Francis Harper (biologist)

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Francis Harper
BornNovember 17, 1886
DiedNovember 17, 1972 (Aged 86)
CitizenshipUnited States
Alma materCornell University
Scientific career
Author abbrev. (botany)F. Harper
Notes
The botanist
Roland McMillan Harper
is Francis' brother.

Francis Harper (17 November 1886 – 17 November 1972) was an American

Roystonea elata.[3][4]

Biography

Harper received an A.B. in 1914 and a Ph.D. in 1925[5] from Cornell University. He taught briefly at Swarthmore College, but beyond that he worked for museums, government agencies and research agencies.[6]

In 1914 Harper made his first trip to northern Canada on an expedition to Lake Athabasca[7] working as a zoologist for the Geological Survey of Canada.[1]

Between 1917 and 1919 Harper served as a rodent control officer in France[1] with the United States Army's 79th Division.[6] He returned to Athabasca in 1920,[6] Nueltin Lake in the southern District of Keewatin (Keewatin / Kivalliq) in 1947 and the Ungava Peninsula in 1953, his last trip north.[7] Harper published notable works on the caribou of Keewatin, the birds of the Ungava Peninsula, and the Innu (Montagnais) of the Ungava.[6][8]

Research

From 1917 through the 1950s Harper spent significant time researching the work of the early North American naturalists John Bartram and his son William Bartram. Harper traced the Bartrams' travels in the American South and helped revive both scientific and popular interest in the Bartrams' work,[9] while keeping notebooks on his fieldworks as early as in 1912.[10] Harper's research into the Bartrams was funded by grants from the John Bartram Association in Philadelphia, the American Philosophical Society, and the Guggenheim Foundation among others.

Extensive publications on both of the Bartrams included annotated editions of John Bartram's "Diary of a Journey through the Carolinas, Georgia, and Florida 1765-1766"; William Bartram's "Report to Dr. John Fothergill 1773-1774" and an annotated The Travels of William Bartram: Naturalist’s Edition first published in Philadelphia in 1791.[11]

Harper published on the mammals[12] and folklore[7] of the Okefenokee Swamp, including recordings of the local music. He also published on the "extinct and vanishing" mammals of the old world.[6] His papers are held in the Kenneth Spencer Research Library at the University of Kansas.[6]

Publications

Harper authored about 135 publications[12] including:

Bibliography

  • n.s. (December 1942). Transactions of the American Philosophical Society, part 1. Vol. 33. pp. 1–122.
  • Manville, Richard H (1959). "Book Review: John and William Bartram's America by Helen Gere Cruickshank; by Francis Harper". Journal of Mammalogy. 40 (2): 259–260. .

Footnotes

Notes

  1. ^ Reprinted from "The Auk," vol. LIII, October 1936.
  2. ^ Reprinted from the "Bulletin of the Garden Club of America", September, 1939.
  3. ^ Reprinted from the American Midland Naturalist, v. 23, no. 3, May, 1940.
  4. ^ Reprinted from the "Proceedings of the Rochester Academy of Science" 8: pp.208–221, September 10, 1942.
  5. ^ Bound in one volume with extra title page. See also the bibliographical note in Brothers of the spade: Correspondence of Peter Collinson, of London, and of John Curtis, of Williamsberg, Virginia, 1734–1746 by Swem, E.G., in "Proceedings of American Antiquarian Society", volume 58, part 1. (Apr. 1948)[13] on this work.
  6. ^ Originally published by Yale University Press: in 1958.

References

Further reading

External links