Item 0012 - Letter, 18 November 1878

Open original Digital object

Title and statement of responsibility area

Title proper

Letter, 18 November 1878

General material designation

    Parallel title

    Other title information

    Title statements of responsibility

    Title notes

    • Source of title proper: Title based on content.

    Level of description

    Item

    Reference code

    CA MUA MG 1022-2-1-131-0012

    Edition area

    Edition statement

    Edition statement of responsibility

    Class of material specific details area

    Statement of scale (cartographic)

    Statement of projection (cartographic)

    Statement of coordinates (cartographic)

    Statement of scale (architectural)

    Issuing jurisdiction and denomination (philatelic)

    Dates of creation area

    Date(s)

    • 18 November 1878 (Creation)
      Creator
      Lesquereux, Leo, 1806-1889
      Place
      Columbus (Ohio)

    Physical description area

    Physical description

    Publisher's series area

    Title proper of publisher's series

    Parallel titles of publisher's series

    Other title information of publisher's series

    Statement of responsibility relating to publisher's series

    Numbering within publisher's series

    Note on publisher's series

    Archival description area

    Name of creator

    (1806-1889)

    Biographical history

    Léo Lesquereux, a palaeobotanist, grew up in Fleurier, a small Swiss town where his father was one of a Huguenot community of watchmakers. Young Leo loved roaming the cliffs and bogs of the region. At age seven, one of his explorations ended in a fall from a precipice; he survived but spent two weeks in a coma. He nevertheless persisted in his interest in bogs and devised a sort of augur to investigate their stratification that led to an understanding of the causes of peat formation and eventually to its relationship to the geology of coal.
    He went to the University of Neuchatel where his theory met with skepticism but where he benefitted from the teaching of Louis Agassiz. He was appointed to chair at La Chaux de Fonds when tragedy struck: a Parisian doctor bungled treatment of an ear infection, leaving Lesguereux stone deaf for life and unemployed. He fell back on the family métier of watch-engraving but soon became despondent. His wife, the daughter of a Prussian general, not only nursed him but taught herself watch-engraving to support the family. After his recovery, he taught himself to lip-read in French, English and German so well that people often did not realize he was deaf.
    His fortunes turned when the king of Prussia commissioned him to report on the peat bogs of the kingdom. He also examined bogs in the United States and Canada, and decided to follow his former teacher Agassiz to North America. He and his family moved to Columbus, Ohio, in 1848 where he began a watch business with his sons. Though poor at first, he was soon doing well enough to devote his energies to science. He became recognized as a pioneer of palaeobotany, contributing 12 important works. He was elected a member of the American Philosophical Society in 1861 and of the National Academy of Sciences in 1864. At his death in 1883 at the age of 83, J. P. Lesley wrote his obituary for the Proceedings of the American Philosophical Society.

    Custodial history

    Scope and content

    Letter from L. Lesguereux to John William Dawson, written from Columbus.

    Notes area

    Physical condition

    Immediate source of acquisition

    Arrangement

    Language of material

      Script of material

        Location of originals

        Availability of other formats

        Restrictions on access

        Terms governing use, reproduction, and publication

        Finding aids

        Associated materials

        Related materials

        Accruals

        Alternative identifier(s)

        Standard number

        Standard number

        Access points

        Subject access points

        Place access points

        Name access points

        Genre access points

        Control area

        Description record identifier

        Institution identifier

        Rules or conventions

        Status

        Level of detail

        Dates of creation, revision and deletion

        Language of description

          Script of description

            Sources

            Digital object (External URI) rights area

            Digital object (Reference) rights area

            Digital object (Thumbnail) rights area

            Accession area