Background
Charles Nutting was born on May 25, 1858, in Jacksonville, Illinois, United States. He was the fourth of seven children born to Rev. Rufus Nutting Jr. and Margaretta Leib (Hunt) Nutting in Jacksonville, Illinois.
Charles Nutting was born on May 25, 1858, in Jacksonville, Illinois, United States. He was the fourth of seven children born to Rev. Rufus Nutting Jr. and Margaretta Leib (Hunt) Nutting in Jacksonville, Illinois.
Charles Cleveland Nutting was a curious child, whose inquisitive and experimental nature often got him in trouble. He developed a love for nature and began collecting specimens at a young age.
Charles Nutting attended high school in Indianapolis, Indiana, where the seed of Darwinism was planted by teacher David Starr Jordan, future president of Leland Stanford University. Darwin would be a paramount figure for Nutting for the rest of his life.
He graduated from Blackburn University (now Blackburn College) (1880) and received a Master of Arts from the same institution in 1882. He attended Blackburn College in Carlinville, Illinois, where his father taught Greek.
In addition to his growing Darwinist and zoological interests, Charles Nutting was also involved in the literary society, drama club, and choir. He graduated in 1880 and went to work as a paymaster for his brother Will’s assaying business. He also surveyed the route of the Denver and Rio Grande Railroad. Upon returning to Illinois, Nutting received his Master of Arts from Blackburn in 1882.
The Smithsonian hired him to travel to Costa Rica, where Charles Nutting collected more than 300 bird skins for the U.S. National Museum. In 1883 he traveled to Nicaragua, again to collect specimens. In all, he collected almost 1,000 skins for the U.S. National Museum. In 1885 Nutting’s father persuaded him to attend the State University of Iowa (now the University of Iowa ) for further study.
In 1886 a faculty position opened, for which Samuel Calvin, head of the natural science department, recommended him. By 1888 Charles Nutting was an assistant professor of zoology, and by 1889 he was a full professor and curator of the State University of Iowa Museum of Natural History.
By 1899 Charles Nutting had published three works on hydroids and was promoting them to the Smithsonian and the U.S. Fish Commission. In total, he published 15 works on hydroids and discovered 134 new species, four new genera, and one new family. American Hydroids, three volumes written for the Smithsonian and the U.S. National Museum, was his most significant work and the rock on which his reputation was founded. A fourth volume, almost ready for publication at the time of his death, was lost.
The crowning jewel in Nutting’s career at the State University of Iowa was his development of the university’s Museum of Natural History. In addition to expanding the museum’s collections considerably, Charles Nutting also was responsible for securing adequate housing for them. In 1892 he wrote to the university’s Board of Regents, pointing out that much of the collection was stored in boxes in the basement of the zoology building, with no room to display or examine anything, and at-risk in the event of a fire. Charles Nutting was a key figure in designing Macbride Hall to house the museum in its center, surrounded by the natural science departments (an ideal that was compromised in practice). Still an active member of the university and international scientific community after retiring from the positions of the department head and museum curator in 1926, Charles Nutting died of heart failure in 1927, at the age of 68.
(Issue 13, Parts 1-3. German Edition)
2012(Issue 4, Parts 1-3)
2012(Volume 4, pts. 1-2)
2012(Volume 4, pts. 1-3)
2012(Volume 1-2)
2013