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Henry Hurd Rusby

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Henry Hurd Rusby (1855-1940) was an American botanist, pharmacist and explorer.[1] He discovered several new species of plants.[2] In 1921, he led the Mulford Expedition to the Amazon.

His herbarium won a first prize medal at the 1886 Philadelphia Centennial Exposition.[3]

He made seven expeditions to Central and South America.

Biography

Henry H. Rusby grew up in Franklin (today Nutley) New Jersey. He showed a passionate interest in plants. At 21, his herbarium won first prize at the Centennial Exposition in Philadelphia in 1876. He came into the awareness of Dr. George Thurber who was President of the Torrey Botanical Club. Rusby joined the club in 1879, and by then studied medicine at the School of Medicine of New York University.

In 1880, still a medical student, he spent 18 months collecting plants in Texas and New Mexico as agent for the Smithsonian Institution. In 1883 returns to the southwest to study and collect medicinal flora of Arizona, for Parke-Davis & Co.

In 1884, he graduated with his in medicine; and in 1885 he embarked on a two-year expedition for Parke, Davis & Co., crossing South America and exploring remote regions of Colombia, Ecuador, Peru, Chile, Bolivia and Brazil.

Although trained as a physician, Rusby chooses to leave medicine for his interest in plants.

In 1889, he was Professor of Botany and Materia Medica at the School of Pharmacy at the University of Columbia .He was Dean of the Faculty for 26 years until his retirement in 1930, and Dean Emeritus until his death in 1940.

His association with New York Botanical Garden began even before it was formally created. As a member of Club Bot. Torrey, he encountered Nathaniel Lord Britton. And it was achieving club establish a botanical garden. In 1888 a pro-Garden committee of Botony, with eight distinguished members of the club, including Britton and Rusby was formed. Rusby was instrumental in collaboration between the Herbarium School of Columbia, and the botanical Library at the NY Botanical Garden.

In 1898, Rusby was designated "Honorary Curator of the Museum of Economic Botany, and assigned to the Board until 1933 .

His tropical explorations, particularly in the Amazon, gave sustenance to deepen taxonomic studies and economic botany by the JBNY. Productivity in these explorations was due to his strength and exploration skills.

In 1921, at age 65, he made his last trip to South America as Director of the "Mulford Biological Exploration of the Amazon Basin".

Rusby died on November 18 of 1940 , at 85.


Selected works

  • "Report of Work on the Mulford Biological Exploration of 1921–22". Journal of the New York Botanical Garden 23(272): 101–111, August 1922.
  • "New Species of Trees of Medicinal Interest from Bolivia". Bulletin of the Torrey Botanical Club 49: 259–264, sept 1922; & Journal of the American Pharmaceutical Association, October 1922.
  • "Descriptions of New Genera and Species of Plants Collected on the Mulford Biologial Exploration of the Amazon Valley, 1921–1922,". Memoirs of the New York Botanical Garden 7: 205–387, March 1927.
  • Autobiography, Jungle Memories. 1933.

References

  1. ^ http://plants.jstor.org/person/bm000007268
  2. ^ http://plants.jstor.org/person/bm000007268
  3. ^ http://plants.jstor.org/person/bm000007268
  4. ^ International Plant Names Index.  Rusby.

See also

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