(Redirected from Alexander Agassiz)
Alexander Agassiz
'Alexander Emanuel Agassiz' (
December 17,
1835 –
March 27,
1910), son of
Louis Agassiz and
Elizabeth Cabot Agassiz, was an
American scientist and engineer.
He was born in
Neuchâtel,
Switzerland and emigrated to the
United States with his father in
1849. He graduated at
Harvard University in
1855, subsequently studying
engineering and
chemistry, and taking the degree of
bachelor of science at the
Lawrence scientific school of the same institution in
1857; and in
1859 became an assistant in the
United States Coast Survey.
Thenceforward he became a specialist in marine
ichthyology, but devoted much time to the investigation, superintendence and exploitation of
mines.
E. J. Hulbert, a friend of Agassiz's brother-in-law,
Quincy Adams Shaw, had discovered a rich copper lode known as the
Calumet conglomerate on the
Keweenaw Peninsula Lake Superior in
Michigan. He persuaded them, along with a group of friends, to purchase a controlling interest in the mines, which later became known as the
Calumet and Hecla Mining Company based in
Calumet, Michigan. Up until the summer of
1866, Agassiz worked as an assistant in the museum of natural history that his father founded at Harvard. That summer, he took a trip to see the mines for himself and he afterwards became treasurer of the enterprise.
Over the winter of 1866 and early
1867, mining operations began to falter due to the difficulty of extracting copper from the conglomerate. Hulbert had sold his interests in the mines and had moved on to other ventures. But Agassiz refused to give up hope for the mines, and he returned to the mines in March of 1867 with his wife and young son. At that time, Calumet was a remote settlement, virtually inaccessible during the winter and very far removed from civilization even during the summer. With insufficient supplies at the mines, Agassiz struggled to maintain order, while back in Boston, Shaw was saddled with debt and the collapse of their interests. Shaw obtained financial assistance from John Simpkins, the selling agent for the enterprise to continue operations.
Agassiz continued to live at Calumet, making gradual progress in stablizing the mining operations, such that he was able to leave the mines under the control of a general manager and return to Boston in
1868 before winter closed navigation.
The mines continued to prosper and in May,
1871, several mines were consolidated to form the
Calumet and Hecla Mining Company with Shaw as its first president. In August, 1871, Shaw "retired" to the board of directors and Agassiz became president, a position he held until his death.
Agassiz was a major factor in the mine's continued success and visited the mines twice a year. He innovated by installing a giant engine, known as the Superior, which was able to lift 24 tons of rock from a depth of 4,000 feet. He also built a railroad and dredged a channel to navigable waters. However, after a time the mines did not require his full-time year-round attention and he returned to his interests in natural history at Harvard.
Out of his copper fortune, he gave some $500,000 to Harvard for the museum of comparative
zoology and other purposes.
In
1875 he surveyed
Lake Titicaca,
Peru, examined the
copper mines of Peru and
Chile, and made a collection of Peruvian antiquities for the
Museum of Comparative Zoology, of which he was
curator from
1874 to
1885. He assisted
Charles Wyville Thomson in the examination and classification of the collections of the ''
Challenger'' exploring expedition, and wrote the ''Review of the Echini'' (2 vols., 1872–1874) in the reports.
Between
1877 and
1880 he took part in the three
dredging expeditions of the steamer ''Blake'' of the Coast Survey, and presented a full account of them in two volumes (
1888).
Of his other writings on marine zoology, most are contained in the bulletins and memoirs of the museum of comparative zoology; but he published in
1865 (with
Elizabeth Cary Agassiz, his step-mother) ''Seaside Studies in Natural History'', a work at once exact and stimulating, and in
1871 ''Marine Animals of
Massachusetts Bay''.
He served as a president of the
National Academy of Sciences, which since 1913 has awarded the
Alexander Agassiz Medal in his memory.
He died in
1910 onboard the
SS ''Adriatic''.
See also
★
Agassiz family
Works
★ (with
Elizabeth Cary Agassiz) ''Seaside Studies in Natural History'' (
1865)
★ ''North American Acalephs'', (1865)
★ ''
Marine Animals of Massachusetts Bay'' (
1817)
★ ''Revision of the Echini'' (2 vols.,
1872–
1874)
★ ''North American Starfishes'', (
1877)
★ ''Report on the Echini of the Challenger Expedition'', (
1881)
★ ''Explorations of Lake Titicaca''
★ ''List of the Echinoderms''
★ ''Three Cruises of the ''Blake (
1888)
★ ''Pacific Coral Reefs''
★ ''Coral Reefs of the Maldives''
★ ''Panamic Deep Sea Echini''
Further reading
★