Albert B. Ulrey

Albert Brennus Ulrey was a marine biologist, born in North Manchester, Indiana, December 31, 1860[1] and died 21 December 1932 in Los Angeles, California.[2]

Personal life

Ulrey married Florence Katherine Speicher (1883-1966) on 15 November 1900.[2]

Career

He was the first biology instructor at Manchester University in Indiana, joining the faculty in 1894.[3] Later, in the early 20th Century, in 1901 Albert Ulrey became the first director of the Venice Marine Biological Station of the University of Southern California.[4] He published a marine biology article in 1918 as Director of the Venice Marine Biological Station of the University of Southern California (USC) in the Bulletin of the Southern California Academy of Science that was entitled: The Starfishes of Southern California.

Fish named for him

The Hyphessobrycon ulreyi is named after him.[5]

Publications

gollark: Oh, this must be Sparkfun.
gollark: It's off by ONE SECOND per DAY!
gollark: I would really like one for my watch because its quartz-or-whatever oscillator keeps time terribly.
gollark: You can get chip-scale atomic clocks now apparently.
gollark: RTL-SDRs are cool and obviously an important\* and useful\*\* thing for calculators.

References

  1. Proceedings of the Indiana Academy of Science, Volumes 83-84 (1974) By Indiana Academy of Science, 335.
  2. Albert B. Ulrey, Ancestry.com.
  3. A. B. Ulrey, First Biology Instructor Manchester College,” Manchester College Archives and Brethren Historical Collection.
  4. USC Wrigley Institute Archived 2010-05-18 at the Wayback Machine.
  5. Dr. Herbert R. Axelrod and Dr. Leonard P. Schultz, Handbook of Tropical Aquarium Fishes (Neptune City: T.F.H. Publications, Inc., 1983), 226.
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