Frederick Samuel Dellenbaugh
Frederick Samuel Dellenbaugh (September 13, 1853 – January 29, 1935) was an American explorer.
Biography
[edit]He was born in McConnelsville, Ohio on September 13, 1853,[1] and was educated in the United States and in Europe. An explorer of the American West at an early age, he was a member of an expedition that discovered the last unknown river in the United States, the Escalante River and the previously undiscovered Henry Mountains.[2]
From 1871 to 1873, he was artist and assistant topographer with Major Powell's second expedition down the Colorado River. He joined the 1899 Harriman Alaska Expedition financed by railroad magnate E. H. Harriman. He served as librarian of the American Geographical Society (1909–1911), and became a fellow of the American Ethnological Society. He helped to found the Explorers Club in 1904.
Dellenbaugh died of pneumonia on January 29, 1935, and was buried in the Otis family plot in Ellenville, New York.[1]
Dellenbaugh is the namesake of Dellenbaugh Butte, in Utah.[3]
Publications
[edit]- The North Americans of Yesterday (1900)
- The Romance of the Colorado River (1902; third edition, 1909)
- Breaking the Wilderness (1905)
- In the Amazon Jungle (1908); by Algot Lange (Introduction by Dellenbaugh)
- A Canyon Voyage (1908; second edition, 1926)
- Frémont and '49 (1913; second edition, 1914)
- George Armstrong Custer (1917)
References
[edit]- ^ a b Anderson, Martin J. (1987). "ARTIST IN THE WILDERNESS: Frederick Dellenbaugh's Grand Canyon Adventure". The Journal of Arizona History. 28 (1): 66. ISSN 0021-9053. JSTOR 41859358.
- ^ "America's Outback: Southern Utah". The New York Times. 12 April 2009. Retrieved 24 October 2010.
- ^ Leigh, Rufus Wood (1961). Five hundred Utah place names: their origin and significance. Salt Lake City: Deseret News Press. p. 18.
Further reading
[edit]- Maurer, Richard, The Wild Colorado The True Adventures of Fred Dellenbaugh, Age 17, on the Second Powell Expedition into the Grand Canyon. Crown Publishers, New York, NY. 1999
External links
[edit]- Works by Frederick Samuel Dellenbaugh at Project Gutenberg
- Works by or about Frederick Samuel Dellenbaugh at the Internet Archive
- "America’s Outback: Southern Utah", NY Times 2009 at the Wayback Machine (archived April 26, 2009)
- Papers of Frederick Samuel Dellenbaugh, 1867-1937, AZ 407 at University of Arizona Libraries Special Collections, University of Arizona
- Frederick Samuel Dellenbaugh note and photograph, MSS SC 1664 at L. Tom Perry Special Collections, Harold B. Lee Library, Brigham Young University