John Cassin

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John Cassin
Cassin John 1813-1869.jpg
Born September 6, 1813
Upper Providence Township, Pennsylvania, U.S.
Died 10 January 1869 (1869-01-11) (aged 55)
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, U.S.
Resting place Laurel Hill Cemetery, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, U.S.
Fields Ornithology, Naturalist
Known for

John Cassin (September 6, 1813 – January 10, 1869) was an American ornithologist from Pennsylvania. He worked as curator and vice president at the Philadelphia Academy of Natural Sciences and focused on the systemic classification of the academy's extensive collection of birds. He was one of the founders of the Delaware County Institute of Science and published several books describing 194 new species of birds. Five species of North American birds, a cicada, and a mineral are named in his honor.

Early life and education

Cassin was born in Upper Providence Township, Pennsylvania on September 6, 1813. He was educated at the Westtown School in Westtown Township, Pennsylvania.[1] His great Uncle, John Cassin, was a commodore in the U.S. Navy and served in the War of 1812.[2]

He served in the Union Army during the American Civil War and was held prisoner in the infamous Confederate Libby Prison in Richmond, Virginia.[3]

Career

Cassin moved to Philadelphia in 1834 and became the head of a lithographing business in which many of his illustrations of birds were later printed.[4] He served for a brief time in the Philadelphia City Council.[5] He was a member of the Zoological Society, the American Philosophical Society and the Pennsylvania Historical Society.[2]

In 1833, Cassin, along with 4 colleagues, founded the Delaware County Institute of Science in Media, Pennsylvania.[6]

In 1842, he was elected curator of the Philadelphia Academy of Natural Sciences.[4] From 1846 to 1850, Thomas Bellerby Wilson, a wealthy patron of the academy, became interested in the department of ornithology and procured a collection of over 25,000 birds.[7] The academy had the largest ornithological collection in the United States at the time and included an extensive collection of non-North American species.[8] This exceptional collection of birds allowed Cassin to become the leading ornithological taxonomist in the world.[2]

Cassin worked almost exclusively at the academy, focused on research and the systematic classification of species rather than field work.[9] He described 194 new species of birds[7] and revised a number of families in the academy's publications. His publications include Birds of California, with descriptions and colored engravings of fifty species; Synopsis of the Birds of North America; Ornithology of the United States Exploring Expedition; Ornithology of the Japan Expedition; Ornithology of Gillis's Astronomical Expedition to Chile; and chapters on raptorial birds and waders in Ornithology of the Pacific Railroad Explorations and Surveys.[10] He also co-authored Birds of North America (1860) with Spencer Fullerton Baird and George Newbold Lawrence.

Specimens collected from the Pacific Railroad Surveys and the Mexican Boundary Surveys were sent to the academy and further supplemented the collection. Cassin helped revise the publications that arose from these surveys.[11]

Martha Maxwell was a student of Cassin at the Academy of Natural Sciences from 1862 to 1869.[12]

Cassin was elected vice president of the Academy of Natural Sciences in 1864.[4]

He died in 1869 of arsenic poisoning caused by his handling of bird skins preserved with arsenic.[13] His collection of 4,300 birds was purchased for $500, equivalent to $8,889 in 2021 dollars, by John Whipple Potter Jenks for Brown University's museum of natural history.[14]

He is buried at Laurel Hill Cemetery in Philadelphia.[2]

Legacy

Five birds from North America are named in his honor: the Cassin's auklet, Cassin's kingbird, Cassin's vireo, Cassin's sparrow, and Cassin's finch.[15] The periodic cicada Magicicada cassini and the mineral orthoclase variety cassinite are also named for him.[1]

In 1901, the journal of the Delaware Valley Ornithological Club was renamed Cassinia in his honor.[16]

Bibliography

References

Citations

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  4. 4.0 4.1 4.2 Stone 1901, p. 1.
  5. Stone 1901, pp. 1-2.
  6. Ashmead 1884, pp. 601-602.
  7. 7.0 7.1 Stone 1901, p. 3.
  8. Barrow 1998, p. 24.
  9. Stone 1901, p. 4.
  10. Ashmead 1884, pp. 673-675.
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  12. Barrow 1998, p. 43.
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Sources

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External links

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