Ohio History Journal




THE BREADTH OF VISION OF DR

THE BREADTH OF VISION OF DR. JOHN STRONG

NEWBERRY

 

By A. E. WALLER, Ph. D.1

 

Attention has been directed to the interesting circumstance

that many of our leaders in the natural sciences whose schooling

ended before 1850 held degrees in medicine. When it is asked how

this happens to be the case, the facts seem to show that only the

colleges of medicine offered an approach in training and teaching

to modern laboratory study. Thus Asa Gray, John Torrey, George

Engelmann, to mention the most distinguished botanists, and some

lesser lights such as Charles Parry, Jacob Bigelow, John M. Bige-

low, Charles W. Short and others all were the holders of medical

degrees. With the exception of Jacob Bigelow, whose contribution

to the materia medica of the day is unparalleled, none of these

men made great contributions to medicine.

The subject of this paper is a geologist, one of the founders

of paleontology for the United States, Dr. John Strong Newberry.

His work in botany is mainly in paleobotany, but he was one of the

throng of explorers of the Western States whose botanical col-

lections made possible the quick organization of the flora of North

America under the guiding genius of Torrey and Gray. Those

interested in Ohioana remember him as a director of the Ohio

Geological Survey and as the author of the first catalog of the

plants of the state of Ohio.

Since Newberry was a medical college graduate who practiced

medicine but gave it up for scientific studies, it becomes a matter

of philosophical and historical concern to examine his education

and background. Obviously, since he was not primarily interested

in the practice of medicine and as he came from a family of suffi-

cient wealth and was free to choose whatever he liked in the way

of a career, what he did with his education is of great interest.

 

1 Papers from  the Department of Botany, The Ohio State University, No. 465.

324



OHIO MEDICAL HISTORY, 1835-58 325

OHIO MEDICAL HISTORY, 1835-58           325

 

He became a leader of his time, not in government, though he

possessed a number of important contacts to make such a life

possible also. Nor did he turn away from medicine to law or to

a rectorship in the footsteps of so many who were given the clas-

sical education of the period.

Quite away from beaten paths, he appears as one of the first

to rise high in practical humanitarianism. He found new appli-

cations to human welfare of the natural sciences he followed. He

remained a professor and by his researches and teachings trained

young men to go along with him in the pathways he was exploring.

Before his death the laboratory methods of study were widely in

use. He may have carefully examined, during his career, the

strong and weak points of medical college training as he had ex-

perienced it and thrown his influence directly toward laboratory

training in the natural sciences. An address he made before the

American Association for the Advancement of Science indicates

how seriously he thought along these lines.

Looking back to the successful medical practice he built in

the pyramiding population of the Cleveland of the 1850's, it is

interesting to see how ready he was to cut short his private prac-

tice to respond to the calls of usefulness in wider fields. The very

absence of specialization in his training stands out as an advantage

to him. Without going into detail here as to the content of his

college work, one only needs to ask whether a brilliant young phy-

sician of today's schools could turn so easily to botany or to

geology after several years of active medical practice.

To express as fully as possible what the spirit of the bio-

logical sciences entailed at this time one might call this period

the Golden Age of Nomenclature. Twenty-five years later the

various fields of the sciences were to be separated. At the mid-

century, however, many of the conspicuous plants and animals

were still to be described. This was also essentially true in geol-

ogy. The rock formations had not been named. At the same

time comparative studies were beginning to add to the excitement.

There were minor synthesizing influences at work, but the major

principles to proceed from the work of Darwin, Mendel, Faraday,



326 OHIO ARCHAEOLOGICAL AND HISTORICAL QUARTERLY

326   OHIO ARCHAEOLOGICAL AND HISTORICAL QUARTERLY

 

Lyell, Pasteur and Agassiz were not yet announced or at least

their antecedents were not yet a part of the college courses of a

young contemporary of John S. Newberry. The healing of the

sick was only groping its way from superstitions, some of which

were as old as the Asclepiads, to the newer knowledge based on

experimentation. Yet medicine was at this moment much in ad-

vance of agriculture. The new enabling legislation which was to

establish colleges of agriculture and experimental stations was not

yet dreamed of.

So it was that the medical colleges of the nineteenth century

offered the only schools in which biological principles were studied.

The advances made in the twentieth century in biology owe much

to this torch of knowledge passed on by the medical colleges, even

humble ones. It is beside the point to say that there were bad

schools as well as good. For these early schools offered one thing

difficult to obtain in the highly specialized university centers of

training today. Education was viewed through a wide-angle lens

to be as all-inclusive as possible. Dr. Newberry offers a record

worthy of attention.

A soldier in the Revolutionary War was General Roger New-

berry, the paternal grandfather of John. The Newberry family

was already an old one in America, Thomas having landed in

Dorchester, Massachusetts, in 1634, and the forebears of General

Roger having moved later to Connecticut. The General was in-

terested in the Western Reserve of the Connecticut Land Com-

pany, although there is no record that he ever saw his holdings.

His son, Henry, however, was an attorney who inherited the land

from the General and decided to move to Ohio. Thus it hap-

pened that, though John Newberry always thought of himself as

an Ohio man, he was really born in Windsor, Connecticut. He

was two years old before his father moved the family in 1824.

Henry Newberry, taking title to his part of the estate of Gen-

eral Roger, founded the town of Cuyahoga Falls. While by train-

ing and profession a lawyer, Henry also had an eye for power

development. There is no doubt about his interest in the possi-

bilities of water power from the falls of the Cuyahoga River.



OHIO MEDICAL HISTORY 1835-58 327

OHIO MEDICAL HISTORY 1835-58           327

 

With all the instincts of the industrialist he wanted to bring mills

and turning wheels to a nearly untamed wilderness. Northern

Ohio still was practically that, for it had not been opened to set-

tlement as early as the Ohio River counties. Cincinnati was the

center of culture. The potentialities of Cleveland were not to

be realized for some time to come.

Henry Newberry chose Cuyahoga Falls for his residence and

the place to stake out his future. At Tallmadge, not far away,

he owned land containing deposits of coal. It is to the credit of

Henry Newberry, father of John, the geologist, that he was the

first to appreciate the possibilities of operating the Tallmadge land

as a coal mining enterprise. Later, when John's reputation as a

geologist had been made, he recorded in the Lisbon Railway Re-

port2 a tribute to his father's foresight in developing coal mines

as an important step in building industrial Cleveland.

Of the youthful Johnny, one of a family of nine children, it

is reported that he "helped" his father in inspecting the mining

properties at Tallmadge. At the age of eleven he displayed an

overpowering curiosity in the plant fossils exposed in the slates

and shales composing the roofs of the mine galleries. Most mature

persons are not without a stir of the imagination on entering a

clark -cave. The effect was even greater on the sensitive young

Johnny. He peered down dark passages lighted by torch or candle.

He saw strange leaves or branches pressed into solid stone and

themselves feeling like stones. The desire to learn the story of

those buried plants became for Johnny a life-long quest. His first

scientific effort was on fossils. His last paper a year before his

death was on the flora of a coal field in Montana.

The man, John Strong Newberry, was fond of recalling the

effect of the visits so frequently made to the Tallmadge mines.

The Science Museum at Cleveland became years afterwards the

depository for some of his favorite specimens. Likewise, the

Columbia School of Mines and the Smithsonian, after their

establishment, received some of these specimens. One hopes that

some geologist today noting some J. S. N. specimens from Tall-

 

2 First Annual Report of the President of the New Lisbon Railway Co., presented

at the Annual Meeting, January 2d, 1865 (Cleveland, 1865).



328 OHIO ARCHAEOLOGICAL AND HISTORICAL QUARTERLY

328    OHIO ARCHAEOLOGICAL AND HISTORICAL QUARTERLY

 

madge would pause a moment to recall the little boy who grew

up into the famous Dr. Newberry.

When young John was passing out of his teens and becom-

ing a mature young man, Henry Newberry, as an enterprising

coal operator received a notable visitor who may have further

heightened John's interest in geology. James Hall was thirty

years of age at the time of his visit to Henry Newberry. He had

already been connected with New York Geological Survey for

five years. In 1841, to extend his knowledge of the limestones

and their ranges, Hall made a journey to the Mississippi River.

On his return eastward, he stopped with the Newberrys of Cuya-

hoga Falls. Young John, already familiar with the Tallmadge

mines, was more than ever eager to visit them and show them to

the distinguished James Hall. Unfortunately there is no written

record of the conversation that took place between the nineteen-

year-old host and the thirty-year-old guest. It may have been

warm and witty or serious and heavy. It probably was both as

the visit may have lasted several days. This visit, however,

was the beginning of a fine friendship of many years. It was both

personal and professional in import as both were later to become

Presidents of the American Association for the Advancement of

Science, Hall in 1857 and Newberry in 1867. Hall became the

most prolific writer of the period in geology. Newberry became

internationally famous--the first American to receive the Murchi-

son Medal. Newberry's work, however, was not confined to

geology. He left a significant record in whatever field he touched.

The visit of James Hall may have been the turning point in

John Newberry's life and may have fixed his resolve to devote

himself to scholarly pursuits. Henry Newberry was able to bring

every comfort and opportunity to his nine children and John was

sent to Western Reserve College, which was then still located at

Hudson, where it had been incorporated two years after Henry

Newberry had moved to Cuyahoga Falls. It was the oldest and

best school of the district and there John was sent. The avowed

purpose of the college was to "educate pious young men as

pastors for her [Ohio's] destitute churches," "to preserve the

present literary and religious character of the state and redeem



OHIO MEDICAL HISTORY, 1835-58 329

OHIO MEDICAL HISTORY, 1835-58            329

 

it from future decline" and "to train competent young men to

fill the cabinet and for the bench and bar."3 These were high

aims and many young men developed along the lines indicated.

John Newberry was to show that there were still other aims to be

discovered. The college, never a large one before its removal

to Cleveland, was not without influence in educating the young men

and later the young women of the State. Already talented as a

keen observer and with a scientific bent, John Newberry profited

by his literary studies. He was ready to enter the Cleveland

Medical College in 1846 and he obtained his degree in 1848.

A strong ingredient in his medical college training was the

contact with Dr. Jared P. Kirtland.4 As a boy Dr. Kirtland had

developed a consuming interest in the living world, and his grand-

father, Dr. Jared Potter of Wallingford, Connecticut, had taken

the boy's training in hand, and taught him all he knew of birds

and insects and plants, so that "at the age of twelve Kirtland was

already familiar with budding and grafting." At twenty he was

one of the first students to enter the newly opened Yale Medical

School, from which he was graduated in 1815. At Yale, Kirtland

studied botany under the famous Dr. Ives and mineralogy and

zoology under Professor Silliman. In his contact with Dr. Ives,

Kirtland antedated by a few years another young man who was

later to make notable contributions to Ohio botany, William S.

Sullivant. By 1830, Dr. Kirtland was not only one of the best

known and best liked physicians, but he had served in the Ohio

Legislative Assembly as the representative of Trumbull County

and organized the first effort to have made a State Geological Sur-

vey. In this he took part in 1827 and found himself in an em-

barrassing position. The State Treasury was without funds. He

paid the assistants out of his own pocket and took for his reward

the geological specimens which were later the nucleus of the col-

lections in the Cleveland Museum. For a while Dr. Kirtland

lived in Cincinnati as professor in the Ohio Medical College. He

was asked to return to the Western Reserve in 1841 to the

 

3 Harriet Taylor Upton, et al., History of the Western Reserve (Chicago, 1940),

340.

4 George M. Curtis, "Jared  Potter Kirtland, M.D.,"  Ohio State Medical Journal

(Columbus), XXXVII  (1941), 10.



330 OHIO ARCHAEOLOGICAL AND HISTORICAL QUARTERLY

330   OHIO ARCHAEOLOGICAL AND HISTORICAL QUARTERLY

Willoughby College of Medicine, by Dr. John Delemater. In 1844,

Dr. Kirtland wrote to his friend, Dr. Samuel P. Hildreth of Mari-

etta: "You doubtless have learned we are busily engaged in

building up a medical institution at Cleveland. Our efforts are

thus far successful as we now number 67 students in our class

and our course of instruction has been very satisfactory. We hope

to have our school . . . as the Medical Department of W. R.

College by an act of the legislature this season."5

In 1845, the year before John entered Medical College,

Cleveland was a city of 9,573 people and was already called the

"Forest City."  There were those who said of it that it would

continue "to be a delightful place of rus-urban residence"6 but

any great industrial or commercial future seemed unlikely. Such

men as the Newberry family, Dr. Kirtland and others, by de-

veloping industries and increasing cultural opportunities, built up

the community in spite of the doubters.

The Cleveland Medical College was headed by Dr. John Dele-

mater as the professor of general pathology, midwifery and

diseases of women and children; Dr. Kirtland was professor of

physical diagnosis and the theory and practice of physic. There

were five others on the faculty.  Wednesdays were given to

"Medical and Surgical Cliniques." The announcement also car-

ried this alluring statement, "As surgical operations are performed

gratuitously in the presence of the class, it is believed that there are

few Medical Institutions in the country where the principles of

surgery are more fully taught with their application to successful

practice than in this." Nine years after its establishment it had

enrolled more than a thousand students and was well launched.

As to John Newberry, he was much impressed by Dr. Kirt-

land, who taught him ornithology and added to his interest in

geology, as well as taught him botany and materia medica. John,

however, was not handicapped or obliged to confine his studies to

the local scene. After obtaining his degree he went for the next

two years to study abroad.

 

5 Ibid.

6 J. S. Newberry  in  Knight and  Parsons  Business  Directory, of the  City  of

Cleveland  (Cleveland, 1853), 31.



OHIO MEDICAL, HISTORY, 1835-58 331

OHIO MEDICAL, HISTORY, 1835-58                 331

 

Most of this study period was spent in Paris. Besides at-

tending medical lectures he also attended geological courses. He

visited Italy and made his first contribution to scientific literature

in the description of a quarry containing fossil fish at Monte

Bolca, Italy. This was published in 1851 in The Family Visitor.

He returned to Cleveland and opened up his medical practice.

He is reported as having been successful. He practiced medicine

from 1851 to 1855. His residence is given in Knight and Parsons

Directory for 1853 as being at the "Cor of Superior and Euclid."7

and his office in Kelly's Block at 64 Superior Street. There are

58 physicians-surgeons listed in this directory in an article entitled

"Cleveland past, present, and future." This article is quite likely

accurate, since it was written by Dr. Newberry himself. It de-

serves to be read by collectors of Western Reserve and Pioneer

Ohio history.

In 1845, public-spirited citizens of Cleveland voted a municipal

loan of $200,000 for the construction of a railroad to connect Cleve-

land with Columbus and Cincinnati. The first train entered Cleve-

land traveling all the way from Cincinnati in 1851. Previously the

only connections had been by canal but that traffic, as well as the

Lake traffic, was ice bound during the entire winter.    As New-

berry described it "with the first hard frost the business of the city

went into a state of hybernation, lying dormant and dead until

resuscitated by the genial warmth of returning spring."8 He also

said,

The effect of the construction of these various railroad lines, all con-

verging to Cleveland as a centre, upon her business and general prosperity

has been magical. The commercial transactions of every month, are far

greater than formerly, and now we have twelve such months in every year.

We have no longer an annual hybernation, but reckon time by the same

almanac which serves as a guide to other civilized communities. Nor is it

longer necessary, that the existence of a Clevelander should be extended

thirty-three per cent beyond the common term in order that he should

have his share of life.9

Clearly John Newberry saw the prosperity of his community

and took pride in sharing it. He could write precisely and with a

7 Ibid., 215.

8 Ibid., 31.

9 Ibid., 32.



332 OHIO ARCHAEOLOGICAL HISTORICAL QUARTERLY

332    OHIO ARCHAEOLOGICAL HISTORICAL QUARTERLY

light touch. He lived near Dr. John Delemater and perhaps con-

tinued to see Dr. Kirtland whose residence was not in Cleveland.

He had married and gave all indication of permanent location in

Cleveland.

He began to publish scientific articles and four papers of his

on fossil plants appeared in 1853 in the short-lived but thoroughly

excellent Annals of Science. This ambitious publication is de-

scribed as a semi-monthly magazine devoted to science and the

arts. Its editor was H. L. Smith, a physician and professor of

general and physiological chemistry in the Western College of

Homeopathic Medicine. The city of Cleveland was flourishing

at this time, with two medical colleges and a university just becom-

ing established.  John Newberry apparently maintained friend-

ships in both medical colleges and was active and happy in civic

affairs. The Annals of Science ran from November, 1852, to May,

1854. In August, 1843, the seventh annual meeting of the Ameri-

can Association for the Advancement of Science was held in Cleve-

land and the Annals published a full account of the program with

abstracts of many of the articles. Culturally, as well as commer-

cially, Cleveland was growing.

The Cleveland Academy of Natural Sciences was founded in

1845 by Dr. Kirtland. It was one of his particular delights. In

1853, J. P. Kirtland was president, as he probably had been con-

tinuously, and John S. Newberry, former student and now a

mature man and colleague in the field of medicine, was recording

secretary.  There was one other interesting activity in which

Newberry participated at this time. The Young Men's Christian

Association was started that same year. In February of the fol-

lowing year when the constitution and by-laws were adopted he

was made the first president.10 Truly, his position in the city was

established. He was a recognized scientist, a physician to be re-

spected and a prosperous family man. Here his life changed.

In May, 1855, he was appointed assistant surgeon and geol-

ogist on the Williamson and Abbott Expedition. This expedition

was authorized to explore the country from San Francisco to the

 

10 Samuel P. Orth, A History of Cleveland  (Chicago, 1910), I, 406.



OHIO MEDICAL HISTORY, 1835-58 333

OHIO MEDICAL HISTORY, 1835-58                 333

 

Columbia River. The reports on the botany, geology and zoology

of Northern California are in the sixth volume of the Reports of

Explorations and Surveys to ascertain the most practical and eco-

nomical route for a Railroad from    the Mississippi River to the

Pacific Ocean, made in 1853-6 (Washington, 1857).        His work

on the trees of Northern California was illustrated and was done

in collaboration with Torrey and Gray. Thus, in one year, John

Newberry was working with the foremost botanists of the country.

He worked in Washington while completing his reports, though

his family remained in Cleveland. In 1857, he was given a similar

appointment on the Lieut. Joseph C. Ives Expedition for the

exploration and navigation of the Colorado River. A boat from

San Francisco sailing around Lower California, up to the mouth

of the Colorado River, carried a smaller steamer suitable for ex-

ploring the river.  While waiting near Yuma for the dismantled

small boat to be fitted for its exploring work, John Newberry

became ill and almost left the party.     He recovered, however,

sufficiently to continue.  With his recovery his accustomed zest

for living returned, as is evidenced in the following excerpt from

a letter written aboard the steamer Explorer, February 10,1858,

on the Colorado River, by Newberry to his friend, F. V. Hayden:

I should be very happy to be one of your pleasant circle at the Smith-

sonian this winter . . . I am doomed to pass the entire winter and spring

doing the hardest kind of field duty with few of its pleasures or rewards.

Day after day we slowly crawl along up the muddy Colorado--, confined

to a little tucked up, over-loaded, over-crowded steamer with no retreat

from the cold, heat, wind or drifting sand, and nothing but the monotony

of an absolute desert to, feast our eyes upon, with nothing but bacon and

beans and rice and bread and sand--or rather Sand and Bacon, etc. to eat,

sleeping on shore with a sand drift, eyes, nose, mouth, ears, clothes and bed

filled with sand--with almost everyone discontented and cross. I some-

times almost envy you who are reposing in your "otium cum dig." studying

abundant material, eating comforting food, sleeping on good beds, washing

clean and dressing neatly every day, and having a good time generally.

I only hope you appreciate your advantages with sometimes pity on poor

wretches who are not so fortunate.

After several paragraphs in more serious vein about the ex-

pedition he ends the letter: "Give my love to all who love me.

Ah, who does in all W.     Be a good boy, don't get tight.    And



334 OHIO ARCHAEOLOGICAL AND HISTORICAL QUARTERLY

334 OHIO ARCHAEOLOGICAL AND HISTORICAL QUARTERLY

when you read this think of me as one of your best friends. P. S.

I am sorry this sheet is disfigured by this caricature of a Mohave

belle, but paper is very scarce and I must use up every scrap."11

Following the Ives Expedition, Newberry also accompanied

Capt. John N. Macomb on the expedition over parts of northern

Arizona and Utah. This led to covering portions of the land sur-

vey of the Ives Expedition. The Report of the Macomb Expedi-

tion was not published until 1876, but it is interesting to see how

the return journey became later almost the exact route of the

Santa Fe across Arizona and New Mexico to Garden, Kansas.

After the summer survey work on the Macomb Expedition in 1859

was completed Newberry came back to Washington to join the

Smithsonian staff. With the outbreak of the Civil War he entered

the United States Army, but was elected a member of the United

States Sanitary Commission, June 14, 1861. The first sanitary in-

spection of troops was made by him at Cairo, Illinois, in connection

with the Reverend Henry Bellows and Dr. William H. Mussey.

By September of 1861, however, his status again was to undergo a

change. He was called to serve as secretary of the Western Divi-

sion of the U. S. Sanitary Commission. So he resigned from the

Army and established headquarters at Louisville, Kentucky.

The story of the Sanitary Commission is best told by Dr. New-

berry himself.12

The outbreak of the rebellion found me at Washington, D. C. in

the service of the War Department with which I had been connected for

the five years previous as Acting Assistant Surgeon and Geologist. On

the 14th of June, I was elected a member of the United States Sanitary

Commission, and immediately took part in the meeting then being held at

Washington. . . . It is not, perhaps, generally known that Cairo had been

seized on the 24th of April by a detachment of men brought down rapidly

and secretly by the Illinois Central Railroad Company, just in time to

anticipate a plan formed for its seizure by the rebels. The transaction was

an interesting and an important one and saved us a point which in

strategic value was second to no other one along our frontier.

Having prepared the way by correspondence in the latter part of

October I went to Columbus, Cincinnati, and Louisville, where by the

11 George P. Merrill, The First One-Hundred Years of American Geology (New

Haven, 1924), 684.

12 John S. Newberry, The Sanitary Commission in the Valley of the Mississippi

(Cleveland,  1671).



OHIO MEDICAL HISTORY, 1835-58 335

OHIO MEDICAL HISTORY, 1835-58                  335

 

assistance of my friends, Dr. S. M. Smith, Hon. George Hoadly, Dr. Mussey,

Dr. T. S. Bell, and Mr. Heywood, meetings of the Associate Members of

the Sanitary Commission were held and Branch Commissions organized . . .

Thus in these few words he tells of the part he took in what

was the greatest attempt in saving lives and caring for soldier

casualties the world had ever seen. A long letter, dated Louisville,

October 24, 1862, to Fred. Law. Olmstead, who was the general

secretary of the U. S. Sanitary Commission concludes with the

following:

By the addition to the medical corps of a body of trained assistants,

whose duty it shall be to gather up and remove the wounded from the

battlefield and perform for them the first necessary offices of relief; and

entrusting to that department independent means of transportation and

subsistence for the sick, much will be done to economize life, prevent suf-

fering and improve the health of the army.13

This statement could be taken from     a current message con-

cerning the aims and objectives of our M. R. T. C. John New-

berry expressed the spirit of today's activities in this field. Only

the means of carrying out the work has improved.

A second far-reaching idea is one on scurvy to be found in

the Sanitary Reporter, for May 15, 1863, as an extract from the

official report of F. N. Hamilton, Medical Inspector, U. S. Army.

"There were no fresh vegetables furnished to the troops except

what were obtained from    the Sanitary Commission."14     "On the

same day Dr. Newberry replied by telegram to me: 'Large ship-

ments are being made daily. Yesterday I telegraphed Cincinnati,

Chicago, Cleveland and Pittsburgh and have reply that shipments

will be made at once from there.'"

I found that the Sanitary Commission had already furnished them

with the vegetables they had called for and which were needed for the

sick so that in the hospitals none were dying of scurvy; on the contrary

in every instance I found them recovering rapidly. I would respectfully

suggest that for the season of the year when neither fresh potatoes nor

onions can be furnished to our armies, they should be supplied with pickled

onions and cabbage; also potatoes cut in slices and packed in molasses,

as is the practise with sailors; the potatoes to be eaten raw.

A third action of great importance grew out of the first two.

How could hospital supplies for the army be procured; how could

 

13 Ibid., 67.

14 Ibid., 82.



336 OHIO ARCHAEOLOGICAL AND HISTORICAL QUARTERLY

336    OHIO ARCHAEOLOGICAL AND HISTORICAL QUARTERLY

the quantities of fresh foods be kept flowing to the stations as

rapidly as required? The most important measure was the Sani-

tary Fair. The Great Western Sanitary Fair, as the one held in

Cincinnati was called, has been made the subject of a book by the

Rev. Dr. Henry W. Bellows who was the president of the U. S.

Sanitary Commission.15 The following description of the Chicago

Sanitary Fair in which seventy-two thousand dollars was ?? the net

proceeds is interesting. "The contributions to the Fair to be sold

for the benefit of our sick and wounded soldiers were large, were

munificent; but it was this tone of deep-seated earnestness which

was largest." The Chicago Fair was followed by the Cincinnati

Fair which opened Christmas Day. It produced the surprising

result of raising a fund of two hundred and thirty-five thousand

dollars. The second Chicago Fair, held May 30, 1865, the closing

year of the war, realized more than two hundred thousand dollars.

To sum up briefly, John Newberry, between September, 1861,

and July, 1866, expended more than eight hundred thousand

dollars and distributed supplies worth more than five millions. He

also established a hospital directory at Louisville in which there

were recorded the names of eight hundred and fifty thousand

soldiers who had been given direct help by the Sanitary Commis-

sion and more than one million more who, on being released, were

through soldiers' homes temporarily fed or sheltered as they were

furloughed, and for whom no other adequate provision had been

made. Probably no one up to that time had been so great an

apostle of humanitarianism.  The Sanitary Commission was a

charity "twice blessed" as the editors of the Sanitary Reporter

noted.

There were two other items to be mentioned. At the base

hospitals in Murfreesboro, Chattanooga, Nashville, Louisville, New

Albany and other points, vegetable gardens were established, not

only to provide food, but for "convalescent soldiers and those unfit

for regular duty in the field," who "can do the work, finding

healthful and stimulating exercise in place of the depressive in-

fluences of convalescent camps." Finally, in Cleveland, Dr. New-

 

15 The  Great  Western  Sanitary  Fair  (Cincinnati,  1864).



OHIO MEDICAL HISTORY, 1835-58 337

OHIO MEDICAL HISTORY, 1835-58           337

 

berry established an employment agency to help find jobs for the

men going back to civilian life.

When the British army in 1854-1856 had fought in the Crimea

the death rate mounted from "129 per thousand to the fantastic

figure of 1,174 per thousand per year." At this rate the entire

army would have disappeared within a few months. No wars of

history ever equaled this. In our war between the states the death

rate dropped from 65 to 44 per thousand under the ministrations

of the Sanitary Commission. Newberry planned along lines to

avert disaster and to save the lives of the men at war.

In the autumn of 1866, at the age of 44 years, with much

practical experience behind him in field work, in correspondence

with official and semi-official report making and administration,

with some teaching contacts in Washington, at Columbia College,

and in research for the Smithsonian and with four years of private

medical practice, John Newberry was to embark on his principal

career and to continue in it for the rest of his life, more than a

quarter of a century. The Columbia School of Mines was in-

augurated in 1866 and to it John S. Newberry was called to fill

the multiple post of professor of geology and botany and paleon-

tology.

The strongest pillar of science in New York at that time was

doubtless Dr. Torrey. Though Torrey's real love in the sciences

was botany and he played the major role in founding the U. S.

National Herbarium and the New York Botanical Garden Her-

barium and shared countless specimens with his former student

and great friend, Asa Gray, in the establishment of the Gray Her-

barium of Harvard, Torrey was, nevertheless, professor of chem-

istry at Princeton and Columbia. Thus it was that John S. New-

berry not only was the one to be responsible for botanical teaching

at Columbia, but also, since Newberry's interest was mainly in

fossil botany, he was contributing a new note to the classical botany

of Torrey and Gray. It is also of interest to see the broad bases

on which the plant sciences lie. Conventionally expected in liberal

arts colleges and colleges of agriculture, the plant sciences are

studied as fundamental to medicine, pharmacy, horticulture, fores-

try, and as applied to fuels--in the mining schools. The Columbia



338 OHIO ARCHAEOLOGICAL AND HISTORICAL QUARTERLY

338    OHIO ARCHAEOLOGICAL AND HISTORICAL QUARTERLY

School of Mines is the oldest of its type in the United States, and

the work of Newberry was that of a pioneer. He left wonder-

fully complete museum material, by his own admission, the best

that had ever been assembled. It contained in Newberry's time

over one hundred thousand specimens and he made use of the col-

lections as needed in illustrating his lectures in paleontology and

economic geology. Other specimens he had collected went to the

Smithsonian and to the Cleveland Museum. Although perma-

nently situated at Columbia, in 1869, John Newberry was ap-

pointed Director of the second Ohio Geological Survey. Unable to

leave New York except for short intervals he chose a number of

assistants to work in the field. His principal assistant was Edward

Orton, professor of natural sciences at Antioch College.

By a curious coincidence, Dr. Orton was descended from an-

other line of early settlers at Windsor, Connecticut. His own

boyhood was mostly in Ripley, the westernmost town in New

York. He entered Hamilton College in 1845 as a sophomore and

was graduated at the age of nineteen in 1848. Teaching the fol-

lowing year at Erie, Pennsylvania, he entered Lane Theological

Seminary in Cincinnati for the 1849-50 period, but was obliged to

leave because of trouble with his eyesight. He lived an outdoor

life on a farm and on a coast-wise steamer, and in 1851 became a

teacher in the Delaware Literary Institute, Franklin, New York.

The following year he went to Lawrence Scientific School at Har-

vard where he studied chemistry and botany. In 1853, he was

again teaching at the Delaware Institute. He went to the Andover

Theological Seminary and was ordained without graduating at

Delhi in 1856. He then accepted the position of professor of

natural sciences at the State Normal School at Albany. Here,

however, his religious views changed and he was accused of heresy.

For the best account of this change of opinion and the position

taken by Dr. Orton, the Memorial Address by Dr. Washington

Gladden16 should be consulted. Orton was then principal of a

boys' academy at Chester from which he was called to Antioch

 

16 Ohio  State  Archaeological and  Historical Quarterly  (Columbus)  VIII  (1900),

409-32.



OHIO MEDICAL HISTORY, 1835-58 339

OHIO MEDICAL HISTORY,  1835-58            339

College in 1865. He was professor of natural sciences here until

1872, when he became the president of Antioch.

Meanwhile, in 1869, Orton accepted the offer of Newberry to

become an assistant on the Ohio Geological Survey. E. B. An-

drews and John H. Klippart were likewise principal assistants.

T. G. Wormley was added as chemist in 1870 as well as some local

assistants. Some of the most eminent geologists, including E. D.

Cope, O. C. Marsh, F. B. Meek, R. P. Whitfield, James Hall and

others all participated at various times. One who was not called

and who entered into a bitter controversy with Newberry was

Colonel Charles Whittlesey.17  Some of the results of the com-

bined studies established anew the sequence of events in the late

Tertiary when the ocean reached to Louisville and a subtropical

climate embraced the lake region, while Greenland was as mild as

the Ohio Valley today. This was followed by a gradual uplift in

pre-glacial times and a period of glaciation with the ice sheet ex-

tending to Cincinnati. A post-glacial period of subsidence and

warmer climate followed this. For the present another epoch of

elevation is in progress. All of this was exciting to the geologists,

but Newberry made a grave tactical error. He was not talking in

common terms or of common ideas. He was publishing the results

of the paleontological findings first. The bickerings with Whittle-

sey were echoed at least in the private letters by another and per-

haps the most distinguished scientist of the group, Leo Lesquereux.

Newberry himself would have been unable to say why Les-

quereux regarded him in contumelious fashion, even if he had

been aware of it. It is true they had had an interminable con-

troversy--the famous Larramie question which Lesquereux kept

open long past anyone's interest in the matter. A mere disagree-

ment over problems of scientific interpretation, would not, how-

ever, have been enough to rouse the bitter personal antipathy that

Lesquereux expressed.              It is not known that Newberry wrote

directly to Lesquereux.             To his friend, J. Peter Lesley, State

Geologist of Pennsylvania, Lesquereux completely unburdened

himself in many letters spread over a period of approximately

17 Merrill, First Hundred  Years of American Geology, 451.



340 OHIO ARCHAEOLOGICAL AND HISTORICAL QUARTERLY

340    OHIO ARCHAEOLOGICAL AND HISTORICAL QUARTERLY

twenty years.18 They had met probably for the first time when

Newberry was practicing medicine in Cleveland and Lesquereux

had lived about three years in Columbus. A letter to Lesley dated

January 9, 1852, contains the following: "I have now a good deal

of visits destined to my collection of fossil plants. Yesterday Dr.

Newberry from Cleveland was here." It is too bad Lesquereux

did not describe this first meeting.  Though neither of them

knew it at the time, it was the contact between the two persons

who were destined later to be recognized as the co-founders of

paleobotany for North America. They may have been disap-

pointed in each other from the start. Newberry was tall, sure of

himself, with sharp, perhaps critical eyes. He may not have

known that Sophie, Lesquereux's wife, was the daughter of Baron

von Wolfskell. Glancing at the humble surroundings in the little

house at Fourth and Mound Streets, in Columbus, Newberry may

have been more abashed by their poverty than alert to their intel-

lectual aristocracy or Sophie's ancient lineage. If Newberry spoke

in English she would have to act as intermediary and translate to

German or French, so that her deaf husband would lip read. If

Newberry spoke French, he may, in spite of his two years abroad,

have done so haltingly, thus adding embarrassment to his some-

what aloof manner of separating himself from his hosts. What-

ever the situation, no other word concerning Newberry appears

in the Lesley correspondence until April, 1860, and then Les-

quereux was appalled that Newberry should have the arrogance

to challenge Heer, the great European paleontologist who was

Lesquereux's ideal. Yes, it was Newberry who gave Lesquereux

the feeling he was being disdainfully treated. No one else in

America seemed to have had this effect on him.

Lesquereux was elected to membership in the new (at that

time) National Academy of Sciences, being the first person so

honored. Newberry, however, was one of the corporate members.

Lesquereux did not know this or he would never have written to

 

18 For  extracts from  the  Lesquereux  letters, grateful acknowledgement is made

to my friend, Andrew Denney Rodgers III. For sketch of Lesquereux see Merrill,

First Hundred Years of American Geology, 363. Also George Sarton, "Second

Preface to vol. 34," Isis (Cambridge, Mass.), XXXIV (1942), who offers an excellent

recent interpretation.



OHIO MEDICAL HISTORY, 1835-58 341

OHIO MEDICAL HISTORY, 1835-58             341

Lesley in April, 1863, "I am sincerely obliged to yourself and

your friends who pleaded for my admittance. But Newberry's

claim cannot be put aside, especially at Washington. He is a born

American, a rich man and is sustained by great political influence."

These were, of course, the things Lesquereux could never attain.

A furious envy engulfed him.

On January 21, 1865, his letter to Lesley disparages New-

berry's accomplishments. "I wrote you about Newberry's opinion

on the old beds of rivers. I see that it is old or rather that the

same remarks have been made a long time ago. Dana mentions

the same thing in his Manual."

A sharper note, as bitter as it was possible for Lesquereux to

write, came from his pen, February 11 of the same year. "I am

trying to get from our Legislature an appropriation for a survey

of our coal fields (no general survey). But I do not think that the

appropriation will be granted and should it be, it is very probable

that Newberry would get it and not L. I live here quite unknown

and without friends except Sullivant who has no influence."

We must not forget that Lesquereux was rendered totally

deaf from an operation he had submitted to in an attempt to im-

prove his hearing. He never heard any English spoken, and while

he learned to write English, he was always dependent upon his

wife whenever he carried on conversation in that language. He

was more independent in French, his native tongue, and German,

as he had learned lip reading for those languages while, he still

retained some ability to hear. So devoted was his beloved Sophie,

that he probably never realized the difficulties others had in con-

versing with him. He did not see anything incongruous in con-

sidering himself able to conduct field surveys, and so thought of

himself as a candidate for such a position and was impatient when

Newberry's claims were recognized ahead of his own. Therefore,

whenever Newberry might be censured he was ready to express his

animadversions. On April 7, 1872, he wrote to Lesley,

Just as soon as I was ready (with a report) Hayden sent me a new

batch of the same (specimens from the tertiary and cretaceous) those

got from Newberry who had had them for years and never found time

for an examination. Perhaps you heard of the manner in which the



342 OHIO ARCHAEOLOGICAL AND HISTORICAL QUARTERLY

342     OHIO  ARCHAEOLOGICAL AND HISTORICAL QUARTERLY

 

Geological Survey of Ohio has been conducted. Since its beginning it

was a failure. It was a money enterprise neither the director nor the

assistants had any plan or any other purpose, but to get as much money

out of the State for doing nothing at all. Newberry could not leave New

York and could not give any direction for work to be done. Of course,

he had not had any control over his so-called assistants who each of them

are directors over their own district. Then there were a number of dis-

contented so-called geologists like the famous Whittlesley, who at once

took part against the survey because they could not get any slice of the

cake. Hence recriminations, accusations, hard words, our local papers are

full of letters of these gentlemen of recriminations of one of these members

against another. I was providentially spared every kind of connection with

the Survey and I have not taken any part in those disreputable quarrels

not even by a single word.

The legislature became interested in the bickering, not be-

cause they were able to offer any solution to problems of geology

or because they could end the disputes.   On the contrary, they

saw or pretended to see a failure of the survey itself and suggested

that the whole work be forfeited and that no money be paid.

Newberry's mistakes lay not along the lines of geology, but in his

inability to unbend and meet people on their own level rather than

trying to raise them to his. The legislature complained that the

reports on the paleontology told nothing of the natural wealth of

the Ohio lands, or as one legislator is said to have expressed it "all

this money spent to turn up one damned salamander that's been

dead a million years."

Newberry resigned in 1872 and Orton took his place.       In

spite of the chiding and clamor which seemed to impugn Newberry,

his record shows nine published volumes on Ohio, six on the

geology, two on paleontology, one on zoology. These were illus-

trated by many maps. Further, a system of county reports was

begun. All of these volumes continued to be published after his

resignation, the last appearing in 1883.

Newberry had turned out to be the Geological Survey's whip-

ping-boy, and the one person who understood that best was Ed-

ward Orton. His work was largely economic in character. He cor-

rected the stratigraphy of the coal measures in the 1884 volume,

the first one published under his own name. This, by some of the

geologists, is regarded as his masterpiece, while others hold that the



OHIO MEDICAL HISTORY, 1835-58 343

OHIO MEDICAL HISTORY, 1835-58          343

1888 publication on petroleum and natural gas in Ohio exceeded it

in significance. Since that is a matter pertinent only to geologists

it has no immediate significance here. There is one important fea-

ture of Newberry's resignation that remains to be discussed. It is

the effect on Orton's outlook. He was made the president of

Antioch College, as was previously mentioned in 1872. In 1873

he was called to the first presidency of the Ohio Agricultural and

Mechanical College. He accepted the position and continued to

head the Geological Survey as soon as Newberry's resignation had

been accepted. As college president, he directed his effort with

the legislature to altering the nature of the new institution. The

inspiration for this came from the most broadly educated man with

whom Orton had become acquainted, John Newberry. The caution

with which he approached the legislature, always wary of too much

education, was gleaned from the mishap to Newberry's survey.

Newberry had tried to separate the fundamental geology from the

practical applications and discovered that those interested in "re-

sults" only, could not wait until the basic studies were ready.

Orton, as college administrator, had the advantage of the colleges,

with their practical implications, having been founded first. Know-

ing the impossibility of practical application without something to

apply, he successfully tackled the legislature until the college had

become a university. Thus the shadow of Newberry looms large

across the achievements in learning made by Ohio State Univer-

sity. Orton, as is well known, having gained his ends and seen the

university established, resigned the presidency in 1881 to go on in

geology. In this, too, he followed John Newberry.

It has been noted that Newberry was an incorporator of the

National Academy of Sciences and president in 1867 of the Amer-

ican Association for the Advancement of Science. There were two

New York organizations to which he also added luster. Each of

these organizations has been chronicled by the foremost botanical

bibliographer, John Hendley Barnhart. The Torrey Botanical So-

ciety owed its origin to Dr. Torrey's many-sided scientific en-

deavors. Originally it had been known to its friends and members

as "the Club." Not until about the time of Torrey's death did it



344 OHIO ARCHAEOLOGICAL AND HISTORICAL QUARTERLY

344    OHIO ARCHAEOLOGICAL AND HISTORICAL QUARTERLY

have formal organization. The first president was Dr. George

Thurber, who was followed, after about seven years, by Dr. New-

berry. From 1880 to 1890 "Newberry was the president of the

club for ten prosperous years."19 In addition to the Bulletin, the

Memoirs were inaugurated during his presidency and plans for

the New York Botanical Garden were projected. Newberry was

also president of the New York Academy of Sciences.20  During

his term of office the name of the organization was changed from

the old Lyceum. It also became somewhat ambulatory in its place

of meeting until safely lodged with Newberry and N. L. Britton21

in the college library building of Columbia College. Dr. Britton,

later to become the Director of the New York Botanical Garden,

presented a communication paving the way for a Scientific Alli-

ance which in turn led to the more expanded New York Academy

of Sciences as incorporated in 1907 with its close relation to the

American Museum of Natural History. In all of this Dr. New-

berry's advice and counsel had been sought and he had offered

the guiding voice initiating these actions. As in Orton's case, it

appears that Dr. Britton owed much to his association with New-

berry. When, in 1867, Newberry had been called to the presidency

of the A. A. A. S. his address22 bore the title "Modern Scientific

Investigation: Its Method and Tendencies." Here he was review-

ing the rapid changes in viewpoint in the twenty years since he

had been a medical student. The same principles by which he had

progressed were now valuable as the guiding aims for the closest

associates he ever had, Orton and Britton. Both Ohio State Uni-

versity and the New York Botanical Garden benefited.

Another interesting contribution to the natural science of Ohio

was mentioned at the beginning of this paper, namely the first

State catalog of plants of Ohio. The full story of recording the

plant life of Ohio is too long for discussion here. Newberry's

paper was first presented at the Ohio State Medical Society con-

vention in Cincinnati in 1854. Two years previously, at the June,

19 J. H. Barnhart, Reprinted from the Memoirs of the Torrey Botany Club, XVII,

12-21.

20 Id., reprinted from the Scientific Monthly (New York), Nov., 1917.

21 N. L. Britton, "Sketch of John S. Newberry with Portrait," Torrey Bulletin,

XX (1893), No. 3, p. 89.

22 Reprinted in the 9th number of the American Naturalist.



OHIO MEDICAL HISTORY, 1835-58 345

OHIO MEDICAL HISTORY, 1835-58               345

 

1852, meeting, where Dr. Kirtland had presided in the absence of

Dr. Boerstler of Lancaster, Dr. Robert Thompson of Columbus

had read an address on the subject of medical literature and had

referred to Drake and his "Botanicals" and to the study of the flora

made by Sullivant23 and Bigelow.24 At this meeting Dr. New-

berry was made a member of a committee on medical literature,

presumably to investigate medicinal plants. In 1859-1860 the Cata-

logue of the Flowering Plants and Ferns of Ohio, by J. S. New-

berry was published. He states in the introduction,

The following catalogue was presented and ordered to be published

at the meeting in Cincinnati in 1854, but by a miscarriage in the mail was not

included in the proceedings of that meeting. That report embraced a brief

exposition of the generalities of the geographical botany of Ohio . . . also

from a point of view more strictly medical, a notice of some of the remedial

agents included in our flora.

These remarks flatly contradict the later statement by John

Klippart, who, as editor, included an introduction to the second

catalog published in 1878.25  In this Klippart implied that he, not

Newberry, had prepared the material of the first catalog. As the

second catalog was published after Newberry had shown his in-

ability to appease the legislature on the manner of conducting the

Geological Survey in which Klippart was an assistant, the attack

seems merely to be a bit of personal malevolence. It is a peculiar

irony that Newberry, who had given so much to Ohio, should have

been attacked enviously by Ohio citizens.

Two other honors came to him before the close of his noble

career. The last, the presidency of the International Geologists

Association in 1891, reached him after he was too ill to preside.

In 1888, he was presented the Murchison Medal by the Geological

Society of London. He was the first American to be chosen for

this coveted award. The words of the citation furnish a fitting

close for this paper:  "He is a geologist keen of eye, stout of

 

23 Flora of Franklin County.

24 Florula Lancastriensis.

25 H. C. Beardslee, "Catalogue of the Plants of Ohio," Ohio Agricultural Report,

1877 (Columbus, 1878), 335-63.



346 OHIO ARCHAEOLOGICAL AND HISTORICAL QUARTERLY

346       OHIO ARCHAEOLOGICAL AND HISTORICAL QUARTERLY

limb, with a due sense of the value of detail, but with a breadth

of vision that keeps detail in due subordination."26

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

26 Additional source material, not included in the footnote references previously

given are:

(1) James Furman Kemp, "In Memoriam John Strong Newberry. Two Portraits

on Steel and a Bibliography Chiefly Prepared by Dr. Newberry in 1889," Columbia

School of Mines Quarterly, I, No. 6.

(2) Sketch of Newberry in A History of Columbia University (New  York, 1904).

(3) A catalog of the most important scientific writings of Newberry is in the

Surgeon General's Catalog at Washington, D. C.