Joseph Ewan

Joseph Andorfer Ewan (1909–1999) was a botanist, naturalist, and historian of botany and natural history.[3]

Joseph Andorfer Ewan
Born(1909-10-24)October 24, 1909[1]
DiedDecember 5, 1999(1999-12-05) (aged 90)
NationalityAmerican
AwardsGuggenheim Fellowship (1953)[2]
Scientific career
FieldsBotany
History of botany
Author abbrev. (botany)Ewan

Biography

Joseph Ewan grew up in Los Angeles and developed an early interest in the study of nature. At the age of eighteen, he published an ornithological report in The Condor. [4] He matriculated at UCLA and transferred to the University of California, Berkeley in 1933, graduating there with a B.A. in 1934. After graduating he remained at Berkeley until 1937 as a research assistant to Willis Jepson.[5] In 1935 Ewan married a fellow botanical student, Ada Nesta Dunn (1908–2000), in Reno, Nevada. She often collaborated with him on their publications. He was from 1937 to 1944 an instructor at the University of Colorado, from 1944 to 1945 a botanist with the Foreign Economic Administration, from 1945 to 1946 an assistant curator at the Smithsonian Institution, and from 1946 to 1947 an associate botanist at the USDA's Bureau of Plant Industry. At Tulane University he became in 1947 an assistant professor and was eventually promoted to associate professor, and then full professor. There he held the Ida Richard Professorship from 1972 to 1977, when he retired as professor emeritus.[3]

Ewan was a member of London's Society for the Bibliography of Natural History and in 1977 received its Founder's Medal.[3]

The number of his publications exceeds 400. He wrote extensively on the history of naturalists in America and their work during the 17th, 18th, and 19th centuries.[1] Joseph and Nesta Ewan wrote John Banister and his natural history of Virginia (1970),[6] a Biographical dictionary of Rocky Mountain naturalists (1981),[7] and Benjamin Smith Barton: naturalist and physician in Jeffersonian America (published posthumously in 2007).[8][1]

... there are his many contributions to The Dictionary of Scientific Biography where ones finds, among others, sketches of George Engelmann, Albert Spear Hitchcock, Elmer Drew Merrill, Frederick Pursh, and the irascible Constantine Samuel Rafinesque. His introductions to the Classica Botanica Americana series are classics themselves.[3]

Joseph Ewan was one of the last survivors of a vanishing age in the history of science, the antiquarian era before "professionalisation", in which specialists on slime moulds wrote about the history of the study of slime moulds. Ewan's place as a historian is with Charles Singer, F.J. Cole and Clifford Dobell.[1]

During their long marriage, Mr. and Mrs. Ewan collected about 4,500 books[3] and huge numbers of "offprints, newspaper clippings, photocopies, correspondence, documents and manuscript notes."[1] In 1986 the Missouri Botanical Garden purchased the collection and in 1997 published (and placed on-line) a Guide to the Ewan Papers which lists about 10,000 names.[1]

Joseph Ewan died in 1999. His widow died in 2000. They were survived by three daughters, Kathleen, Dorothy, and Marjorie, and five grandchildren.[3]

gollark: In some cases you would have to contort your speech weirdly to make it work.
gollark: I mean, my brain only has access to bounded memory and computing time.
gollark: Gibson said "they decide how they wanted to referred to", which seems excessively general since, again, the supreme overlord of all, master of all space and time, destroyer of worlds, devourer of souls/the supreme overlord of all, master of all space and time, destroyer of worlds, devourer of souls/the supreme overlord of all, master of all space and time, destroyer of worlds, devourer of souls's/the supreme overlord of all, master of all space and time, destroyer of worlds, devourer of souls's/the supreme overlord of all, master of all space and time, destroyer of worlds, devourer of souls.
gollark: English is far too complex for sed.
gollark: Not really.

References

  1. Jackson, Ian (17 December 1999). "Obituary: Joseph Ewan". The Independent.
  2. "Joseph Ewan". John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation.
  3. Bradburn, Anne S. (September 2000). "Joseph Andorfer Ewan, October 24, 1909 – December 5, 1999". SIDA, Contributions to Botany. 19 (1): 219–222.
  4. Ewan, Joseph (1928). "California Black Rail in Los Angeles County". The Condor. 30 (4, July–August): 247.
  5. Dorr, Laurence J. (February 2000). "Joseph Andorfer Ewan (1909–1999)". Taxon. 49 (1): 107–112. doi:10.1002/j.1996-8175.2000.tb05531.x. JSTOR 1223942.
  6. "Review of John Banister and His Natural History of Virginia, 1678–1692 by Joseph and Nesta Ewan". The American Historical Review. 75 (5): 1588. December 1971. doi:10.1086/ahr/76.5.1588. ISSN 1937-5239. (See John Banister.)
  7. Porter, Charlotte M. (1983). "Review of Biographical Dictionary of Rocky Mountain Naturalists: A Guide to the Writings and Collections of Botanists, Zoologists, Geologists, Artists, and Photographers, 1682-1932 by Joseph Ewan and Nesta Dunn Ewan". Isis. 74 (3): 420. doi:10.1086/353315.
  8. Kleinman, Kim (2008). "Review of Benjamin Smith Barton: Naturalist and physician in Jeffersonian America by J. Ewan and N. D. Ewan". Archives of Natural History. 35: 186–187. doi:10.3366/E0260954108000260. (See Benjamin Smith Barton.)
  9. IPNI.  Ewan.
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