Loring Woart Bailey
Loring Woart Bailey (28 September 1839 – 10 January 1925) was an educator, geologist, botanist, and author. He was born at West Point, New York, the son of a professor at the academy.
Loring Woart Bailey was introduced to scientific circles by his father, first professor of chemistry, mineralogy, and geology at the United States Military Academy in West Point. Eminent American and European scientists visited their home and as a youth he joined his father and brothers in botanical and geological field observations. He was educated at schools in Maryland and Rhode Island before entering Harvard University in Cambridge, Massachusetts, in 1855. There he studied under the geologist Louis Agassiz, the botanist Asa Gray, and the chemist Josiah Parsons Cooke. His AB degree in 1859 was followed by a period of further study in chemistry at Brown University in Providence, R.I. He then returned to Harvard, where he served as assistant to Cooke, who in 1861 recommended him, at the age of 21, for the post of professor of chemistry and natural science at the University of New Brunswick. He would receive his MA from Harvard the following year.
In 1863 and 1864, accompanied by G.F. Matthew and C.F. Hartt, he undertook mineralogical and geological surveys of New Brunswick. They discovered the Silurian (Cambrian) age of the rock formations, not Precambrian as had been believed, and laid the foundations for elucidating the entire geological region, including New England. From 1868 Bailey contributed summer fieldwork to the Geological Survey of Canada. He became a Royal Society of Canada charter member in 1882.
Bailey’s place among eminent geologists of the province was recognized in 1899 when fellow naturalist William Francis Ganong named a northern New Brunswick mountain after him. His pioneering work in provincial geology enriched his teaching and his influence as a teacher is attested by the success of students such as Ganong and William Diller Matthew (G. F. Matthew’s son), whose early training enabled them to undertake graduate work at prestigious universities; later they contributed to the broader world in botany and palaeontology. Honours bestowed on Bailey included a Ph.D. from the University of New Brunswick in 1873 and an LL.D. from Dalhousie University in 1896.
Retiring as professor in 1907; he pursued research in biology with a new enthusiasm and published scientific research on diatoms which was widely regarded. He published over 100 scientific works in his lifetime, a number of which were major works.
His grandson Alfred Bailey was an important poet and academic.
External links
References
Bailey’s writings are listed in the biography by Joseph Whitman Bailey mentioned below, as well as in Science and technology biblio. (Richardson and MacDonald). Among his publications is a tribute to his colleague George Frederic Matthew in RSC, Trans., 3rd ser., 17 (1923): vii–x. His annotated catalogue of diatoms appears in Biological Board of Canada, Contributions to Canadian biology, being studies from the biological stations of Canada (Toronto), 2 (1925), no.2: [31]–67.
The main primary source for Loring Woart Bailey and his family is the Bailey family fonds at the Univ. of N.B. Library, Arch. and Special Coll. Dept. (Fredericton), MG H1. There are photographs of Bailey in the archives and in the university’s dept. of biology. His botanical collections are preserved in the department’s Connell Memorial Herbarium, and some of his geological specimens are in the dept. of geology.
Daily Evening Globe (Saint John), 25 April 1864.
Daily Gleaner (Fredericton), 10 January 1925.
J. W. Bailey, Loring Woart Bailey, the story of a man of science (Saint John, 1925).
R. A. Jarrell, “Science education at the University of New Brunswick in the nineteenth century,” Acadiensis (Fredericton), 2 (1972–73), no.2: 55–79.
Kenneth Johnstone, The aquatic explorers: a history of the Fisheries Research Board of Canada (Toronto, 1977).
RSC, Trans., 3rd ser., 19 (1925), proc.: xiv—xv.
Morris Zaslow, Reading the rocks: the story of the Geological Survey of Canada, 1842—1972 (Toronto and Ottawa, 1975)