Editorial Type:
Article Category: Research Article
 | 
Online Publication Date: 05 Nov 2007

Edwin James-Chronicler of Geology in The American West

Page Range: 115 – 120
DOI: 10.17704/eshi.13.2.gn02226010571537
Save
Download PDF

Edwin James (1797-1861) was born in Weybridge, Addison County, Vermont, just 5 months after James Hutton, founder of modern geology, died in Edinburgh, Scotland. Edwin was the youngest of 13 children born to Deacon Daniel James and wife Mary. He studied medicine with his older brother in Albany, New York, after graduating from Middlebury College (Vermont) at the age of 19. While studying medicine, he became interested in geology and was influenced by Amos Eaton of the Rensselaer School. Upon completing his medical studies. James accepted a position in the spring of 1820 as a botanist/geologist with the Maj. Stephan H. Long Expedition. He was the first man to reach the summit of James' Peak, now named Pike's Peak, and made notes on the geology of the Great Plains and Rocky Mountains. In 1823 "An Account of an Expedition from Pittsburgh to the Rocky Mountains Performed in the Years 1819 and '20," written mostly by James, was published in Philadelphia (2 vols.) and London (3 vols.). This major work, from a Wernerian viewpoint, and five other lesser ones were published between 1820 and 1827. They were the sum total of his geological contributions, but included in the "Account" is the first geological map of the trans-Mississippi region. In 1823 he was commissioned an assistant surgeon in the U.S. Army; after leaving the Army in 1833 he later settled near Burlington, Iowa, where he was engaged in agriculture until his death in 1861.

Barry, L., 1972, The beginning of the west: Kansas State Hist. Soc., Topeka, Kansas, 1296 p.

Benson, M. F., 1968, Edwin James: scientist, linguist, humanitarian; Dissertation Abstracts, v. 29, sec. A, p. 1485-A.

Birbeck, R., 1940, A review: life of Dr. Edwin James 1797-1861, a professional pathfinder: Iowa State Hist. Soc., Hist. Dept. Library (Des Moines), printed pamphlet, 8 p.

Conybeare, W. D., and Phillips, W., 1822, Outlines of the geology of England and Wales: William Phillips, London, 470 p.

DeKay, J. E., 1826, Anniversary address of the progress of the natural sciences in the United States: delivered before the Lyceum of Natural History of New York, 78 p. (Arno Press Reprint, 1970).

Eaton, A., 1820, An index to the geology of the northern states (2nd ed.): W. S. Parker, Troy, New York, 286 p.

Faul, H., and Faul, C., 1983, It began with a stone: John Wiley & Sons, New York, 270 p.

Goetzmann, W. H., 1966, Exploration and empire: Alfred A. Knopf, New York, 656 p.

Goetzmann, W. H., 1979, Army exploration in the American West 1803-1863: Univ. Nebraska Press, Lincoln, 489 p.

Hazen, R. M., 1976, Bibliography of American-published geology 1669 to 1850: Geol. Soc. America Microform Publ. 4, 11 fische.

Iowa State Medical Society, 1950, One hundred years of Iowa medicine: The Athens Press, Iowa City, Iowa, 483 p.

James, E., 1820, On the geology of a part of the state of Vermont, the shores of Lake Champlain, St. John's River, and Montreal: Plough Boy, v. 1, no. 32, p. 250.

James, E., 1822, Geological sketches of the Mississippi Valley: Acad. Nat. Sci. Philadelphia, Jour. 2, p. 326-329.

James, E., 1823a, On the identity of the supposed pumice of the Missouri and a variety of amygdaloid found near the Rocky Mountains: New York Lyceum of Nat. History, Ann. 1, p. 21-23.

James, E., 1823b, Account of an expedition from Pittsburgh to the Rocky Mountains, performed in the years 1819 and '20: H. C. Carey and I. Lea, Philadelphia, v. 1, 503 p., v. 2, 442 p. (Readex Microprint, 1966).

James, E., 1825, Remarks on the sandstone and floetz trap formations of the western part of the Valley of the Mississippi: Am. Phil. Soc. Trans., n.s. 2, p. 191-215.

James, E., 1827, Remarks on the limestone of the Mississippi lead mines: Acad. Nat. Sci. Philadelphia, Jour. 5, p. 376-380.

Keyes, C., 1922, Pioneer geological explorations of Edwin James: Pan-American Geologist, v. 38, no. 4, p. 273-282.

Maclure, W., 1809, Observations on the geology of the United States, explanatory of the geological map: Am. Phil. Soc., v. 6, p. 411-428.

Maclure, W., 1817, Observations of the geology of the United States of America: printed for the author by Abraham Small, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, 127 p.

Merriam, D. F., 1984, Notes on some early geological investigations in Kansas: Earth Sciences History, v. 3, no. 2, p. 96-102.

Merrill, G. P., 1924, The first one hundred years of American geology: Yale Univ. Press, New Haven, 773 p.

Ormes, R., 1970, Guide to the Colorado Mountains (6th ed.): Sage Books, Chicago, 300 p.

Pammel, L. H., 1907, Dr. Edwin James: Annals of Iowa, 3rd ser., v. 8, no. 3, p. 160-185; 1908, no. 4, p. 276-295.

Parry, C. C., 1862, Obituary for Dr. Edwin James: Am. Jour. Science and Arts, 2nd ser., v. 33, p. 428-430.

Poesch, J., 1961, Titian Ramsay Peale and his journals of the Wilkes Expedition: Am. Phil. Soc. Mem. (v. 52), Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, 214 p.

Ross, F. E., 1932, Edwin James: Dictionary of American Biography: Charles Scribner's Sons, New York, v. 9, p. 576.

Schoolcraft, H. R., 1819, A view of the lead mines of Missouri, including some observations on the mineralogy, geology, geography, antiquities, soil, climate, population, and productions of Missouri and Arkansaw, and other sections of the western country: C. Wiley and Co., New York, 299 p.

White, G. W., and Slanker, B. O., 1962, Early geology in the Mississippi Valley: Univ. of Illinois, (Urbana) pamphlet, 26 p.

  • Download PDF