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Henry Gannett

Henry Gannett (August 24, 1846 – November 5, 1914) was an American geographer who is described as the "father of mapmaking in America."[1][2][3][4] He was the chief geographer for the United States Geological Survey essentially from its founding until 1902.[2]

Henry Gannett
Born(1846-08-24)August 24, 1846
DiedNovember 5, 1914(1914-11-05) (aged 68)
Alma materHarvard University
Harvard University School of Mining and Practical Geology
OccupationGeographer
Employer(s)United States Geological Survey
United States Census
Organization(s)American Association of Geographers
Cosmos Club
National Geographic Society
Known forFather of mapmaking in America

He was a founding member and president of the National Geographic Society, a founder of the American Association of Geographers, and a co-founder and president of the Twenty Year Club or Twenty Year Topographers which was formed at the U.S.G.S. Topographic Division. He was also a founder and president of the Cosmos Club in Washington, D.C.

Gannett also was the geographer of the 10th United States Census in 1880, 11th Census in 1890, and the 12th Census in 1900. He was the assistant director of the 1899 Census of the Philippines and Puerto Rico, the 1902 Census of the Philippines, and the 1906 Census in Cuba.

Early life edit

Gannett was born in Bath, Maine, on August 24, 1846.[3] He was the son of Hannah Trufant (née Church) and Michael Farley Gannett.[3][5] He attended local schools, before going to Harvard for college.[3] He graduated with a B.S. from the Lawrence Scientific School of Harvard University in 1869 and received an M.E. at the Hooper Mining School (aka the Harvard University School of Mining and Practical Geology) in 1870.[5][3] Later, he trained in topographic mapping at Cambridge under Josiah D. Whitney and Charles F. Hoffman.[4]

Career edit

 
U.S. Geological Survey cartographers with Gannett, c.1890-1900
 
Supervisors for the Puerto Rican Census, 1899
 
Review of Peary's Records: Gilbert Grosvenor, Otto H. Tittman, Willis L. Moore, Commander Peary, Gannett, C. M. Chester

From 1870 to 1871, Gannett was an assistant at the Harvard College Observatory.[5] In 1871, he participated in a Harvard expedition to Spain to observe a solar eclipse.[3][4]

In 1871 he declined a position as an astronomer with Charles Francis Hall's ill-fated Polaris Expedition to the North Pole.[4][5][3] Instead, with the encouragement of Charles Hoffman, he accepted the position of topographer with Dr. Ferdinand Vandeveer Hayden's survey of Yellowstone National Park, working on western territories surveys from 1872 through 1879.[5][2][3][4] On July 26, 1872, while climbing the then-unnamed highest mountain in the Gallatin Mountains, he and his party experienced electric shocks following a lightning event near the summit. He named the mountain Electric Peak.

In 1879, Gannet was among those lobbying to centralize the mapping functions into one government agency. Previously individual mapmakers and agencies had to compete for money from Congress for project funds. He suggested calling the new organization "United States Geological and Geographical Survey" although the name United States Geological Survey (USGS) would officially be approved. He also assisted in planning the work of the USGS.[2]

Gannet was appointed to the USGS on October 8, 1879, under director Clarence King.[4][6] He was immediately transferred served as the geographer of the 10th United States Census in 1880.[5][4] 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.

On July 1, 1882, John Wesley Powell appointed Gannett as the chief geographer in charge of the topographic mapping division of the USGS, a position he held until 1896.[5][4] Around 1884, he persuaded various organizations doing the surveys, including the railroads, to begin using similar datums so the data could interconnect. As the chief geographer, he oversaw work on the topographical atlas of the United States.[5] He also served as a geographer for the 11th Census in 1890 and the 12th Census in 1900.[2][3]

In 1890, he and Thomas Corwin Mendenhall of the United States Coast and Geodetic Survey campaigned to establish the United States Board on Geographic Names to create official names for locations in the United States.[2] He was named to the newly created Board on Geographic Names by President Benjamin Harrison in Executive Order No. 28. In 1896, his last year with the USGS, he started the use of the benchmark.

In 1899, he was invited on the Harriman Alaska Expedition. In 1899, he was appointed the assistant director of the Census of the Philippines and Puerto Rico, the Philippines again in 1902, and Cuba in 1906.[2][4][7] In 1909 he was named chairman of a special committee to examine and verify the records of Robert E. Peary in the controversy with Frederick Cook over who was the first to reach the North Pole.

Gannett's published works are geographical and statistical.[5] He wrote more than fifty USGS Bulletins and Annual Reports.[8] He issued a gazetteer for eleven states and was a contributor to Baedecker's Guide to the United States, Encyclopedia Britannica, and The New International Encyclopedia.[9][3] He also was the author books for general readers and. statistical atlases. He wrote articles for The National Geographic Magazine, Science, Nature, Bulletin of the American Geographical Society, and other journals. Although he did not write many works in geomorphology and physical geology, he offered valuable suggestions.[3] For example, he recognized hanging valleys and their importance in interpreting a geological setting.[3] Later his in career, he ofter wrote about American forests, and the importance of conservation.

 
National Geographic Society members, 1909
 
Gannet Peak and Gannett Glacier in Pinedale, Wyoming
 
Mount Gannett in the Chugach Mountains, Alaska

Professional affiliations edit

In 1888 Gannett was one of six founding members of the National Geographic Society.[10][2][4] He served as its first secretary, and later as treasurer, then vice–president, and president, in 1909.[7][2] He was also Chair of the Society's Research Committee, organizing expeditions to Alaska, La Soufriere, Mount Pelee, Peru, and the Polar Seas.[3]

From 1897 to 1909, he was a vice president of the American Statistical Association.[11][7] In 1904 he was among the founders of the American Association of Geographers.[3] Also in 1904, he was secretary of the 8th Geographic Congress.[3] He was also a member of the Washington Academy of Sciences, the Royal Geographical Society of London, the Royal Scottish Geographical Society, and the Philadelphia Geographic Society..[12][2][13][9][14][3][10][4]

Gannett was a co-founder and president of the Twenty Year Club or Twenty Year Topographers which was formed at the United States Geological Survey Topographic Division in the winter of 1910–1911.[4] Eligibility was serving twenty years or more as a topographer with the U.S.G.S.[4]

Honors edit

Gannett received an honorary LL.D from Bowdoin College in 1889.[5][14]

Gannett Peak, the highest peak in Wyoming, and the related Gannett Glacier was named for him in 1906.[15] In 1911, Lawrence Martin named Mount Gannett, a 10,000 feet (3,000 m) peak in the Chugach Mountains of eastern Alaska, for Henry Gannett.[16]

The USGS National Geospatial Program presents the Henry Gannett Award for outstanding efforts in advancing and promoting mapping and geospatial sciences in the United States.[8]

Personal edit

Gannett married Mary E. Chase of Waterville, Maine on November 24, 1874.[3] They had a son, Farley Gannett who was an engineer for the Water Supply Commission of Pennsylvania.[2][9] Their daughters were May Gannett (Mrs. G. T. Backus) and Alice Gannett; the latter was a noted social reformer and settlement house worker.[9][14]

Gannett was one of the ten founding members and president of the Cosmos Club.[4]

Gannett died at his home in 1840 Biltmore Street, Washington, D.C. on November 5, 1914, after being ill for about a year with Bright's Disease.[1][2][9][14] His funeral service was given by Rev. U. G. B. Pierce of All Soul's Unitarian Church.[14] The day of his funeral, the National Geographic Society closed its offices and draped the building in mourning.[2]

 
Sierra Club trek with John Muir, Gannett and others at the General Sherman Tree, 1902

Selected publications edit

Books edit

Monographs edit

Articles edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b "Henry Gannett's Funeral Takes Place Tomorrow". Evening Star (Washington, D.C.). November 7, 1914. p. 8. Retrieved February 25, 2022 – via Newspapers.com.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m "Henry Gannett is Dead". Harrisburg Daily Independent (Harrisburg, PA). November 6, 1814. p. 4. Retrieved February 25, 2022 – via Newspapers.com.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q Darton, N.H. (January 1917). "Memoir of Henry Gannett". Annals of the Association of American Geographers. 7: 68–70. doi:10.1080/00045601709357056. hdl:2027/inu.30000053670869. Retrieved December 15, 2014.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Evans, Richard Tranter; Frye, Helen M. (2009). "History of the Topographic Branch (Division)" (PDF). U.S. Geological Survey Circular. 1341. ISBN 978-1-4113-2612-5.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Johnson, Rossiter; Brown, John Howard (1904). "Henry Gannett". The Twentieth Century Biographical Dictionary of Notable Americans ... Biographical Society. p. 70.
  6. ^ Penry, Jerry (October 27, 2007). . The American Surveyor. Archived from the original on December 16, 2014. Retrieved December 15, 2014.
  7. ^ a b c Colby, Frank Moore; Williams, Talcott (1917). "Henry Gannett". The New International Encyclopædia. Dodd, Mead.
  8. ^ a b "The Henry Gannett Award". U.S. Geological Survey. Retrieved October 9, 2023.
  9. ^ a b c d e "Great Geographer of Country is Dead pt 2". Harrisburg Telegraph (Harrisburg, PA). November 16, 1914. p. 16. Retrieved February 25, 2022 – via Newspapers.com.
  10. ^ a b "Census.gov › History › Agency History › Notable Alumni › Henry Gannett". U.S. Census Bureau. Retrieved December 15, 2014.
  11. ^ North, S.D.N. (1915). Henry Gannett, President of the National Geographic Society, 1910-1914. Washington, D.C.: National Geographic Society. hdl:2027/mdp.39015039793479.
  12. ^ List of members, officers, and committees, corrected to March 16, 1914. Washington, D.C.): Washington Academy of Sciences. 1916. p. 5. hdl:2027/wu.89100016302.
  13. ^ "Funeral for Henry Gannett". The Washington Times. November 8, 1914. p. 8. Retrieved February 25, 2022 – via Newspapers.com.
  14. ^ a b c d e "Funeral on Sunday for Henry Gannett". The Washington Times. November 6, 1914. p. 6. Retrieved February 25, 2022 – via Newspapers.com.
  15. ^ "Gannett Peak". Britannica. February 25, 2022. Retrieved February 25, 2022.
  16. ^ "Mount Gannett". Alaska Guide. Retrieved February 25, 2022.

External links edit

henry, gannett, august, 1846, november, 1914, american, geographer, described, father, mapmaking, america, chief, geographer, united, states, geological, survey, essentially, from, founding, until, 1902, born, 1846, august, 1846bath, maine, diednovember, 1914,. Henry Gannett August 24 1846 November 5 1914 was an American geographer who is described as the father of mapmaking in America 1 2 3 4 He was the chief geographer for the United States Geological Survey essentially from its founding until 1902 2 Henry GannettBorn 1846 08 24 August 24 1846Bath Maine U S DiedNovember 5 1914 1914 11 05 aged 68 Washington D C U S Alma materHarvard UniversityHarvard University School of Mining and Practical GeologyOccupationGeographerEmployer s United States Geological SurveyUnited States CensusOrganization s American Association of GeographersCosmos ClubNational Geographic SocietyKnown forFather of mapmaking in AmericaHe was a founding member and president of the National Geographic Society a founder of the American Association of Geographers and a co founder and president of the Twenty Year Club or Twenty Year Topographers which was formed at the U S G S Topographic Division He was also a founder and president of the Cosmos Club in Washington D C Gannett also was the geographer of the 10th United States Census in 1880 11th Census in 1890 and the 12th Census in 1900 He was the assistant director of the 1899 Census of the Philippines and Puerto Rico the 1902 Census of the Philippines and the 1906 Census in Cuba Contents 1 Early life 2 Career 3 Professional affiliations 4 Honors 5 Personal 6 Selected publications 6 1 Books 6 2 Monographs 6 3 Articles 7 References 8 External linksEarly life editGannett was born in Bath Maine on August 24 1846 3 He was the son of Hannah Trufant nee Church and Michael Farley Gannett 3 5 He attended local schools before going to Harvard for college 3 He graduated with a B S from the Lawrence Scientific School of Harvard University in 1869 and received an M E at the Hooper Mining School aka the Harvard University School of Mining and Practical Geology in 1870 5 3 Later he trained in topographic mapping at Cambridge under Josiah D Whitney and Charles F Hoffman 4 Career edit nbsp U S Geological Survey cartographers with Gannett c 1890 1900 nbsp Supervisors for the Puerto Rican Census 1899 nbsp Review of Peary s Records Gilbert Grosvenor Otto H Tittman Willis L Moore Commander Peary Gannett C M ChesterFrom 1870 to 1871 Gannett was an assistant at the Harvard College Observatory 5 In 1871 he participated in a Harvard expedition to Spain to observe a solar eclipse 3 4 In 1871 he declined a position as an astronomer with Charles Francis Hall s ill fated Polaris Expedition to the North Pole 4 5 3 Instead with the encouragement of Charles Hoffman he accepted the position of topographer with Dr Ferdinand Vandeveer Hayden s survey of Yellowstone National Park working on western territories surveys from 1872 through 1879 5 2 3 4 On July 26 1872 while climbing the then unnamed highest mountain in the Gallatin Mountains he and his party experienced electric shocks following a lightning event near the summit He named the mountain Electric Peak In 1879 Gannet was among those lobbying to centralize the mapping functions into one government agency Previously individual mapmakers and agencies had to compete for money from Congress for project funds He suggested calling the new organization United States Geological and Geographical Survey although the name United States Geological Survey USGS would officially be approved He also assisted in planning the work of the USGS 2 Gannet was appointed to the USGS on October 8 1879 under director Clarence King 4 6 He was immediately transferred served as the geographer of the 10th United States Census in 1880 5 4 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 On July 1 1882 John Wesley Powell appointed Gannett as the chief geographer in charge of the topographic mapping division of the USGS a position he held until 1896 5 4 Around 1884 he persuaded various organizations doing the surveys including the railroads to begin using similar datums so the data could interconnect As the chief geographer he oversaw work on the topographical atlas of the United States 5 He also served as a geographer for the 11th Census in 1890 and the 12th Census in 1900 2 3 In 1890 he and Thomas Corwin Mendenhall of the United States Coast and Geodetic Survey campaigned to establish the United States Board on Geographic Names to create official names for locations in the United States 2 He was named to the newly created Board on Geographic Names by President Benjamin Harrison in Executive Order No 28 In 1896 his last year with the USGS he started the use of the benchmark In 1899 he was invited on the Harriman Alaska Expedition In 1899 he was appointed the assistant director of the Census of the Philippines and Puerto Rico the Philippines again in 1902 and Cuba in 1906 2 4 7 In 1909 he was named chairman of a special committee to examine and verify the records of Robert E Peary in the controversy with Frederick Cook over who was the first to reach the North Pole Gannett s published works are geographical and statistical 5 He wrote more than fifty USGS Bulletins and Annual Reports 8 He issued a gazetteer for eleven states and was a contributor to Baedecker s Guide to the United States Encyclopedia Britannica and The New International Encyclopedia 9 3 He also was the author books for general readers and statistical atlases He wrote articles for The National Geographic Magazine Science Nature Bulletin of the American Geographical Society and other journals Although he did not write many works in geomorphology and physical geology he offered valuable suggestions 3 For example he recognized hanging valleys and their importance in interpreting a geological setting 3 Later his in career he ofter wrote about American forests and the importance of conservation nbsp National Geographic Society members 1909 nbsp Gannet Peak and Gannett Glacier in Pinedale Wyoming nbsp Mount Gannett in the Chugach Mountains AlaskaProfessional affiliations editIn 1888 Gannett was one of six founding members of the National Geographic Society 10 2 4 He served as its first secretary and later as treasurer then vice president and president in 1909 7 2 He was also Chair of the Society s Research Committee organizing expeditions to Alaska La Soufriere Mount Pelee Peru and the Polar Seas 3 From 1897 to 1909 he was a vice president of the American Statistical Association 11 7 In 1904 he was among the founders of the American Association of Geographers 3 Also in 1904 he was secretary of the 8th Geographic Congress 3 He was also a member of the Washington Academy of Sciences the Royal Geographical Society of London the Royal Scottish Geographical Society and the Philadelphia Geographic Society 12 2 13 9 14 3 10 4 Gannett was a co founder and president of the Twenty Year Club or Twenty Year Topographers which was formed at the United States Geological Survey Topographic Division in the winter of 1910 1911 4 Eligibility was serving twenty years or more as a topographer with the U S G S 4 Honors editGannett received an honorary LL D from Bowdoin College in 1889 5 14 Gannett Peak the highest peak in Wyoming and the related Gannett Glacier was named for him in 1906 15 In 1911 Lawrence Martin named Mount Gannett a 10 000 feet 3 000 m peak in the Chugach Mountains of eastern Alaska for Henry Gannett 16 The USGS National Geospatial Program presents the Henry Gannett Award for outstanding efforts in advancing and promoting mapping and geospatial sciences in the United States 8 Personal editGannett married Mary E Chase of Waterville Maine on November 24 1874 3 They had a son Farley Gannett who was an engineer for the Water Supply Commission of Pennsylvania 2 9 Their daughters were May Gannett Mrs G T Backus and Alice Gannett the latter was a noted social reformer and settlement house worker 9 14 Gannett was one of the ten founding members and president of the Cosmos Club 4 Gannett died at his home in 1840 Biltmore Street Washington D C on November 5 1914 after being ill for about a year with Bright s Disease 1 2 9 14 His funeral service was given by Rev U G B Pierce of All Soul s Unitarian Church 14 The day of his funeral the National Geographic Society closed its offices and draped the building in mourning 2 nbsp Sierra Club trek with John Muir Gannett and others at the General Sherman Tree 1902Selected publications editBooks edit The West From the Census of 1880 a History of the Industrial Commercial Social and Political Development of the States and Territories of the West from 1800 to 1880 with Robert P Porter and William A Jones Chicago Rand McNally amp Company 1882 Louisiana Boston Little Brown amp Co 1882 Scribner s Statistical Atlas with F W Hewes New York C Scribner s Sons 1883 The Building of a Nation the growth Present Condition and Resources of the United States with a Forecast of the Future New York The H T Thomas Company 1893 Topographical Atlas of the State of Rhode Island and Providence Plantations with Marcus Baker and George H Walker Providence R I J C Thompson 1891 The Building of a Nation the Growth Present Condition and Resources of the United States with a Forecast of the Future New York The Henry T Thomas Company 1895 Stanford s Compendium of Geography and Travel The United States vol 2 London Edward Stanford 1898 Commercial Geography with Carl L Garrison and Edwin J Houston New York American Book Company 1905 Statistical Abstract of the World New York John Wiley amp Sons 1907 Cuba Population History and Resources 1907 with Victor H Olmsted Washington D C United States Bureau of the Census 1909 Monographs edit The Areas of the United States the Several States and Territories and their Counties Extra Census Bulletin 1881 Dictionary of Altitudes in the United States United States Geological Survey Bulletin no 5 1884 Dictionary of Altitudes in the United States 2nd edition United States Geological Survey Bulletin no 70 1884 Boundaries of the United States and of the Several States and Territories with a Historical Sketch of the Territorial Changes United States Geological Survey Bulletin no 13 1885 A Manual of Topographic Methods United States Geological Survey Monograph no 22 1893 Statistics of the Negroes in the United States The Trustees of the John F Slater Fund Occasional Papers no 4 1894 Occupations of the Negroes The Trustees of the John F Slater Fund Occasional Papers no 6 1894 A Dictionary of Altitudes in the United States 3rd edition United States Geological Survey Bulletin 160 1899 Origin of Certain Place Names in the United States United States Geological Survey Bulletin 248 1902 A Gazetteer of Porto Rico United States Geological Survey Bulletin no 183 1901 A Gazetteer of Cuba United States Geological Survey Bulletin no 192 1902 A Gazetteer of Texas United States Geological Survey Bulletin no 224 1902 The Forests of Oregon United States Geological Survey Professional Paper no 4 1902 The Forests of Washington United States Geological Survey Professional Paper no 5 1902 A Gazetter of Delaware United States Geological Survey Bulletin no 230 Series F Geography 38 1904 A Gazetter of Maryland United States Geological Survey Bulletin no 231 1904 A Gazetter of Virginia United States Geological Survey Bulletin no 232 Series F Geography 40 1904 A Gazetteer of Indian Territory United States Geological Survey Bulletin248 Series F Geography 44 1905 A Dictionary of Altitudes in the United States 4th edition United States Geological Survey Bulletin no 274 1906 A Gazetteer of Colorado United States Geological Survey Bulletin no 291 Series F Geography 51 1906 The Areas of the United States the States and the Territories United States Geological Survey Bulletin no 302 Series F Geography 58 1906 Articles edit Report on the Geographical Field Work in the Yellowstone National Park Twelfth Annual Report of the Survey for the Year 1878 United States Geological Survey June 13 1883 The Geodetic Work of the Hayden and Wheeler Surveys Science vol 3 no 2 April 11 1884 Is the Rainfall Increasing upon the Plains Science vol 11 no 265 March 2 1888 The Mother Maps of the United States The National Geographic Magazine vol 4 1892 1893 The Average Elevation of the United States Thirteenth Annual Report of the Director 1891 92 United States Geological Survey 1894 The Movements of Our Population The National Geographic Magazine vol 5 1895 The Mapping of New York State Journal of the American Geographical Society of New York vol 27 1895 Summmary of the Primary Triangulation Executed by the United States Geological Survey between the Years 1882 and 1894 Sixteenth Annual Report of the Survey 1894 95 Part 1 Director s Report and Papers of a Theoretical Nature United States Geological Survey 1896 A Graphic History of the United States Journal of the American Geographical Society of New York vol 28 1896 The Topographic Work of the U S Geological Survey in 1895 Journal of the American Geographical Society of New York vol 28 no 4 January 1896 Survey and Subdivision of Indian Territory The National Geographic Magazinevol 7 no 3 March 1896 The Work of the United States Board on Geographic Names The National Geographic Magazine vol 7 no 7 July 1896 Statistics of Railways in the United States The National Geographic Magazine vol 7 no 12 December 1896 The Administration of the Forests of the Public Domain Journal of the American Geographical Society of New York vol 29 1897 Our Foreign Trade The National Geographic Magazine vol 9 no 5 January 1898 Captain Charles D Sigsbee U S N The National Geographic Magazine vol 9 no 5 May 1898 Geographic Work of the General Government The National Geographic Magazine vol 9 no 7 July 1898 The Forest Conditions and Standing Timber of the State of Washington The National Geographic Magazine vol 9 no 9 September 1898 The Timber Line Journal of the American Geographical Society of New York vol 31 January 1899 The Redwood Forest of the Pacific Coast The National Geographic Magazine vol 10 no 5 May 1899 The Harriman Alaska Expedition The National Geographic Magazine vol 10 no 12 December 1899 The Forests of the United States Twentieth Annual Report of the Survey 1898 99 Part 5 Forest Reserves United States Geological Survey 1900 Early Western Explorers and the Railroads Bulletin of the American Geographical Society vol 37 January 1905 A Revelation of the Filipinos with Joseph Prentiss Sanger and Victor H Olmsted The National Geographic Magazine vol 16 no 4 April 1905 Certain Relations of Rainfall and Temperature to Tree Growth Bulletin of the American Geographical Society vol 38 January 1906 Farm Tenure in the United States Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science vol 33 May 1 1909 Commander Peary s Expedition to the North Pole with C M Chester and O H Tittman Nature vol 83 no 2114 May 1910 References edit a b Henry Gannett s Funeral Takes Place Tomorrow Evening Star Washington D C November 7 1914 p 8 Retrieved February 25 2022 via Newspapers com a b c d e f g h i j k l m Henry Gannett is Dead Harrisburg Daily Independent Harrisburg PA November 6 1814 p 4 Retrieved February 25 2022 via Newspapers com a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q Darton N H January 1917 Memoir of Henry Gannett Annals of the Association of American Geographers 7 68 70 doi 10 1080 00045601709357056 hdl 2027 inu 30000053670869 Retrieved December 15 2014 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Evans Richard Tranter Frye Helen M 2009 History of the Topographic Branch Division PDF U S Geological Survey Circular 1341 ISBN 978 1 4113 2612 5 a b c d e f g h i j Johnson Rossiter Brown John Howard 1904 Henry Gannett The Twentieth Century Biographical Dictionary of Notable Americans Biographical Society p 70 Penry Jerry October 27 2007 The Father of Government Mapmaking Henry Gannett The American Surveyor Archived from the original on December 16 2014 Retrieved December 15 2014 a b c Colby Frank Moore Williams Talcott 1917 Henry Gannett The New International Encyclopaedia Dodd Mead a b The Henry Gannett Award U S Geological Survey Retrieved October 9 2023 a b c d e Great Geographer of Country is Dead pt 2 Harrisburg Telegraph Harrisburg PA November 16 1914 p 16 Retrieved February 25 2022 via Newspapers com a b Census gov History Agency History Notable Alumni Henry Gannett U S Census Bureau Retrieved December 15 2014 North S D N 1915 Henry Gannett President of the National Geographic Society 1910 1914 Washington D C National Geographic Society hdl 2027 mdp 39015039793479 List of members officers and committees corrected to March 16 1914 Washington D C Washington Academy of Sciences 1916 p 5 hdl 2027 wu 89100016302 Funeral for Henry Gannett The Washington Times November 8 1914 p 8 Retrieved February 25 2022 via Newspapers com a b c d e Funeral on Sunday for Henry Gannett The Washington Times November 6 1914 p 6 Retrieved February 25 2022 via Newspapers com Gannett Peak Britannica February 25 2022 Retrieved February 25 2022 Mount Gannett Alaska Guide Retrieved February 25 2022 External links edit nbsp Wikisource has original works by or about Henry Gannett nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Henry Gannett cartographer Works by or about Henry Gannett at Internet Archive Works by Henry Gannett at LibriVox public domain audiobooks nbsp Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Henry Gannett amp oldid 1190591083, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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