Benjamin Lincoln Robinson
Benjamin Lincoln Robinson | |
---|---|
Born | November 8, 1864 (1864-11-08) Bloomington, Illinois |
Died | July 27, 1935 (1935-07-28) (aged 70) Jaffrey, New Hampshire |
Citizenship | American |
Alma mater | Harvard University University of Strasbourg |
Scientific career | |
Fields | Botany |
Institutions | Gray Herbarium |
Doctoral advisor | Hermann zu Solms-Laubach |
Author abbrev. (botany) | B.L.Rob. |
Benjamin Lincoln Robinson (November 8, 1864 – July 27, 1935) was an American botanist.
Biography
Robinson was born on November 8, 1864, in Bloomington, Illinois. In 1887, he received an A.B. from Harvard. He married Margaret Louise Casson on June 29, 1887, and couple traveled to Europe. He studied plant anatomy with H. Solms-Laubach and completed his Dr.phil. at University of Strasbourg in 1889. They returned to the United States in the fall of 1890. Most of his career was Gray Herbarium curator and he died at his summer home in Jaffrey, New Hampshire on July 27, 1935.[1]
Career
In 1891, Robinson became an assistant to Sereno Watson, the curator of Gray Herbarium at Harvard University. Upon Watson's death in 1892, Robinson was appointed to the curator position. In 1899, Robinson became the first Asa Gray Professor of Systematic Botany. He was the editor of the New England Botanical Club's journal Rhodora from 1899 to 1928.[1] While at the Gray Herbarium, he began a long association with fellow botanist Jesse More Greenman.[2]
Awards
- 1929—Centennial Gold medal of the Massachusetts Horticultural Society[3]
Family
Benjamin Lincoln Robinson was a brother of James Harvey Robinson (1868–1936), a historian, scholar, and educator.
References
- ^ a b Fernald, Merritt Lyndon (1873–1950) (1936). "Biographical Memoir of Benjamin Lincoln Robinson, 1864–1935" (PDF). Biographical Memoirs of the National Academy of Sciences. 17, 13th Memoir: 305–330. Retrieved February 15, 2014. Presented to the Academy at the Annual Meeting, 1936
{{cite journal}}
: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link) CS1 maint: postscript (link) LCCN 39-30911; LCCN 39-31384; ISSN 0077-2933; OCLC 560113405 (all editions). - ^ "Greenman, Jesse More (1867-1951)". JSTOR. Retrieved November 28, 2014.
- ^ 1930 Yearbook of the Massachusetts Horticultural Society. 1930. p. 37.
- ^ International Plant Names Index. B.L.Rob.
External links
- Works by or about Benjamin Lincoln Robinson at Internet Archive
- v
- t
- e
- William Trelease (1894)
- Charles Edwin Bessey (1895)
- John Merle Coulter (1896)
- Nathaniel Lord Britton (1897)
- Lucien Marcus Underwood (1898)
- Benjamin Lincoln Robinson (1899)
- Byron Halsted (1900)
- Joseph Charles Arthur (1901)
- Beverly Thomas Galloway (1902)
- Charles Reid Barnes (1903)
- Robert Almer Harper (1904)
- William Ashbrook Kellerman (1905)
- Franklin Sumner Earle (1906)
- George Francis Atkinson (1907)
- William Francis Ganong (1908)
- Roland Thaxter (1909)
- Erwin Frink Smith (1910)
- William Gilson Farlow (1911)
- Lewis Ralph Jones (1912)
- Douglas Houghton Campbell (1913)
- A. S. Hitchcock (1914)
- John Merle Coulter (1915)
- Robert Almer Harper (1916)
- Frederick Charles Newcombe (1917)
- William Trelease (1918)
- Joseph Charles Arthur (1919)
- Nathaniel Lord Britton (1920)
- Charles Elmer Allen (1921)
- Henry Chandler Cowles (1922)
- Benjamin Minge Duggar (1923)
- William Chambers Coker (1924)
- Jacob R. Schramm (1925)
- Liberty Hyde Bailey (1926)
- Harley Harris Bartlett (1927)
- Arthur Henry Reginald Buller (1928)
- Margaret Clay Ferguson (1929)
- Lester W. Sharp (1930)
- Charles Joseph Chamberlain (1931)
- George James Peirce (1932)
- Ezra Jacob Kraus (1933)
- E. D. Merrill (1934)
- Aven Nelson (1935)
- C. Stuart Gager (1936)
- Edmund Ware Sinnott (1937)
- Arthur Johnson Eames (1938)
- Karl McKay Wiegand (1939)
- Edgar Nelson Transeau (1940)
- John Theodore Buchholz (1941)
- Merritt Lyndon Fernald (1942)
- William Jacob Robbins (1943)
- Gilbert Morgan Smith (1944)
- Irving Widmer Bailey (1945)
- Neil Everett Stevens (1946)
- Ralph Erskine Cleland (1947)
- Henry Allan Gleason (1948)
- Ivey Foreman Lewis (1949)
- Albert Francis Blakeslee (1950)
- Katherine Esau (1951)
- Edgar Anderson (1952)
- Ralph H. Wetmore (1953)
- Adriance S. Foster (1954)
- Oswald Tippo (1955)
- Harriet Creighton (1956)
- George Sherman Avery, Jr. (1957)
- Frits Warmolt Went (1958)
- William Campbell Steere (1959)
- Kenneth V. Thimann (1960)
- Vernon Cheadle (1961)
- G. Ledyard Stebbins (1962)
- Constantine John Alexopoulos (1963)
- Paul J. Kramer (1964)
- Aaron John Sharp (1965)
- Harold Charles Bold (1966)
- Ralph Emerson (1967)
- Arthur Galston (1968)
- Harlan Parker Banks (1969)
- Lincoln Constance (1970)
- Richard C. Starr (1971)
- Charles Heimsch (1972)
- Arthur Cronquist (1973)
- Theodore Delevoryas (1974)
- Peter H. Raven (1975)
- Barbara Frances Palser (1976)
- Warren H. Wagner (1977)
- William August Jensen ( 1978)
- Herbert George Baker (1979)
- Charles Bixler Heiser (1980)
- Patricia Kern Holmgren (1981)
- Ernest M. Gifford, Jr. (1982)
- Barbara D. Webster (1983)
- Mildred Esther Mathias (1984)
- William Louis Stern (1985–86)
- Ray Franklin Evert (1986–87)
- Shirley Cotter Tucker (1987–88)
- W. Hardy Eshbaugh (1988–89)
- David Leonard Dilcher (1989–90)
- Beryl B. Simpson (1990–91)
- William Louis Culberson (1991–92)
- Gregory Joseph Anderson (1992–93)
- Grady Webster (1993–94)
- Harry T. Horner (1994–95)
- Barbara A. Schaal (1995–96)
- Daniel Crawford (1996–97)
- Nancy Dengler (1997–98)
- Carol C. Baskin (1998–99)
- Douglas E. Soltis (1999–2000)
- Patricia G. Gensel (2000–1)
- Judy Jernstedt (2001–2)
- Scott D. Russell (2002–3)
- Linda E. Graham (2003–4)
- Allison A. Snow (2004–5)
- Edward L. Schneider (2005–6)
- Christopher H. Haufler (2006–7)
- Pamela S. Soltis (2007–8)
- Karl J. Niklas (2008–9)
- Kent Holsinger (2009–10)
- Judith Skog (2010–11)
- Stephen G. Weller (2011–12)
- Elizabeth Kellogg (2012–13)
- Pamela Diggle (2013–14)
- Tom Ranker (2014–15)
- Richard Olmstead (2015–16)
- Gordon Uno (2016–17)
- Loren Rieseberg (2017–18)
- Andrea Wolfe (2018–19)
- Linda Watson (2019–20)
- Cynthia S. Jones (2020–21)
- Michael Donoghue (2021-22)
- Vivian Negron-Ortiz (2022-23)
This article about an American botanist is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |
- v
- t
- e