J.W. Spencer (1851-1921): his life in Canada, and his work on preglacial river valleys.SUMMARY J.W. Spencer, born and buried in Dundas, Ontario
In Canada, collegiate institute has a more specific meaning. In 1871 the province of Ontario set up two parallel secondary education systems. (Fig. 1) in 1876. In 1877 he submitted his thesis on Michigan copper deposits to the university at G6ttingen, Germany and that summer he visited the university, passed his oral examinations and was awarded the Ph.D., becoming the second Canadian to earn a doctorate in geology. In 1880 he became Professor at King's College King's College, former name of Columbia Univ. , Windsor, Nova Scotia Windsor is a small town located in central Nova Scotia at the junction of the Avon and St. Croix Rivers. It is the largest community in western Hants County with a 2001 population of 3,778 and was at one time the shire town of the county. . He concentrated his geological studies on the region around his birthplace at the head of Lake Ontario: at first mainly Paleozoic geology and paleontology paleontology (pā'lēəntŏl`əjē) [Gr.,= study of early beings], science of the life of past geologic periods based on fossil remains. , but by 1880 he had switched decisively to surficial sur·fi·cial adj. Of, relating to, or occurring on or near the surface of the earth. [surf(ace) + (superf)icial.] Adj. 1. geology, particularly the preglacial Pre`gla´cial a. 1. (Geol.) Prior to the glacial or drift period. drainage of Lakes Erie and Ontario. In 1880 he travelled extensively in the United States United States, officially United States of America, republic (2005 est. pop. 295,734,000), 3,539,227 sq mi (9,166,598 sq km), North America. The United States is the world's third largest country in population and the fourth largest country in area. and attended the AAAS AAAS American Association for the Advancement of Science. meeting in Boston, where he met J.P. Lesley, who encouraged him to continue his studies of preglacial rivers. In 1882 he accepted a position as Professor and Director of the Museum of Natural History at the University of Missouri. [FIGURE 1 OMMITED] RESUME J.W. Spencer qui est ne eta ete inhume in·hume tr.v. in·humed, in·hum·ing, in·humes To place in a grave; bury. [French inhumer, from Old French, from Latin inhum chez chez prep. At the home of; at or by. [French, from Old French, from Latin casa, cottage, hut.] chez prep at the home of [French] lui a Dundas en Ontario a ete un geomorphologue canadien qui a fait oeuvre de pionnier. Apres avoir ete 5. l'ecole a Dundas, il a demenage 5. Hamilton ou il a travaille dans une pharmacie, et c'est a ce moment que des geologues amateurs l'ont encourage a aller de l'avant. Il a frequente l'Universite McGill de 1871 a 1874, oh il a recu les enseignements de William Dawson et dc Bernard Harrington, et suivi avec succes la formation du programme nouvellement refondu en sciences appliquees. Durant l'ete de 1874, il a ete l'assistant de Robert Bell Robert Bell may refer to:
adj. 1. a. Characterized by or having power and authority vested equally among colleagues: "He . . . Hamilton (Fig. 1). En 1877, il a soumis sa these sur les gisements de cuivre du Michigan a l'universite de G6ttingen en Allemagne, et durant l'ete il s'est rendu a l'universite, y a passe pas·sé adj. 1. No longer current or in fashion; out-of-date. 2. Past the prime; faded or aged. [French, past participle of passer, to pass, from Old French; see ses examens oraux, puis a obtenu son Ph.D., devenant le deuxieme Canadien a obtenir un doctorat en geologie. En 1880, il est devenu professeur au King's College, a Windsor en Nouvelle-Ecosse. Il a concentre Verb 1. concentre - bring into focus or alignment; to converge or cause to converge; of ideas or emotions concenter, focalise, focalize, focus align, aline, adjust, line up - place in a line or arrange so as to be parallel or straight; "align the car with ses recherches geologiques sur la region de son lieu de naissance, a la source du lac Ontario : il s'est d'abord principalement interesse la geologie et a la paleontologie du Paldozoique, mais en 1880 ses interets avaient carrement change pour se porter sur la geologie de la surface, particulierement le drainage preglaciaire des lacs Ontario et Erie. En 1880, il a beaucoup beau·coup also boo·coo or boo·koo Chiefly Southern U.S. adj. Many; much: beaucoup money. n. pl. voyage aux Etats-Unis, participant au congres de I'AAAS (association etasunienne pour l'avancement des sciences) a Boston, ou il a rencontre Ren`con´tre n. 1. Same as Rencounter, n. os> J. E Lesley qui l'a encourage a continuer ses recherches sur les cours d'eau prd-glaciaires. En 1882, il a accepte un poste de professeur et de directeur au musee d'histoire The Marseille History Museum, houses artifacts of Marseille's Greek and Roman past, as well as the world's most fully recovered hull of a 6th century boat. Also of interest is a display of Provence's fossils which record 400 million years of the area's natural history, a gallery naturelle de l'Universite du Missouri. ********** SPENCER'S EARLY LIFE AND EDUCATION Joseph Winthrop Spencer is probably unknown to most Canadian geologists, though the name may be familiar to some who have worked on the Quaternary quaternary /qua·ter·nary/ (kwah´ter-nar?e) 1. fourth in order. 2. containing four elements or groups. qua·ter·nar·y adj. 1. Consisting of four; in fours. of the Great Lakes region The Great Lakes region can refer to:
A geological survey of Canada published his book-length study of the origin of Niagara Falls Niagara Falls, waterfall, United States and Canada Niagara Falls, in the Niagara River, W N.Y. and S Ont., Canada; one of the most famous spectacles in North America. The falls are on the international line between the cities of Niagara Falls, N.Y. (Spencer, 1907). Spencer taught high school in Hamilton, and was later a Professor at King's College in Windsor, Nova Scotia, but in 1882, at the age of 31, be left Canada for an appointment at the University of Missouri. He also served as State Geologist for Missouri and Georgia, before settling as a consultant geologist in Washington, D.C. Throughout his life he travelled widely, and often visited Canada to carry out further field investigations. In 1919 he returned for good, intending to live in Toronto, but died on October 9, 1921, before he could take possession of his new home. Spencer was born in Dundas on March 26, 1851, and is buried there, in the family grave. He was the great grandson Noun 1. great grandson - a son of your grandson or granddaughter great grandchild - a child of your grandson or granddaughter of Robert Spencer
Adam Barrington Spencer (Born in 1970 in Gladesville, New South Wales) is an Australian radio DJ and media personality. He first came to fame when he won his round of the comedic talent search Raw Comedy in the mid 1990s. , ?1775-1815), moved to Dundas about 1828, and in 1834 his father built the Gore Grist Mills in Dundas, on the creek, known ever since as Spencer's Creek. Joseph, Jr. was his only son, and Joseph Sr. died by falling from the roof of the mill only a few months after his son's birth (Woodhouse, 1965, Part 2, p.5-6). The son, christened Joseph William, grew up in Dundas with his mother and five elder sisters, and was one of the first pupils to attend the new Union School, built in 1857. He became interested in natural history and chemistry, in part because of the setting of his home, near the head of the Dundas valley, and in part because of the influence of his teacher, J. Howard Hunter Howard Hunter can refer to:
A security analysis that uses financial information derived from company annual reports and income statements to evaluate an investment decision. Notes: and all the while making short field trips, commonly with his teacher, who shared his enthusiasm ..." About this time (1866), Spencer completed his school education, and he and his mother moved to Hamilton, where one of his married sisters (Annie Warren) also lived. Spencer went to work as an assistant at "T. Bickle, Retail and Wholesale Chemist" (see Sources and Notes), and began to associate with a group of Hamilton amateur geologists, at least two of whom (Col. Grant, and D.EH. Wilkins) were prominent in the Hamilton Association for the Advancement of Literature, Science and Art (Armstrong, 1958). Grant was a well-known fossil collector (Hewitt, 1986); for Wilkins see Sources and Notes. In 1871 Spencer left for McGill University. He graduated in 1874 from the new program in Applied Science, obtaining a B.A.Sc. "with First Rank in Geology and Mineralogy mineralogy Scientific study of minerals, including their physical properties, chemical composition, internal crystal structure, occurrence and distribution in nature, and origins or conditions of formation. ." His teachers certainly included William Dawson and Bernard Harrington. Shaw (1924) claimed that Sterry Hunt and Elkanah Billings were also among his teachers, but Hunt taught at McGill only until 1868, and left in 1872 to become Professor at MIT MIT - Massachusetts Institute of Technology (Zaslow, 1975, p.102; Boyle, 1993), and Billings never held an appointment at McGill (Clark, 1971), so if Spencer received instruction from them, it must have been informally. Shaw also claimed that Spencer won a Dufferin medal (the forerunner of the present Governor General's medals) but McGill has no record of this, and Spencer himself never claimed it. Spencer clearly adopted William Dawson as a surrogate father: he was strongly influenced by his views, particularly as regards glaciation (see below), corresponded with him faithfully until 1895, sought his assistance in obtaining teaching positions, and depended on him for advice, and for the loan of books, papers, and surveying equipment. Following graduation, Spencer worked for the summer of 1874 for the Geological Survey of Canada as assistant to Robert Bell in the new Province of Manitoba (Shaw, 1924). The scientific results from this field season were meagre mea·ger also mea·gre adj. 1. Deficient in quantity, fullness, or extent; scanty. 2. Deficient in richness, fertility, or vigor; feeble: the meager soil of an eroded plain. 3. , but Robert Bell remained a friend for life. If Dawson was Spencer's surrogate father, Bell was his surrogate elder brother: his letters to Bell were more forthright, and extended from 1874 to about 1910 (luckily for historians, Bell never threw away any papers, not even letters marked "Destroy after Reading"! There is a break in the correspondence between March 1889 and December 1893: perhaps this resulted from their divergent views about glaciation). Returning to Ontario in the fall, Spencer was unable to find work because of the recession then in progress. In June 1875 he left for Marquette, Michigan Marquette is a city in the U.S. state of Michigan. As of the 2000 census, the city population was 19,661, with the a 2005 population estimate of 20,714. It is the county seat of Marquette County6. , and was hired as assistant to Luther G. Emerson, an engineer working for several of the native copper mines in the Upper Michigan Peninsula (BP, Sept. 12, 1875; see also Lankton, 1991). This work later became the basis of his doctorate degree. By the end of the year he was back in Canada, again searching unsuccessfully for work. 1876 was not a good year for Spencer: his brother in law (Peter Warren Peter Warren may refer to:
TEACHING APPOINTMENT IN HAMILTON In a letter to Bell (BP, Nov. 23, 1876), Spencer complained that he "... received the promise of a Mastership in Upper Canada College Upper Canada College (UCC) is a private elementary and secondary school for boys in downtown Toronto, Canada. Students between Senior Kindergarten and Grade Twelve study under the International Baccalaureate program. at a salary of $1000, board and lodging, etc ..." but when he returned to Hamilton in the fall "... there had been a dispute in the Council and some of the members would not allow my appointment because 'a McGill man must not deprive a Toronto man when the two are even' ..." Early in 1877, he wrote again describing his appointment at HCI: "The salary ... was the paltry sum of $600 but raised to $700 and with the standing of ... head of a department. There are fourteen teachers ... I have four classes in Chemistry, Physiology, Physical Geography physical geography: see geography. , and shortly Geology, Botany, Zoology zoology, branch of biology concerned with the study of animal life. From earliest times animals have been vitally important to man; cave art demonstrates the practical and mystical significance animals held for prehistoric man. and Physics. In the meantime Adv. 1. in the meantime - during the intervening time; "meanwhile I will not think about the problem"; "meantime he was attentive to his other interests"; "in the meantime the police were notified" meantime, meanwhile I have a class in Latin and others in History and Geography [it is not clear how that adds up to four!] ... I am going to try and make this the best science school in the Province outside of University College." (BP, Jan. 21, 1877). The headmaster at HCI was George Dickson, and Spencer lodged with him during his first term of teaching. Though Dickson was trained in classical languages, he had a strong interest in geology. Beginning in 1873, he was active on the executive of the Hamilton Association, and was the first chair of the Geological Section established in 1883 (Armstrong, 1958). He was successful in making HCI one of the leading high schools in Ontario, and in 1885 he was appointed Principal of Upper Canada College (Rose, 1888). He lost this position in the reorganization of 1895, but with his wife, he founded St. Margaret's College for women, where he remained President until his death in 1910 (Morgan, 1912). He and Spencer remained friends for many years after Spencer left Hamilton. While he was at HCI, Spencer certainly knew and taught Chemistry to Andrew Lawson Andrew Cowper Lawson (1861-1952) was a professor of geology at the University of California, Berkeley. He was the editor of the 1908 report on the 1906 San Francisco Earthquake which became known as the "Lawson Report". , who was raised in Hamilton, Ontario, and was a star pupil at HCI from December 1878 until June 1880. Lawson worked part-time for the Hamilton Spectator, and considered becoming a journalist, or a medical doctor. A summer position as legal journalist in Montreal, and attendance at two courses at McGill soon convinced him that he was not cut out for either profession. In the fall he enrolled at the University of Toronto Research at the University of Toronto has been responsible for the world's first electronic heart pacemaker, artificial larynx, single-lung transplant, nerve transplant, artificial pancreas, chemical laser, G-suit, the first practical electron microscope, the first cloning of T-cells, , and after working as an assistant to Robert Bell in 1882 in the Prairies (Lawson, 1926), he decided to become a geologist. He worked three more field seasons (in the Lake-of-the-Woods region), completed his M.Sc. in 1885, and was hired full-time by the Geological Survey. In 1890, after resigning from the Survey, he accepted a position at the University of California The University of California has a combined student body of more than 191,000 students, over 1,340,000 living alumni, and a combined systemwide and campus endowment of just over $7.3 billion (8th largest in the United States). in Berkeley, where he remained for the rest of his long life (Vaughan, 1970). Though there is little evidence that be was influenced by Spencer, he is known to have presented a paper in 1885 to the Hamilton Association entitled "The physical development of the Niagara escarpment The Niagara Escarpment is a long escarpment or cuesta in the United States and Canada that runs westward from New York State, through Ontario, Michigan, Wisconsin and Illinois. ." This address was never published and the manuscript cannot be found in the Hamilton Association papers, or in Lawson's papers at Berkeley. As a means of obtaining a better appointment, Spencer began to improve his professional credentials. In 1877, with the help of Dawson and Bell, he became a Fellow of the Geological Society of London The Geological Society of London is a learned society based in the United Kingdom with the aim of "investigating the mineral structure of the Earth". It is the oldest national geological society in the world and the largest in Europe with over 9000 Fellows entitled to the , and he began to write up his Michigan work as a thesis to be submitted to the University of Gettingen, in Germany. Why Gettingen? The school was perhaps recommended to him by Bernard Harrington, his chemistry instructor at McGill. When Harrington completed his doctorate at Yale in 1871, it was perhaps the leading centre of geological studies in the USA. Clarence King, who later became Director of the U.S. Geological Survey, graduated there in 1863, and so did Arnold Hague, who spent the following three years studying in Germany, where he met another American, S.F. Emmons (Middleton, 2003; see also Geschwind, 1994). Their experiences were certainly transmitted to Harrington's instructors at Yale: none of Spencer's other friends and mentors had any experience of German universities. Obtaining a doctorate was not then the arduous task that it later became. Even at famous German universities, a doctorate was earned mainly by passing qualifying exams, and by writing and defending a thesis. Spencer wrote to Dawson (DL, Oct. 31,1879): "Six months before I went to Germany, the College Authorities accepted my Monograph on the Copper-Bearing Rocks as my thesis. And then, sending my application and sketches of my life in Latin, I was admitted to the examinations for the degree on the 20th of July 1877. The special subjects of the oral were Geology (particularly Paleontology) and Mineralogy, as the leading subjects, with Natural History as secondary." Spencer wrote his thesis in English and spent less than two months in Germany (McGill archives, letter to Harrington, May 30, 1877). When the thesis work was published in Canadian Naturalist however (Spencer, 1878a), Spencer acknowledges the assistance of Emerson and Bell, but does not mention any of the instructors at Gottingen. After his second visit to Europe (in 1886) he wrote (BP, Sept. 27, 1886): "When I was in Europe before, I came home without any wish to go back again." During the three years that he taught at HCI, Spencer was hard at work on the geology of Southern Ontario. He published his first papers first papers pl.n. The documents first filed by one applying for U.S. citizenship. , which as well as his thesis included a paper on the taxonomy of the local graptolire fauna (Spencer, 1878b; based largely on specimens collected by Colonel Grant); began to prepare a series of papers on the Paleozoic geology; and most important of all, began to take a keen interest in the local gcomorphology and surficial geology. He took a particular interest in the origin of the Dundas valley, where the well records revealed a gorge buried deep beneath the present valley. He wrote to Bell (BP, Apr. 21, 1879): "... either there must have been a deep gorge scooped out by the close of the Pliocene, or else there is evidence of glacial action, and the Dundas valley, so[?] near to the lake, must have been a sort of fiord." In March of that year, he wrote to Dawson (DP, Mar. 17, 1879): "... I am hoping to work up the subject. I have the use of surveying instruments, and I hope with the fine weather to collect all the facts I can, and get the accurate levels, so as to work up the geology of the head of Lake Ontario." Dawson, after reading the list of all Spencer's activities (which included giving private lessons in geology to the Rev. Samuel Lyle, of Central Presbyterian Church Located on the northeast corner of Brazos and Bois d'Arc (now Eighth Street), Central Presbyterian Church in Austin Texas traces its roots to the organization of the first Presbyterian church in Austin on Sunday, October 13, 1839. That event, conducted by Rev. , Hamilton: see Sources and Notes) wrote back: "I fear ... that you are working too hard. Be cautious lest you overtask your brain." In a paper, published a few years later (Spencer, 1882, p. 229) Spencer recalled: "Having procured all the levels that ... were available, it became necessary to connect several places myself by instrumental measurements, which work was accomplished with the aid of Prof. Wilkins ... [so that by 1880] the proof that the ancient Grand river flowed down the Dundas valley was completed ..." PROFESSOR AT KING'S COLLEGE, WINDSOR, NOVA SCOTIA Despite his ambitions for science at the Hamilton Collegiate Institute, Spencer actively sought a better position. Already on August 27, 1878, Spencer had written to Dawson asking for a letter of support for his application for a position in Natural Sciences at the University of Virginia. In 1879, Henry How, a well known mineralogist min·er·al·o·gy n. pl. min·er·al·o·gies 1. The study of minerals, including their distribution, identification, and properties. 2. A book or treatise on mineralogy. and Professor at King's College, in Nova Scotia, died and the college began to look for a replacement (Vroom, 1941, p. 103-125). Kings was a small Anglican university, located at Windsor N.S. (Fig. 2): it later moved to Halifax and became part of Dalhousie University. Dawson wrote to the Principal, Professor Dart, recommending Spencer, and in October Spencer reported that he sent further testimonials from Dr. Harrington (Director of Applied Science at McGill), Dr. Robert Bell, and Mr. A.R.C. Selwyn (the Director of GSC GSC gas-solid chromatography. ). Letters had also been sent by Howard Hunter (he had moved from Dundas to become Principal at Brantford high school), and George Dickson. The Rev. James Carmichael, Rector of the Church of the Ascension Church of the Ascension is a name shared by a number of churches in North America:
v. bap·tized, bap·tiz·ing, bap·tiz·es v.tr. 1. To admit into Christianity by means of baptism. 2. a. To cleanse or purify. b. To initiate. 3. in the Anglican Church in Dundas (the baptismal records are held at McMaster University). Spencer's change from his family's Methodism to Anglicanism, however, was not a conversion of convenience: he remained a committed Anglican throughout his life (Shaw, 1924). [FIGURE 2 OMITTED] Spencer wrote to Dawson (DP, Oct. 31, 1879) : "I preferred the position from the fact that I would have nothing but Science to teach, and be quite independent of that miserable Central Committee in Toronto. And again, it would be easier to get a still higher position, at some future day, even from a small college. Moreover my work ought to be pleasanter for I could shape my own courses." He also mentioned that, should a position open up at the University of Toronto, he would be a candidate. This is the first of many references in his letters to his ambition to replace Edward J. Chapman as Professor of Geology in Toronto. After 1885, Spencer was discretely assisted in this ambition by George Dickson, who as Principal of Upper Canada College, was on the Board of the University of Toronto. Chapman had been serving there since 1853, but in fact he did not retire until 1895! In March 1880 Spencer was apparently already at King's College. He wrote to Dawson (DP, Mar. 4, 1880): "I have very comfortable class rooms now ... I like [President Dart] very much indeed. So also the Prof. of Math. whose room is next to mine and consequently see every day ... [the college has] gone to about $400 expenses for my dept. since I came, but I expect to get no more out of them." Nevertheless that summer he considered applying for a position to teach Geology, Zoology and Botany at Queen's University in Kingston, Ontario: as we will see, he soon became disillusioned dis·il·lu·sion tr.v. dis·il·lu·sioned, dis·il·lu·sion·ing, dis·il·lu·sions To free or deprive of illusion. n. 1. The act of disenchanting. 2. The condition or fact of being disenchanted. with the Board of Governors at King's, and with President Dart. He started to prepare his studies at the head of Lake Ontario as a large monograph in three parts. He returned from Nova Scotia to carry out an ambitious series of field studies, and wrote to Bell (BP, Nov. 18, 1880): "I had a good expedition up the Assemetquagan River, Quebec [a tributary of the Matapedia River in Gaspesie], visited my friends ... at Brampton Falls, Montreal, Ottawa, Kingston, Toronto, Brantford, three or four smaller places, Detroit, Cleveland, Albany, and Boston, where the AAAS meeting was held for nine days. I met lots of eminent people, made a number of nice friends, and have lots of invitations to the States, even as far south as Georgia for Christmas ..." At the AAAS meeting in Boston, he met J.P. Lesley, the Director of the Pennsylvania Geological Survey The first Pennsylvania Geological Survey was created in 1836, making it one of the oldest geological surveys in the United States. It was followed by the Second Survey[1] , and a prominent geologist with a special interest in fluvial flu·vi·al adj. 1. Of, relating to, or inhabiting a river or stream. 2. Produced by the action of a river or stream. [Middle English, from Latin geomorphology geomorphology, study of the origin and evolution of the earth's landforms, both on the continents and within the ocean basins. It is concerned with the internal geologic processes of the earth's crust, such as tectonic activity and volcanism that constructs new (Chorley et al., 1964, p. 346-354). Lesley encouraged Spencer's interest in buried river valleys, and was perhaps more influential than any other person in determining Spencer's future research. On February 3, 1881, he wrote to Lesley: "My paper on the Preglacial drainage is nearly ready ..." And he wrote to Bell (BP, Feb. 19, 1881): "When you see the proofs you will be astonished. The work was carefully done with levels by the railways and myself. It is the best thing I ever did." On March 1, 1881, he wrote again to Lesley: "At last, I have finished a manuscript for you ... After having printed this, I will supplement it next year ... and I will try and make the two papers contain my whole study of the Preglacial Drainage. I think I have a clue to the outlet of Lake Ontario, but of course it is more theoretical at present than based on my own observations. But next summer I will try and work out the truth." "Since seeing you, new life has been infused into my work. Living in this isolated region, one is very apt to get in a state of lethargy, when he never or rarely meets scientific men, and all reading is rather dry, after one's college duties are over for the day ... [at Boston] I think that you impressed in me more enthusiasm than all others, and so, if for nothing else, my visit to Philadelphia [during the Christmas vacation of 1880] amply rewarded me for the long journey." The paper that Spencer referred to was his "Discovery of the Preglacial outlet of the Basin of Lake Erie ..." which was published in the Proceedings of the American Philosophical Society Proceedings of the American Philosophical Society is a quarterly philosophy journal published by the American Philosophical Society since 1838. External links
[FIGURE 3 OMITTED] >From this time on, Spencer set aside most of his other interests and concentrated on the geologically recent [i.e., post-Pliocene] history of the Great Lakes. The summer of 1881 was spent in an even more extensive field season in southern Ontario and upper New York New York, state, United States New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of State, and ended at another AAAS meeting, that year in Cincinnati, Ohio. In June he wrote to Bell (BP, June 12, 1881): "I would like to devote my whole time for a year or two to Fluvial Geology of America. It is a magnificent new field of enquiry." Though he did eventually carry out his program of fieldwork, many years were to pass before Spencer developed his mature thoughts on this subject (for a short summary of his later views on the modern Great Lake basins, see Spencer, 1890, from which an illustration is provided here as Fig. 4). [FIGURE 4 OMITTED] However, King's College was in the early stages of a major upheaval, which has been well documented recently in articles by Roper (e.g., 1999). Spencer was only marginally involved, but felt that he had been misled and betrayed by President Dart. Even though he had been promoted to Vice-President, he reported to Dawson in the spring of 1882 (DP, April 5, 1882): "I have long been intending to go to the States, if I cannot do better here ... I have Friends ... trying to give me a position at Georgia State University." The Georgia appointment came several years later, but by September 1882 he had left Canada for an appointment at the State University, in Columbia, Missouri (at a salary of $2000, substantially larger than anything that King's could offer). The position had been offered first to William Dawson himself, but he declined it and suggested Spencer. PRESENT STATUS OF RESEARCH INTO THE PREGLACIAL CHANNELS Though his letters indicate that he was prepared at first to consider a glacial origin for the Great Lake basins, Spencer soon came to believe that the basins were largely fluvial in origin, formed by a preglacial river system. He was ambivalent about whether or not they were ever filled by ice sheets during the Ice Age. He would admit they were somewhat modified by glacial abrasion and deposition, but he thought that ice sheets, if they existed, would have been quite thin and incapable of eroding the basins themselves. He mostly ascribed glacial striae to the action of floating ice, and even attributed many moraines to accumulations from stranded icebergs (in these ideas he was strongly influenced by William Dawson: cf. Brookes, 2002). Later he became strongly opposed to the theory that proglacial lakes were formed by the agency of huge glacial dams. Spencer's view that glaciers, particularly ice sheets, were incapable of major erosion was not unusual in the nineteenth century. It was shared by Charles Lyell, J.E Lesley, T.G. Bonney, and many other noted geologists, even after the publication of Ramsay's book (1863), which is often cited as establishing the power of glacial erosion (for documentation see the review in Totten and White, 1985; and Chapter 2 of Tesmer, 1989). Indeed, exactly how effective ice sheets are as erosive e·ro·sive adj. Causing erosion. agents was somewhat controversial even recently: for example, Chapman and Putnam (1984, p. 6) wrote: "The amount of erosion accomplished by the great Pleistocene glaciers is not subject to accurate measurement ... Most active erosion of the bedrock occurred on the brows of the escarpments and along the lowland routes taken by the principal streams of ice. The basins of Lakes Ontario, Huron and Superior extend to below sea level; as such scooping-out could not have been the work of a river, it is attributed to the glaciers, although this is the subject of some debate." Spencer pioneered in the discovery of field evidence for preglacial river valleys. These included the channel at the head of Lake Ontario (Dundas) and another crossing the Niagara peninsula south of St. Catharines. His view, based on his studies of bedrock topography, was that before the glacial period (widely believed at that time to be quite short), the Lake Erie and Ontario basins were river valleys, and that the river, which he called the Erigan River, originally flowed north up the Grand River valley Grand River Valley is a valley surrounding various rivers of that name in North America. One is in Canada:
Buried channels exist, and remain incompletely explained (for a summary of work carried out in the United States not long after Spencer, see Bork, 2003; for later work, Flint, 1971, p. 232-239). Spencer's overall scheme of drainage has been reproduced frequently, more recently (with sceptical comments) by Tinkler (1994). Later work has revealed a much longer, more complex history of glaciation than was known in the nineteenth century, so channels buried in drift may be interglacial in·ter·gla·cial adj. Occurring between glacial epochs. n. A comparatively short period of warmth during an overall period of glaciation. rather than preglacial. Nevertheless, Spencer's reconstruction of an ancient Great Lake river system, though regarded as speculative, was fairly generally accepted. After his work, little progress was made in Canada Made in Canada may also mean Country of origin. Made in Canada is a Canadian television situation comedy which aired on the CBC from 1998 to 2003. In the United States, France, Australia and Latin America, the show was syndicated as The Industry. for many years. Recently, Greenhouse and Monier-Williams (1986) showed, using geophysical methods, that the Dundas valley ends abruptly (perhaps at a waterfall) near Copetown (a few miles west of Dundas). Flint and Lolcama (1986) confirmed the existence of Spencer's Erigan channel (south of St. Catharines). The larger role of the Erigan River remains unclear. Some American workers (e.g., Hansen, 1987) have suggested that the buried Teays channels in Ohio, Indiana and Illinois, whose status as a major preglacial drainage system also remains controversial, may have originally flowed northeast into the Erigan system. ACKNOWLEDGMENTS I thank John Drake for drawing my attention to Spencer, and assisting materially in the early stages of research on his family and life. Archivists at McGill (especially Johanne Pelletier and Kathi Murphy), the National Archives of Canada, the American Philosophical Society American Philosophical Society, first scientific society in America, founded (1743) in Philadelphia. It was an outgrowth of the Junto formed (1727) by Benjamin Franklin. Franklin was the first secretary of the society, and Thomas Hopkinson the first president. , University of Manitoba Location The main Fort Garry campus is a complex on the Red River in south Winnipeg. It has an area of 2.74 square kilometres. More than 60 major buildings support the teaching and research programs of the university. (especially Brett Lougheed), McMaster University, the Hamilton Public Library The Hamilton Public Library (HPL) is a modern public library system that serves a population of more than 490,000 people in Hamilton, Ontario.[1] Once restricted to the city of Hamilton, the HPL service area was expanded when the outlying townships were , the Hamilton Educational Archives, and the Dundas Historical Museum (as well as several other libraries) were all very helpful. William Brisbin at the University of Manitoba, and Henry Roper at Dalhousie kindly supplied me with archival materials. Professors Otto Walliser and Dieter Meischner generously answered my queries about Spencer at Gottingen. I also thank my wife and friends for putting up with interminable reports about this study, my first real attempt at historical research, over the last three years. Comments from referees Ian A. Brookes and Randall E Miller helped improve the presentation. SOURCES AND NOTES Much of this article is based on archival (unpublished) sources. These include letters to William Dawson in the McGill archives (cited as DP, followed by the date of the letter), to Robert Bell in the National Archives (BP), and to J.P. Lesley in the American Philosophical Library in Philadelphia (LP). In quoting from the letters, I have standardized the spelling, capitalization, and punctuation. There is also an archive of Spencer's papers (SP) at the University of Manitoba, but unfortunately it includes almost no letters. The Canadian census of 1881 (available at http://www.familysearch.com), early Hamilton directories, and copies of Spencer's family's wills, have also been useful. A good bibliography of Spencer's publications is given by Shaw (1924), and the Bibliography of North American North American named after North America. North American blastomycosis see North American blastomycosis. North American cattle tick see boophilusannulatus. Geology gives an even more complete list. The only other obituary was a brief note by Holm (1921). Throughout his life, Spencer contributed to numerous Who's Who publications: the most informative entries are in the second edition (1910) of American Men of Science (Spencer was a "starred" geologist--meaning that the editors considered him to be among the top 100 geologist in America at that time); and in the first (1898) and second (1912) editions of Canadian Men and Women of the Time, edited by H.J. Morgan. Throughout his life Spencer always signed his letters and papers "J.W. Spencer." He was christened Joseph William, but some time before his marriage (in 1896) he apparently decided to use the name "Winthrop," because he believed he was descended from the family that included the first Governors of Massachusetts This is a list of the governors of Massachusetts who have presided over the Commonwealth of Massachusetts since 1780. Colonial Massachusetts
tr.v. en·graved, en·grav·ing, en·graves 1. To carve, cut, or etch into a material: engraved the champion's name on the trophy. 2. "J. Winthrop Spencer, Geologist," and the date of birth is given erroneously as 1850 (the same date is found in the first edition of Canadian Men and Women of the Time, but is corrected in the second edition). The medal later established by his wife as a memorial at the University of Manitoba is entitled the "Winthrop Spencer Gold Medal," awarded "for outstanding achievement in geological research by a student or graduate of the [university]." Recipients have included such well-known geologists as Thomas Oliver, Andrew Baillie, Peter Laznicka, and William Last. For Tristram Biclde and his son John Wesley Bickle see Anonymous (1981) and Katz (1975, p.196). James Carmichael (1835-1908) served as Rector of the Church of the Ascension, Hamilton, from 1878 to 1881. Before that he was an assistant at St. George's in Montreal. He became Bishop of Montreal in 1906 (K.M., 1991). Samuel Lyle (1841-1919) emigrated to Canada in 1877, and the next year was appointed pastor of Central Presbyterian Church in Hamilton. He became one of the leading Presbyterian clergymen in Canada. He admired German philosophy and scholarship, and was a spokesman for liberal Protestantism. He was active in the Hamilton Association and twice served as its President--which probably explains his interest in geology (Hanlon, 1991). David Francis Henry Wilkins (b. 1846) was a school teacher. When Spencer first met him he was teaching music in Hamilton. He attended McGill at about the same time as Spencer, and graduated in Applied Science a year after Spencer (McGill archives). He published five papers on geology, three in the Canadian Naturalist, two in the Journal and Proceedings of the Hamilton Association. In 1881 he was teaching in Chatham (census), and in 1890, when he published his last papers he was headmaster of Beamsville highschool (east of Hamilton). REFERENCES Anonymous, 1981, Bickle, John Wesley, in Bailey, T.M., ed., Dictionary of Hamilton Biography, W.L. Griffin, v. 1, p. 18-19. Armstrong, H.S., 1958, Geology in the Association, in MacBain, C.H., and others, 1958, The Hamilton Association for the Advancement of Literature, Science and Art: 100th Anniversary 1857-1957, Hamilton, Ontario, p. 41-51. Bork, K.B., 2003, New frontiers: The evolution Of William G. Tight William G. Tight (1865-1910) was an American geomorphologist who became president of the University of New Mexico (UNM). Tight was one of the first to decipher the glacial drainage histories of the Illinois, Indiana, Kentucky, Ohio, Virginia and West Virginia area, from geomorphologist to university president: Earth Sciences History, v. 22, p. 10-35. Boyle, R.W., 1993, Geochemistry at the Geological Survey of Canada, 1842-1952: Earth Sciences History, v. 12, p. 129-141. Brookes, I.A., 2002, GM Dawson and the glaciation of Western Canada: Geoscience ge·o·sci·ence n. Any one of the sciences, such as geology or geochemistry, that deals with the earth. ge Canada, v. 29, p. 169-178. Chapman, L.J., and Pumant, D.E, 1984, The Physiography of Southern Ontario: Third Edition, Ontario Geological Survey Special Volume 2, 270 p. Chorley, R.J., Dunn, A.J., and Beckinsale, R.P., 1964, The History of the Study of Landforms or the Development of Geomorphology: John Wiley and Sons, v. 1, 678 p. Clark, "T.H., 1971, Elkanah Billings (1820-1876)--Canada's first paleontologist. Geological Association of Canada The Geological Association of Canada promotes and develops the geological sciences in Canada. The organization holds conferences, meetings and exhibitions for the discussion of geological problems and the exchange of views in matters related to geology. Proceedings, v. 23, p. 11-14. Flint, J.J. and Lolcama, J., 1986. Buried ancestral drainage between Lake Erie and Ontario. Geological Society of America The Geological Society of America (or GSA) is a nonprofit organization dedicated to the advancement of the geosciences. The society was founded in New York in 1888 by James Hall, James D. , Bulletin, v. 97, p. 75-84. Flint, R.E, 1971, Glacial and Quaternary Geology: John Wiley and Sons, 892 p. Geschwlnd, C-H., 1994, The beginnings of microscopic petrography pe·trog·ra·phy n. The description and classification of rocks. pe·trog ra·pher n. in
the United States, 1870-1885. Earth Sciences History, v. 13, p. 35-46.Greenhouse, J.P. and Monier-Williams, M., 1986, A gravity survey of the Dundas buried valley west of Copetown, Ontario. Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences, v. 23, p. 110-114. Hanlon, P., 1991, Lyle, Samuel: in Bailey, T.M., ed., Dictionary of Hamilton Biography, WL. Griffin, v. 2, p. 95-99. Hansen, M.C., 1987, The Teays River: Ohio Division of Geological Survey, Ohio Geology, Summer issue, p. 1-6. Hewitt, R.A., 1986, Paleontological pa·le·on·tol·o·gy n. The study of the forms of life existing in prehistoric or geologic times, as represented by the fossils of plants, animals, and other organisms. work of Lt. Col. C.C. Grant on the Silurian rocks of the Niagara Escarpment at Hamilton, Ontario: Geoscience Canada, v. 13, no. 4, p. 270-276 Holm, T., 1921, Joseph Winthrop Spencer: American Journal of Science The American Journal of Science (AJS) is America's longest-running journal, having been published continuously since its conception in 1818, by Professor Benjamin Silliman, who edited and financed it himself. , ser.5, v. 2, p. 363-364. Katz, M.B., 1975, The People of Hamilton, Canada West: Family and Class in a Mid-Nineteenth Century City: Harvard University Press The Harvard University Press is a publishing house, a division of Harvard University, that is highly respected in academic publishing. It was established on January 13, 1913. In 2005, it published 220 new titles. , 381 p. K.M., 1991, Carmichael, James: In Bailey, T.M., ed., Dictionary of Hamilton Biography, W.L. Griffin, v. 2, p. 29-30. Lankton, L., 1991, Cradle to Grave: Life, Work, and Death at the Lake Superior Copper Mines: Oxford University Press, 319 p. Lawson, A.C., 1926, Out of beaten paths: University of California Chronicle, v. 28, p. 58-77. Middleton, G.V., 2003, Doctorate degrees earned by early Canadian geologists: Geoscience Canada, v. 30, p. 37-42. Morgan, H.J., ed., 1912, Dickson, Mrs. Mary H. in The Canadian Men and Women of the Time: A Hand-book of Canadian Biography of Living Characters: Toronto, William Briggs, Second edition, p. 328. Ramsay, A.C., 1863, The Physical Geology and Geography of Great Britain: London, Stanford, 145 p. Roper, H., 1999, The Bishop, the President and the Professor: Turmoil at the University of Kings College in the 1880s: Journal of the Royal Nova Scoria scoria: see pumice. scoria Heavy, dark, glassy igneous rock that contains many bubblelike cavities. Foamlike scoria, in which the bubbles are very thin shells of solidified basaltic magma, occurs as a product of explosive eruptions (as on Hawaii) Historical Society, v. 2, p. 94-117. Rose, G.M., ed., 1888, Dickson, George. in A Cyclopaedia of Canadian Biography, being chiefly Men of the Time: Toronto, Rose Publishing Co., p. 760-762. Shaw, E.W., 1924, Memorial of Joseph William Winthrop Spencer: Bulletin of the Geological Society of America, v. 35, p. 24-37. Spencer, J.W., 1878a, On the Nipigon or copper-bearing rocks of Lake Superior, with notes on copper mining in that region: Canadian Naturalist, new series, v. 8, p. 5581. Spencer, J.W., 1878b, Graptolites of the Niagara formation: Canadian Naturalist, new series, v. 8, p. 457-463. Spencer, J.W., 1881, Discovery of the preglacial outlet of the basin of Lake Erie into that of Lake Ontario: American Philosophical Society Proceedings, v. 19, p. 300-337. Spencer, J.W., 1882, Surface geology of the region about the western end of Lake Ontario: Canadian Naturalist, new series, v. 10, p. 213-236; 265-312. Spencer, J.W., 1890, Origin of the basins of the Great Lakes of America: Quarterly Journal of the Geological Society of London, v. 46, p. 523-531. Spencer, J.W., 1907, The Falls of Niagara, their Evolution and Varying Relations to the Great Lakes; Characteristics of the Power and the Effect of its Diversion: Geological Survey of Canada, 400 p. Tesmer, I.H., 1989, History of Geology The history of geology is concerned with the development of the natural science of geology. Geology is the scientific study of the origin, history, and structure of the Earth. of Westernmost New York State: SUNY SUNY - State University of New York College at Buffalo, 214 p. Tinkler, K.J., 1994, Deja vu: The downfall of Niagara Falls as a chronometer chronometer (krənŏm`ətər), instrument for keeping highly accurate time, used especially in navigation. Before the advent of radio time signals it was the only device that provided the time accurately enough for a ship at sea to , 1845-1941, in Gayler, H.J., ed., Niagara's Changing Landscapes, Ottawa, Carleton University Press, p. 81-109. Torten, S,M. and White, G.W. 1985, Glacial geology and the North American craton craton (krā`tŏn): see continent. : Significant concepts and contributions of the nineteenth century: Geological Society of America Centennial_Volume 1, p. 125-141. Vaughan, EE., 1970, Andrew C. Lawson: Scientist, Teacher, Philosopher: Arthur C. Clark, Glendale, CA, 474 p. Vroom, EW., 1941, King's College: A Chronicle: Imperial Publishing Company, Halifax. Woodhouse, T.R., 1965, History of the Town of Dundas: Dundas Historical Society, Dundas, Ontario, Part 1, 48 p.; Part 2, 48 p.; Part 3, 74 p. Zaslow, M., 1975, Reading the Rocks: Macmillan, Toronto, 599 p. Gerard V. Middleton Gerard Viner Gerry Middleton FRSC (born 1931) is an award winning Canadian geologist. Middleton was born in South Africa. Over his career his main fields of research were physical sedimentology and data analysis in geology. School of Geography and Geology McMaster University Hamilton, ON LBS (Location-Based Services) See mobile positioning. 4K1 Send correspondence to: 90 St. Margaret's Rd, Ancaster, ON L9G 2K9 |
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