George Ord
George Ord (March 4, 1781 – January 24, 1866) was an American zoologist who specialized in North American ornithology and mammology.[1][2] Based in part on specimens collected by Lewis and Clark in the North American interior, Ord's article "Zoology of North America" (1815), which was published in the second American edition of William Guthrie's Geographical, Historical, and Commercial Grammar (Johnson and Warner),[3] has been recognized as the "first systematic zoology of America by an American".[4]
George Ord | |
---|---|
Born | |
Died | January 24, 1866 84) Philadelphia, Pennsylvania | (aged
Resting place | Gloria Dei Church cemetery |
Nationality | American |
Scientific career | |
Fields | naturalist, ornithologist |
Influences | Alexander Wilson |
Ord (1815) published the first scientific descriptions of Pronghorn antelope (Antilocapra americana), Grizzly bear (Ursus arctos horribilis), Meadow vole (Microtus pennsylvanicus), Bushy-tailed woodrat (Neotoma cinerea), Eastern gray squirrel (Sciurus carolinensis pennsylvanicus), Columbian ground squirrel (Urocitellus columbianus), Black-tailed prairie-dog (Cynomys ludovicianus), Bonaparte's gull (Chroicocephalus philadelphia), Ring-billed Gull (Larus delawarensis), Tundra swan (Cygnus columbianus), and Columbian sharp-tailed grouse (Tympanuchus phasianellus columbianus).[4]
Ord is widely known for exposing plagiarism and fraud in the works of John James Audubon.[5][6][7]
Early life
Ord was born in Philadelphia. His father (also named George) was a rope maker and Ord joined the family business, which he continued after his father's death in 1806.[1]
American Ornithology
Ord met Alexander Wilson in the summer of 1811, and accompanied him on two collecting expeditions (each four weeks duration) to Cape May, New Jersey, during the spring migration seasons of May 1812 and May 1813.[7] During the 1812 trip, Ord collected a bird that neither he nor Wilson could identify. Wilson illustrated Ord's specimen and named it "Cape May Warbler / Sylvia maritima" in volume 6 of American Ornithology (1812), writing:
"This new and beautiful little species was discovered in a maple swamp, in Cape May county, not far from the coast, by Mr. George Ord of this city, who accompanied me on a shooting excursion to that quarter in the month of May last. Through the zeal and activity of this gentleman I succeeded in procuring many rare and elegant birds among the sea islands and extensive salt marshes that border that part of the Atlantic ; and much interesting information relative to their nests, eggs, and particular habits. I have also at various times been favored with specimens of other birds from the same friend, for all which I return my grateful acknowledgments."[8]
The letter-press for volume 8 of American Ornithology (1814) was complete by August 1813, but Wilson's "great anxiety to conclude the work, condemned him to an excess of toil, which, inflexible as was his mind, his bodily frame was unable to bear."[9] Wilson died of complications from dysentery on August 23, 1813; one week earlier, he named Ord an executor of his "last Will and testament".[7] After Wilson's death, Ord completed the publishing and distribution, and compiled Wilson's unpublished writings for a final (9th) volume which contained an extended "Biographical sketch of Alexander Wilson".[9]
Ord published a second edition of American Ornithology in 1824–25. The first 6 volumes were faithful reprints of the originals, confusingly so because they bear the dates of the first editions on their title pages (1808–12). In contrast, volumes 7–9 were revised and expanded by Ord and included a much larger version of his "Life of Wilson" (198 pp., versus 36 pages in the original 1814 version).[10]
Academic Life
In 1815, Ord was elected to the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia (ANSP), where he would later serve as vice president from (1816–34) and president (1851–58).[11] He became a member of the American Philosophical Society in 1817, and later served as secretary (1820–27), vice president (1832–35), councilor (1839), treasurer (1842–47), and librarian (1842–48).[1][2]
In 1817, he joined the "first private, museum sponsored exploration in the United States", when he, Thomas Say, Titian Ramsay Peale and William Maclure went on a collecting expedition to Georgia and Florida, sponsored by the ANSP.[2]
Ord, a supporter of scientific peer review, frequently served on ANSP publications committees, reviewing the work of his peers.[12] He was a reviewer of three influential papers authored by Charles Lucien Bonaparte in 1824 and 1825, which included the original taxonomic descriptions of Wilson's Storm Petrel (Procellaria Wilsonii)[12][13] in 1824, and Transvolcanic Jay (Aphelocoma ultramarina), and Yellow-winged Cacique (Cassiculus melanicterus) in 1825.[12][14] In 1829 he retired from the rope-making business to devote more time to science.[2]
Ord authored peer-reviewed articles on a wide variety of topics including feather molt,[15] the mating behavior of the Eastern Box Turtle (Terrapene carolina carolina),[16] and the taxonomy of the Florida Scrub Jay (Aphelocoma coerulescens).[17] His publication about "An account of an American species of the genus Tantalus or Ibis" (1817) was the first account of the Glossy Ibis (Plegadis falcinellus) in the United States,[18] as noted by Bonaparte in his quasi-continuation of Wilson's American Ornithology (1833):
"The credit of having added this beautiful species [Plegadis falcinellus] to the fauna of the United States is due to Mr. Ord, the well known friend and biographer of Wilson, who several years ago gave a good history and minute description of it in the Journal of the Academy of Philadelphia, under the name Tantalus mexicanus? His excellent memoir would have been sufficient to establish its identity with the species found so extensively in the old world, even if the specimen itself, carefully preserved in the Philadelphia Museum, did not place this beyond the possibility of doubt."[19]
Ord was a vocal opponent of John James Audubon, and exposed multiple examples of plagiarism in Audubon's The Birds of America at a meeting of the American Philosophical Society in 1840.[6] Information in Ord's private correspondence[2] has been used to expose additional fraud in the work of Audubon.[5]
He also wrote biographical memoirs of Charles Alexandre Lesueur, published in 1849,[20] and Thomas Say, published in 1859,[21] that have been valuable sources of information for modern scholars.[22]
Death and Burial
Ord died on January 23, 1866, and is buried in a family plot at Gloria Dei Church cemetery.[1][2]
Published Works
- Ord, G. 1817. Account of a North American quadruped, supposed to belong to the genus Ovis. Journal of the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia 1(1), 8–12.
- Ord, G. 1817. An account of an American species of the genus Tantalus or Ibis. Journal of the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia 1(4), 53–57. (BHL link)
- Ord, G. 1818. Observations on two species of the genus Gracula of Latham. Journal of the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia 1(7), 253–260. (Read May 19, 1818) (BHL link)
- Ord, G. 1818. An account of the Florida Jay of Bartram. Journal of the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia 1(7), 345–347. (Read May 26, 1818) (BHL link)
- Ord, G. 1830. Some observations on the moulting of birds. Transactions of the American Philosophical Society new series 3, 292–299. (Read March 7, 1828) (BHL link)
References
- Rhoads, Samuel N. (1908). George Ord. pp. 1–8.
- "George Ord Collection". American Philosophical Society.
- Guthrie, William; Ferguson, James; Guthrie, William; Knox, John (1815). A new geographical, historical, and commercial grammar : and present state of the several kingdoms of the world ... : to which are added, 1. a geographical index, with the names of places alphabetically arranged. 2. A chronological table of remarkable event. Philadelphia :: Published by Johnson and Warner and for sale ... in Philadelphia and Richmond, Virginia,.CS1 maint: extra punctuation (link)
- Ord, George; Guthrie, William; Rhoads, Samuel N. (1894). A reprint of the North American zoology, by George Ord. Being an exact reproduction of the part originally compiled by Mr. Ord for Johnson & Warner, and first published by them in their 2d American ed. of Guthrie's geography, in 1815. Taken. Haddonsfield, N.J.,: Pub. by the editor,.CS1 maint: extra punctuation (link)
- Halley, Matthew R. (June 2020). "Audubon's Bird of Washington: unravelling the fraud that launched The birds of America". Bulletin of the British Ornithologists’ Club. 140 (2): 110–141. doi:10.25226/bboc.v140i2.2020.a3. ISSN 0007-1595.
- Ord, George (1840). "Minutes from the Stated Meeting, September 18 [1840]". Proceedings of the American Philosophical Society. 1: 272.
- Hunter, Clark (1983). The Life and Letters of Alexander Wilson. Philadelphia, Pennsylvania: Memoirs of the American Philosophical Society. ISBN 978-0871691545.
- Wilson, Alexander (1812). American Ornithology, volume 6. Philadelphia, Pennsylvania: Bradford and Inskeep. p. 99.
- George Ord (ed.) in Wilson, Alexander (1814). American Ornithology, volume 9. Philadelphia, PA: Bradford and Inskeep.
- Faxon, Walter (1901). "Early editions of Wilson's Ornithology". The Auk. 18: 216–218.
- Nolan, Edward J. (December, 1909). A short history of the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia. Philadelphia, Pennsylvania: The Academy of Natural Sciences. Check date values in:
|year=
(help) - Archives of the Academy of Natural Sciences of Drexel University. Collection 292: Publication Committee. Papers, 1821-1939. https://ansp.org/research/library/archives/0200-0299/coll0292/
- Bonaparte, Charles (1824). "An account of four species of stormy petrels". Journal of the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia. 3: 227–233.
- Bonaparte, Charles (1825). "Descriptions of two new species of Mexican birds". Journal of the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia. 4: 387–390.
- Ord, George (1830). "Some observations on the moulting of birds". Transactions of the American Philosophical Society. 3 (New Series): 292–299.
- Ord, George (1845). "Notes on the habits of the Box-Tortoise of the United States of America, Cistuda Carolina Gray". Transactions of the Linnaean Society of London. 19: 59–64.
- Ord, George (1818). "An account of the Florida Jay of Bartram". Journal of the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia. 2: 345–347.
- Ord, George (1817). "An account of an American species of the genus Tantalus or Ibis". Journal of the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia. 1: 53–57.
- "Decorative Arts: American ornithology, or, The natural history of birds inhabiting the United States, not given by Wilson : with figures drawn, engraved, and coloured, from nature (Vol. IV): Glossy ibis. Ibis falcinellus. Plate XXIII. Fig. 1". digicoll.library.wisc.edu. Retrieved 2020-08-06.
- Ord, George (1849). "A memoir of Charles Alexander Lesueur". American Journal of Science and Arts, Second Series. 8: 189–216.
- Say, Thomas; Le Conte, John Lawrence; Ord, George (1859). The complete writings of Thomas Say on the entomology of North America. New York,: Baillière brothers;.CS1 maint: extra punctuation (link)
- Stroud, Patricia Tyson (1992). Thomas Say: New World Naturalist. Philadelphia, Pennsylvania: University of Pennsylvania Press. ISBN 978-0812231038.
External links
- Dorof, Al. "George Ord (1781-1866)". Queen Village Neighbors Association. Archived from the original on 2016-05-13. Retrieved 2016-05-01. Reprint from Southwark Historical Society
- George Ord at Find a Grave