Hall on the University of California Berkeley campus Streets named after him in Berkeley Los Angeles and Davis The Hilgard Cut a railroad cut on the campus of the University of Mississippi designed by Hilgard in 1858 12 The mineral hilgardite The U S Liberty ship SS Eugene W Hilgard Hilgard received the degree of Doctor of Laws from the University of Mississippi in 1882 from the University of Michigan in 1887 and from Columbia University in 1887 In 1903 the University of Heidelberg reconferred the title of Doctor of Philosophy after fifty years in recognition of the scientific work accomplished since the doctorate was first conferred in 1853 The journal Hilgardia published from 1925 to 1995 was named in his honor Hilgard Oregon Mount Hilgard a mountain in California s Sierra NevadaPublications editHe published a report on the agriculture and geology of Mississippi 1860 on the Geology of Louisiana and the Rock salt Deposits of Petite Anse Island 1869 reports on the Experimental Work of the College of Agriculture University of California 1877 1898 Report on the Arid Regions of the Pacific Coast 1887 and monographs on Mississippi Louisiana and California in the Report on Cotton Production of the United States Census Report of 1880 which he edited He prepared for the United States Weather Bureau in 1892 a discussion of the Relations of Climate to Soils which was translated into several European languages and gained for the author in 1894 from the Royal Bavarian Academy of Sciences the Liebig medal for important advances in agricultural science Together with his book Soils 1906 Climate established the basis for understanding climate as a factor of soil formation in the United States 13 He also published numerous papers on chemical geological and agricultural subjects in government reports and in scientific journals both at home and abroad 1860 Report on the geology and agriculture of the State of Mississippi 1884 Report on the Physical and Agricultural Features of the State of California with a discussion of the present and future of cotton production in the state 1885 The Phylloxera at Berkeley 1892 The Relation of Soils to Climate 1906 Soils Their Formation Properties Composition and Relations to Climate and Plant Growth in the Humid and Arid RegionsCitations edit a b Wickson 1916 p 5 Slate 1918 p 96 Koerner 1909 p 275 Loughridge 1916 p 21 Hilgard 1893 pp 329 330 JSTOR Hilgard Eugene Woldemar 1833 1916 a b Slate 1918 pp 98 100 Slate 1918 pp 100 102 Slate 1918 pp 102 104 White 1909 Baecker amp Englemann 1958 p 87 cited in Krafft StoppingPoints com 2010 Hugget 1991 The role of climate as a soil forming factor was recognized independently in the United States by Hilgard carried out extensive studies of soils which led him to appreciate that different soils tend to be associated with different environmental conditions In his monograph on The Relation of Soils to Climate he wrote of a more or less intimate relation between soils of a region and the prevailing climatic conditions and in his book Soils he recorded the tendency of climate materially to influence the character of soils formed from the same rocks References editBaecker Gertrud Englemann Fritz 1958 Die Kurpfalzischen Familien Englemann und Hilgard Ludwigshafen am Rhein Richard Louis Verlag Hilgard Cut StoppingPoints com July 5 2010 retrieved 2018 10 19 Hilgard Eugene W 1893 Memoir of Julius Erasmus Hilgard 1825 1890 in National Academy of Sciences ed Biographical Memoirs vol III Washington D C National Academy Press published 1895 pp 327 338 Hilgard Eugene Woldemar 1833 1916 on JSTOR plants jstor org Retrieved 2021 07 23 Hinsdale Burke A 1906 Demmon Isaac ed History of the University of Michigan University of Michigan pp 248 249 Jenny Hans 1961 E W Hilgard and the birth of modern soil science Pisa Italy 144 pp illus Hugget R J 1991 Climate Earth Processes and Earth History Heidelberg Springer Verlag Berlin p 112 ISBN 978 3642762703 Koerner Gustave P 1909 McCormack Thomas J ed Memoirs of Gustave Koerner 1809 1896 vol I Cedar Rapids Iowa Torch Press Krafft Dean Krafft Family retrieved 2008 07 08 Langenheim Ralph L 1990 Hilgard Eugene Woldemar American National Biography Vol 10 Oxford University Press Loughridge R H 1916 The Life Work of Professor Hilgard in University of California Agricultural Experiment Station ed In Memoriam Eugene Woldemar Hilgard Berkeley University of California Press pp 21 31 Pittman Walter E 1985 Eugene W Hilgard and Scientific Education in Mississippi Earth Sciences History 4 1 26 31 ISSN 0736 623X Slate Frederick 1918 Biographical Memoir of Eugene Woldemar Hilgard 1833 1916 PDF in National Academy of Sciences ed Biographical Memoirs vol IX Washington D C National Academy of Sciences published 1919 pp 95 155 White James T 1909 The National Cyclopaedia of American Biography New York J T White p 308 Wickson E J 1916 Address in University of California Agricultural Experiment Station ed In Memoriam Eugene Woldemar Hilgard Berkeley University of California Press pp 3 21External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Eugene W Hilgard The E W Hilgard Collection MUM00569 can be found at the University of Mississippi Archive and Special Collections Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Eugene W Hilgard amp oldid 1199272068, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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