Charles Conrad Abbott

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Charles Conrad Abbott
Charles Conrad Abbott as depicted in Popular Science Monthly
BornJune 4, 1843 Edit this on Wikidata
Trenton Edit this on Wikidata
DiedJuly 27, 1919 Edit this on Wikidata (aged 76)
Bristol Edit this on Wikidata
Alma mater
OccupationArchaeologist, naturalist, writer Edit this on Wikidata
Employer
Parent(s)
  • Timothy Abbott Edit this on Wikidata

Charles Conrad Abbott (June 4, 1843 – July 27, 1919) was an American archaeologist and naturalist.

Biography

He was born at Trenton, New Jersey, and studied medicine at the University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine.[1] During the American Civil War, he served as a surgeon in the Union Army. He received his M.D. degree from UPenn in 1865.

In 1876, he announced the discovery, later confirmed by other archaeologists, of traces of human presence in the Delaware River Valley dating from the first or "Kansan" ice age, and inferentially from the pre-glacial period when humans are believed to have entered upon the North American continent.[2] However, today the consensus of archaeologists is that most of Abbott's "Trenton Gravel Implements" date from the Middle Woodland period of about A.D. 300–900.[3] From 1876 to 1889, he was assistant curator of the Peabody Museum in Cambridge, Massachusetts, to which he presented a collection of 20,000 archaeological specimens; he freely gave also to other archaeological collections. From 1890 to 1894 he served as the first curator of the University of Pennsylvania's newly organized Department of American Archaeology.

He was a corresponding member of the Boston Society of Natural History, a member of the American Philosophical Society of Philadelphia, and a fellow of the Royal Society of Antiquaries of the North in Copenhagen. In 1919 he died at the age of 76 years in Bristol, Pennsylvania, where he had moved after the burning of his New Jersey home a few years before.

Writings

His book Primitive Industry: Illustrations of the Hand-work in Stone, Bone, and Clay of the Native Races of the Northern Atlantic Seaboard of America (Salem, 1881) detailed the evidences of the presence of pre-glacial man in the Delaware Valley, and is a valuable contribution to American archaeology. He was well known as a frequent contributor to the American Naturalist, Science, Nature, Science News, and Popular Science Monthly. He also published many books on outdoor observation, such as A Naturalist's Rambles about Home (1884).

Bibliography

  • Catalogue of Vertebrate Animals of New Jersey (1868 - in Geology of New Jersey, ed. George H. Cook)
  • The Stone Age in New Jersey (1876)
  • Primitive Industry: or Illustrations of the Handiwork, in Stone, Bone and Clay, of the Native Races of the Northern Atlantic Seaboard of America (1881)
  • The Paleolithic Implements of the Valley of the Delaware (1881)
  • Upland and Meadow (1886)
  • Waste Land Wanderings (1887)
  • Outings at Odd Times (1890)
  • Recent Archaeological Explorations in the Valley of the Delaware (1892)
  • A Naturalists' Rambles About Home (1894 - 2nd Edition)
  • The Birds About Us (1894)
  • Travels in a Tree-Top (1894)
  • A Colonial Wooing (1895)
  • Notes of the Night And Other Outdoor Sketches (1896)
  • The Freedom of the Fields (1898)
  • Clear Skies and Cloudy (1899)
  • In Nature's Realm (1900)
  • Bird-Land Echoes (1904)
  • Rambles of an Idler (1906)
  • Archæologia Nova Cæsarea (1907–09)
  • Ten Years' Diggings in Lenape Land (1901–11)

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Leonard, John William; Marquis, Albert Nelson, eds. (1908), Who's who in America, vol. 5, Chicago: Marquis Who's Who, Incorporated, p. 3.
  2. ^ Charles C. Mann. 1491: New Revelations of the Americas Before Columbus. Knopf (2005) ISBN 1-4000-3205-9. pp 160–163.
  3. ^ Herbert C. Kraft. The Lenape. NJ Historical Society (1986) ISBN 9780911020144. p 28.

References