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Due to financial strains spurred by the ], Harold and his older brother Elbert alternated years in college so that one could work while the other was in school. Harrington completed two years of college before returning to Graettinger a a high school teacher. He would also coach the school's basketball and football teams.<ref name=Flora/> | Due to financial strains spurred by the ], Harold and his older brother Elbert alternated years in college so that one could work while the other was in school. Harrington completed two years of college before returning to Graettinger a a high school teacher. He would also coach the school's basketball and football teams.<ref name=Flora/> | ||
Harrington completed his ] in biology in 1927 at ]. At the ] | Harrington completed his ] in biology in 1927 at ]. At the ], Harrington completed his ] in 1931 and ] in 1933, both in botany.<ref name=Wilken/><ref name=CSU/> The same year of his doctorate, he married fellow botanist Edith Jirsa in ].<ref name=CSU/> | ||
==Career== | ==Career== | ||
Harold Harrington accepted a position at the ] (renamed Colorado A&M and now named Colorado State University) in ], where he taught taxonomy.<ref name=CSU/> He worked as assistant to Ernest Charles Smith, the curator of the college's ].<ref name=Flora/> Harrington then taught at the ] (now Chicago State University) before returning to Colorado A&M in 1943 to become the curator of its herbarium{{snd}} a position he would hold for 25 years{{snd}} and a professor of botany.<ref name=Wilken/><ref name=CSU/> | |||
Whereas his mentor Smith had been concerned primarily with collecting willow specimens,<ref name=Flora/> Harrington eventually contributed approximately 6,200 specimens to the CSU Herbarium. While he did not collect to describe new species, he would identify unusual examples and submit them to the relevant experts. One such collection, made in June 1951, resulted the identification of a new '']'' species, which was named for him.<ref name=CSU/><ref name=Pendland/> | |||
In 1954, Harrington's ''Manual of the Plants of Colorado'' was published after years of research.<ref name=CSU>{{cite web|url=https://www.biology.colostate.edu/cns-announcement/former-herbarium-curator-harringtons-legacy/|title=Harold Harrington's Legacy as Curator of the Colorado State University Herbarium|first=Jennifer|last=Ackerfield|date=January 28, 2022|website=biology.colostate.edu|publisher=]|access-date=December 9, 2024|archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20240624002702/https://www.biology.colostate.edu/cns-announcement/former-herbarium-curator-harringtons-legacy/|archive-date=June 24, 2024|url-status=live}}</ref> This was the first comprehensive account of the state's flora of since the 1906 ''Flora of Colorado'' by Axel Rydberg.<ref name=Wilken/> Harrington's book remains an authoritative text on Colorado's flora and one in 30 of its entries were the first time a plant was recorded in the state. In order to make the text affordable to students, the book was self-published. Edith, who aided in collecting specimens and preparing her husband's publications, hand-typed the 1954 book and called it "her small way" of helping.<ref name=Flora/> | In 1954, Harrington's ''Manual of the Plants of Colorado'' was published after years of research.<ref name=CSU>{{cite web|url=https://www.biology.colostate.edu/cns-announcement/former-herbarium-curator-harringtons-legacy/|title=Harold Harrington's Legacy as Curator of the Colorado State University Herbarium|first=Jennifer|last=Ackerfield|date=January 28, 2022|website=biology.colostate.edu|publisher=]|access-date=December 9, 2024|archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20240624002702/https://www.biology.colostate.edu/cns-announcement/former-herbarium-curator-harringtons-legacy/|archive-date=June 24, 2024|url-status=live}}</ref> This was the first comprehensive account of the state's flora of since the 1906 ''Flora of Colorado'' by Axel Rydberg.<ref name=Wilken/> Harrington's book remains an authoritative text on Colorado's flora and one in 30 of its entries were the first time a plant was recorded in the state. In order to make the text affordable to students, the book was self-published. Edith, who aided in collecting specimens and preparing her husband's publications, hand-typed the 1954 book and called it "her small way" of helping.<ref name=Flora/> | ||
Harrington ultimately published 17 books. These included collaborations with Y. Matsumura on the 1955 ''The True Aquatic Vascular Plants of Colorado'' and 1967 ''Edible Native Plants''.<ref name=CSU/><ref name=Wilken/> The Harringtons also traveled, visiting Europe in 1964 and taking photographs of various plants for educational use back on the ]. Their travels led them to visit every state in the continental U.S.<ref name=CSU/> | |||
⚫ | During trips to collect specimens with students, he would play the ] at the campfire after the day's work. He could also play the ] and ], the latter he had taught himself while in college and had played to supplement his income while in school.<ref name=Flora/> | ||
⚫ | During trips to collect specimens with students, he would play the ] at the campfire after the day's work. He could also play the ] and ], the latter of which he had taught himself to play while in college and had played to supplement his income while in school.<ref name=Flora/> Harrington was also a poet and included one of his poems in the introduction to his final book.<ref name=Flora/><ref name=Wilken/> | ||
==Later life and death== | ==Later life and death== | ||
In 1968, Harrington retired as ]. He continued writing on botany |
In 1968, Harrington retired as ]. He continued writing on botany, publishing ''Western Edible Wild Plants'' in 1972 and his final work, ''How to Identify Grasses and Grasslike Plants'', in 1977.<ref name=Wilken>{{cite journal|title=In Memoriam: Harold D. Harrington (1903-1981)|first=Dieter H.|last=Wilken|journal=]|volume=34|number=1|date=1982|page=11|jstor=2806392}}</ref> | ||
He and his wife performed a final round trip through the Colorado Rockies during the summer of 1980.<ref name=CSU/> Harold Harrington died on January 22, 1981.<ref>{{cite journal|title=Deaths|journal=]|date=August 1982|volume=31|number=3|page=613|jstor=1220711}}</ref> | He and his wife performed a final round trip through the Colorado Rockies during the summer of 1980. The same year, the couple visited a variety of Pacific islands, including ], and Australia.<ref name=CSU/> Harold Harrington died on January 22, 1981.<ref>{{cite journal|title=Deaths|journal=]|date=August 1982|volume=31|number=3|page=613|jstor=1220711}}</ref> | ||
==Legacy== | ==Legacy== | ||
Two species of flowering plants endemic to Colorado are named for Harrington: '']'' and '']''.<ref name=CSU/><ref name=Ladyman>{{cite web|url=https://www.fs.usda.gov/Internet/FSE_DOCUMENTS/stelprdb5206869.pdf|title=''Oenothera harringtonii'' Wagner, Stockhouse & Klein (Colorado Springs evening-primrose): A Technical Conservation Assessment|first=Jaunita A. R.|last=Ladyman|date=February 1, 2005|location=], ]|publisher=] ], ]|work=Species Conservation Project|pages=11–12}}</ref> In the case of ''P. harringtonii'', Harrington was credited with the first collection of the species when it was first described by C. William T. Penland in 1958. Penland pointed to a specimen Harrington collected in ], on June 7, 1951, as the first of two collections of the species that month.<ref>{{cite journal|title=Two new species of ''Penstemon'' in Colorado|first=C. William T.|last=Penland|date=January 1958|journal=]|volume=14|issue=5|page=154|jstor=41422929}}</ref> | Two species of flowering plants endemic to Colorado are named for Harrington: '']'' and '']''.<ref name=CSU/><ref name=Ladyman>{{cite web|url=https://www.fs.usda.gov/Internet/FSE_DOCUMENTS/stelprdb5206869.pdf|title=''Oenothera harringtonii'' Wagner, Stockhouse & Klein (Colorado Springs evening-primrose): A Technical Conservation Assessment|first=Jaunita A. R.|last=Ladyman|date=February 1, 2005|location=], ]|publisher=] ], ]|work=Species Conservation Project|pages=11–12}}</ref> In the case of ''P. harringtonii'', Harrington was credited with the first collection of the species when it was first described by C. William T. Penland in 1958. Penland pointed to a specimen Harrington collected in ], on June 7, 1951, as the first of two collections of the species that month.<ref name=Penland>{{cite journal|title=Two new species of ''Penstemon'' in Colorado|first=C. William T.|last=Penland|date=January 1958|journal=]|volume=14|issue=5|page=154|jstor=41422929}}</ref> | ||
In 1991, botanist ] identified Harrington as part of a tradition of botanists collecting specimens in the Colorado Rockies from ] and ] on ] through to ] that saw the region's close as a "botanical frontier".<ref>{{cite journal|title=Botanical Explorations in the American West-1889-1989: An Essay on the Last Century of a Floristic Frontier|first=James L.|last=Reveal|author-link=James L. Reveal|work=]|volume=78|number=1|page=71|doi=10.2307/2399591|jstor=2399591}}</ref> | Harrington's coworker Dieter H. Wilken wrote an obituary for Harrington in 1982, recalling his "kindness, sensitivity", and regular visits to the CSU to discuss unexplored and undocumented aspects of Colorado's flora.<ref name=Wilken/> In 1991, botanist ] identified Harrington as part of a tradition of botanists collecting specimens in the Colorado Rockies from ] and ] on ] through to ] that saw the region's close as a "botanical frontier".<ref>{{cite journal|title=Botanical Explorations in the American West-1889-1989: An Essay on the Last Century of a Floristic Frontier|first=James L.|last=Reveal|author-link=James L. Reveal|work=]|volume=78|number=1|page=71|doi=10.2307/2399591|jstor=2399591}}</ref> | ||
==Selected bibliography== | |||
==References== | ==References== | ||
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Category:1903 births | Category:1903 births | ||
Category:1981 deaths | Category:1981 deaths | ||
Category: |
Category:20th-century American botanists | ||
Category:American botanical writers | |||
Category:Colorado State University faculty | Category:Colorado State University faculty | ||
Category:Chicago State University faculty | |||
Category:People from Palo Alto County, Iowa | |||
Category:Poets from Colorado | |||
Category:Writers from Fort Collins, Colorado |
Revision as of 21:21, 26 December 2024
American botanist (1903 - 1981)Harold David Harrington | |
---|---|
Born | March 14, 1903 Graettinger, Iowa |
Died | January 22, 1981(1981-01-22) (aged 77) |
Nationality | American |
Alma mater | Iowa State Teachers College (B.A.) University of Northern Iowa (M.S., Ph.D.) |
Spouse | Edith Jirsa |
Scientific career | |
Fields | Botany |
Institutions | Colorado State University |
Author abbrev. (botany) | H.D.Harr. |
Harold David Harrington (1903 - 1981) was an American botanist who specialized in flora of Colorado and the Rocky Mountains. He worked on the faculty of Colorado State University (CSU) and collected over 10,000 botanical specimens from across the state. His 1954 book, Manual of the Plants of Colorado, the first comprehensive coverage of Colorado's flora in nearly 50 years that remains an authoritative work. With his wife and fellow botanist Edith, he traveled around the United States, Europe, and Pacific, bringing back photographs for use in teaching. He published 17 books while at CSU, where the majority of his collection of specimen's are kept as part of the university's herbarium that he had previously curated.
He is the namesake of two species of flowering plants endemic to Colorado: Oenothera harringtonii and Penstemon harringtonii. In the case of P. harringtonii, Harrington was credited with the first collection of the species when it was first described.
Early life and education
Harold David Harrington was born on March 14, 1903 in De Motte, Indiana. He moved with his family from De Motte to Mitchell, South Dakota, in 1909 and then to Graettinger, Iowa, in 1911. Harrington would remain in Graettinger for most of his childhood, growing up on a farm there with seven siblings.
Due to financial strains spurred by the Great Depression, Harold and his older brother Elbert alternated years in college so that one could work while the other was in school. Harrington completed two years of college before returning to Graettinger a a high school teacher. He would also coach the school's basketball and football teams.
Harrington completed his B.A. in biology in 1927 at Iowa State Teachers College. At the University of Northern Iowa, Harrington completed his M.S. in 1931 and Ph.D. in 1933, both in botany. The same year of his doctorate, he married fellow botanist Edith Jirsa in Waterloo, Iowa.
Career
Harold Harrington accepted a position at the Colorado Agricultural College (renamed Colorado A&M and now named Colorado State University) in Fort Collins, Colorado, where he taught taxonomy. He worked as assistant to Ernest Charles Smith, the curator of the college's herbarium. Harrington then taught at the Chicago Teachers College (now Chicago State University) before returning to Colorado A&M in 1943 to become the curator of its herbarium – a position he would hold for 25 years – and a professor of botany.
Whereas his mentor Smith had been concerned primarily with collecting willow specimens, Harrington eventually contributed approximately 6,200 specimens to the CSU Herbarium. While he did not collect to describe new species, he would identify unusual examples and submit them to the relevant experts. One such collection, made in June 1951, resulted the identification of a new Penstemon species, which was named for him.
In 1954, Harrington's Manual of the Plants of Colorado was published after years of research. This was the first comprehensive account of the state's flora of since the 1906 Flora of Colorado by Axel Rydberg. Harrington's book remains an authoritative text on Colorado's flora and one in 30 of its entries were the first time a plant was recorded in the state. In order to make the text affordable to students, the book was self-published. Edith, who aided in collecting specimens and preparing her husband's publications, hand-typed the 1954 book and called it "her small way" of helping.
Harrington ultimately published 17 books. These included collaborations with Y. Matsumura on the 1955 The True Aquatic Vascular Plants of Colorado and 1967 Edible Native Plants. The Harringtons also traveled, visiting Europe in 1964 and taking photographs of various plants for educational use back on the Front Range. Their travels led them to visit every state in the continental U.S.
During trips to collect specimens with students, he would play the ukulele at the campfire after the day's work. He could also play the Spanish guitar and violin, the latter of which he had taught himself to play while in college and had played to supplement his income while in school. Harrington was also a poet and included one of his poems in the introduction to his final book.
Later life and death
In 1968, Harrington retired as professor emeritus. He continued writing on botany, publishing Western Edible Wild Plants in 1972 and his final work, How to Identify Grasses and Grasslike Plants, in 1977.
He and his wife performed a final round trip through the Colorado Rockies during the summer of 1980. The same year, the couple visited a variety of Pacific islands, including Hawai'i, and Australia. Harold Harrington died on January 22, 1981.
Legacy
Two species of flowering plants endemic to Colorado are named for Harrington: Oenothera harringtonii and Penstemon harringtonii. In the case of P. harringtonii, Harrington was credited with the first collection of the species when it was first described by C. William T. Penland in 1958. Penland pointed to a specimen Harrington collected in Routt County, Colorado, on June 7, 1951, as the first of two collections of the species that month.
Harrington's coworker Dieter H. Wilken wrote an obituary for Harrington in 1982, recalling his "kindness, sensitivity", and regular visits to the CSU to discuss unexplored and undocumented aspects of Colorado's flora. In 1991, botanist James L. Reveal identified Harrington as part of a tradition of botanists collecting specimens in the Colorado Rockies from Thomas Say and Edwin James on Long's Expedition of 1820 through to William Alfred Weber that saw the region's close as a "botanical frontier".
References
- ^ Ackerfield, Jennifer (2015). Flora of Colorado (1st ed.). BRIT Press. p. 4–5. ISBN 9781889878898.
- ^ Wilken, Dieter H. (1982). "In Memoriam: Harold D. Harrington (1903-1981)". Brittonia. 34 (1): 11. JSTOR 2806392.
- ^ Ackerfield, Jennifer (January 28, 2022). "Harold Harrington's Legacy as Curator of the Colorado State University Herbarium". biology.colostate.edu. Colorado State University. Archived from the original on June 24, 2024. Retrieved December 9, 2024.
- Cite error: The named reference
Pendland
was invoked but never defined (see the help page). - "Deaths". Taxon. 31 (3): 613. August 1982. JSTOR 1220711.
- Ladyman, Jaunita A. R. (February 1, 2005). "Oenothera harringtonii Wagner, Stockhouse & Klein (Colorado Springs evening-primrose): A Technical Conservation Assessment" (PDF). Species Conservation Project. Centennial, CO: United States Department of Agriculture Forest Service, Center for Plant Conservation. pp. 11–12.
- Penland, C. William T. (January 1958). "Two new species of Penstemon in Colorado". Madroño. 14 (5): 154. JSTOR 41422929.
- Reveal, James L. "Botanical Explorations in the American West-1889-1989: An Essay on the Last Century of a Floristic Frontier". Annals of the Missouri Botanical Garden. 78 (1): 71. doi:10.2307/2399591. JSTOR 2399591.
Category:1903 births Category:1981 deaths Category:20th-century American botanists Category:American botanical writers Category:Colorado State University faculty Category:Chicago State University faculty Category:People from Palo Alto County, Iowa Category:Poets from Colorado Category:Writers from Fort Collins, Colorado