Albert John Cook

Albert John Cook (born in Owosso, Michigan on August 30, 1842; died in Owosso on September 29, 1916) was an entomologist and zoologist.

Albert John Cook.

He spent much of his life in Michigan and graduated from the State Agricultural College, present-day Michigan State University, in 1862. In 1867 he established the Collection of Insects at the College.[1] As an instructor at State Agricultural College, he was extensively involved in beekeeping, where he lectured on apiculture and published a pamphlet called The Manual of the Apiary in 1876, which was eventually expanded into a textbook and went through at least seventeen editions.

He also spent many years in California as he taught at Pomona College from 1894 to 1911 and after this headed California's Commission of Horticulture.

He died in his childhood home in 1916.[2]

Bibliography

  • Manual of the apiary. Chicago: Newman & Son (1880).
  • Wintering bees. Lansing: Agricultural College of Michigan (1885).
  • Report of apicultural experiments in 1891. (1892).
  • The Bee-Keeper's Guide; or Manual of the Apiary. (17th ed.) Chicago: Newman & Son (1902).
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gollark: It might be?
gollark: Hmm, that actually makes no sense as the frame format knows it.
gollark: So it doesn't stop at the end of the zstandarduous data.
gollark: Ah. I have worked out the problem. The zstandard decoder just keeps advancing the stream until, for some bizarre reason, it goes quite a lot of the way through the file.

References

  1. Michigan State University
  2. Crawford, David L. (1916). "Albert John Cook, DSC". Journal of Entomology and Zoology. Pomona College Dept. of Zoology. 8 (4): 169–170.


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