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==Family and early life==
==Family and early life==


Thure Kumlien was born in 1819 in the parish of Herrlunda in the Västergötland (Sweden),<ref>SpeedyLook encyclopedia, [http://www.speedylook.com/Thure_Ludwig_Theodor_Kumlien.html Thure Ludwig Theodor Kumlien]; access 2008-09-29.</ref> the oldest of fourteen children<ref>SpeedyLook encyclopedia.</ref> in an aristocratic Swedish family.<ref>Hoard Historical Museum, [http://www.hoardmuseum.org/23.asp?page=23.asp&ID=167 Thure Kumlien]; access 2008-09-18.</ref> His father was an army quartermaster, and owned several large estates.<ref>SpeedyLook encyclopedia.</ref> His early education was with a tutor, after which he entered the [[Gymnasium (school)|Gymnasium]] of [[Skara]].<ref>SpeedyLook encyclopedia.</ref> He subsequently attended [[Uppsala University]], graduating in 1843.<ref>SpeedyLook encyclopedia.</ref> He took an early interest in natural history and collected many specimens, particularly from the [[Baltic]] islands, sending them to [[Hermann Schlegel]] of [[Leiden]]; [[Wilhelm Peters]] of [[Berlin Zoological Museum|Berlin]], [[Carl Jakob Sundevall]] of the [[Swedish Museum of Natural History]], [[Stockholm]], and [[John Cassin]] of Boston were among his other correspondents.<ref>SpeedyLook encyclopedia.</ref>
Thure Kumlien was born in 1819 in the parish of Herrlunda in the Västergötland (Sweden),<ref>SpeedyLook encyclopedia, [http://www.speedylook.com/Thure_Ludwig_Theodor_Kumlien.html Thure Ludwig Theodor Kumlien]; access 2008-09-29.</ref> the oldest of fourteen children<ref>SpeedyLook encyclopedia.</ref> in an aristocratic Swedish family.<ref>Hoard Historical Museum, [http://www.hoardmuseum.org/23.asp?page=23.asp&ID=167 Thure Kumlien]; access 2008-09-18.</ref> His father, Ludwig Kumlien (1790-1839),<ref>Angie Kumlien Main, "Thure Kumlien, Koshkonong Naturalist", ''Wisconsin Magazine of History'', Volume 27, number 1, September 1943, p. 21.</ref> was an army quartermaster, and owned several large estates.<ref>SpeedyLook encyclopedia.</ref> His mother, Johanna Rhodin (1800-1830) was the daughter of a minister.<ref>Main, ''op. cit.'', p. 21.</ref> His early education was with a tutor, after which he entered the [[Gymnasium (school)|Gymnasium]] of [[Skara]].<ref>SpeedyLook encyclopedia.</ref> He subsequently attended [[Uppsala University]], graduating in 1843.<ref>SpeedyLook encyclopedia.</ref> He took an early interest in natural history and collected many specimens, particularly from the [[Baltic]] islands, sending them to [[Hermann Schlegel]] of [[Leiden]]; [[Wilhelm Peters]] of [[Berlin Zoological Museum|Berlin]], [[Carl Jakob Sundevall]] of the [[Swedish Museum of Natural History]], [[Stockholm]], and [[John Cassin]] of Boston were among his other correspondents.<ref>SpeedyLook encyclopedia.</ref>


==Career==
==Career==

Revision as of 22:03, 30 September 2008

Thure Ludwig Theodor Kumlien
Thure Kumlien
Born(1819-11-09)9 November 1819
Died5 August 1888(1888-08-05) (aged 68)
NationalitySwedish, American
Occupation(s)Farmer, Ornithologist, Naturalist, Taxidermist

Thure Ludwig Theodor Kumlien (November 9, 1819 – August 5, 1888) was a Swedish-American ornithologist, naturalist, and taxidermist. A contemporary of Thoreau, Audubon, and Agassiz, he contributed much to the knowledge of the natural history of Wisconsin and its birds. He collected and shipped specimens to many investigators in the United States and abroad. He taught botany and zoology, as well as foreign languages, at Albion Academy, and was particularly regarded as an expert in the identification of birds’ nests.

Family and early life

Thure Kumlien was born in 1819 in the parish of Herrlunda in the Västergötland (Sweden),[1] the oldest of fourteen children[2] in an aristocratic Swedish family.[3] His father, Ludwig Kumlien (1790-1839),[4] was an army quartermaster, and owned several large estates.[5] His mother, Johanna Rhodin (1800-1830) was the daughter of a minister.[6] His early education was with a tutor, after which he entered the Gymnasium of Skara.[7] He subsequently attended Uppsala University, graduating in 1843.[8] He took an early interest in natural history and collected many specimens, particularly from the Baltic islands, sending them to Hermann Schlegel of Leiden; Wilhelm Peters of Berlin, Carl Jakob Sundevall of the Swedish Museum of Natural History, Stockholm, and John Cassin of Boston were among his other correspondents.[9]

Career

Kumlien emigrated to the United States in 1843, accompanied by his fiancée, Margaretta Christina Wallberg, and her sister.[10] They first settled in Milwaukee and were married there on September 5 of the same year.[11] Not long afterward, drawn by letters written by the minister of a local parish, he came to the Lake Koshkonong area of Wisconsin.[12] When he bought his homestead, he bypassed farmland and instead purchased woodland, probably because of his love of nature,[13] and devoted his spare time to the study of surrounding nature, in particular the local plants, birds, and insects.[14] His first purchase was 40 acres, from the government; he bought another 40 acres later.[15] His first home was a log house near Busseyville.[16] Often distracted by local wildlife and plants,[17] Kumlien did not succeed at farming;[18] he supplemented his farm income by collecting specimens for museums and other scientists.[19]

Kumlien's life work constituted a rich personal herbarium and an important collection of birds. He began with a collection acquired by the Boston Society of Natural Sciences in 1854, and expanded his reach to Europe, sending specimens to such scientists as Elias Magnus Fries of Uppsala and Thomas Mayo Brewer. He also kept up correspondence with Spencer Fullerton Baird, Edward Augustus Samuels (1836-1908), and others.[20] Kumlien was regarded by no less a luminary than Louis Agassiz as his country's best authority on the identification of birds' nests.[21] Combined with his modesty, his collecting and correspondence made him more widely known to fellow scientists than to his neighbors.[22] In spite of the recognition and the regard he received from the scientific community, he lived in tight financial circumstances nearly all of his life.[23]

Through the efforts of Rasmus Bjørn Anderson, Kumlien accepted a position in the faculty of Albion Academy, in Albion, Wisconsin.[24] From 1867 to 1870, he taught not only botany and zoology, but also foreign languages;[25] he left when financial turmoil hit the college[26]. He took a position with the State of Wisconsin in 1870,[27] collecting specimens for the University of Wisconsin in Madison[28] and the teacher training school (the university’s collections were destroyed in a fire in 1884).[29] From 1881 to 1883, he worked for the Wisconsin Natural History Society as taxidermist and conservator of its collections.[30]

In 1883, the Natural History Society's collections were transferred to the Milwaukee Public Museum, and Kumlien began working for the museum in the same capacity,[31] which enabled him to pursue his naturalist studies year round.[32] He became a member of the American Ornithologists' Union the year it was founded (1883).[33] He died in 1888, most likely as a result of exposure to preservatives used on bird specimens sent from South America.[34] He is buried at Sweet Cemetery, in Albion.[35] His work can still be viewed at numerous museums in Europe and America.[36]

Legacy

Kumlien trained his son, Aaron Ludwig Kumlien (1853-1902), an ornithologist, and also Edward Lee Greene, a botanist.[37]

Kumlein was also acquainted with Willard North, the father of author Sterling North, who included him in such books as Rascal and The Wolfling.

A number of species have been named for Kumlien:

  • Aster Kumlienii, a purple aster that grows at Busseyville. [38]
  • Kumlienia is a genus of flowering plants in the buttercup family. It was named for Kumlien by his student Greene.

References

  1. ^ SpeedyLook encyclopedia, Thure Ludwig Theodor Kumlien; access 2008-09-29.
  2. ^ SpeedyLook encyclopedia.
  3. ^ Hoard Historical Museum, Thure Kumlien; access 2008-09-18.
  4. ^ Angie Kumlien Main, "Thure Kumlien, Koshkonong Naturalist", Wisconsin Magazine of History, Volume 27, number 1, September 1943, p. 21.
  5. ^ SpeedyLook encyclopedia.
  6. ^ Main, op. cit., p. 21.
  7. ^ SpeedyLook encyclopedia.
  8. ^ SpeedyLook encyclopedia.
  9. ^ SpeedyLook encyclopedia.
  10. ^ Mrs. H.J. Taylor, Thure Kumlien, The Wilson Bulletin, June 1936, pp. 86-93; p. 86.
  11. ^ SpeedyLook encyclopedia.
  12. ^ Hoard Historical Museum.
  13. ^ Hoard Historical Museum.
  14. ^ SpeedyLook encuclopedia.
  15. ^ Taylor, p. 86.
  16. ^ Taylor, p. 86.
  17. ^ Taylor, p. 87.
  18. ^ Hoard Historical Museum.
  19. ^ Hoard Historical Museum.
  20. ^ SpeedyLook encyclopedia.
  21. ^ SpeedyLook encyclopedia.
  22. ^ Hoard Historical Museum.
  23. ^ SpeedyLook encyclopedia.
  24. ^ Lloyd Hustvedt, Rasmus Bjørn Anderson, Norwegian-American Historical Association, Northfield, Minnesota.
  25. ^ SpeedyLook encyclopedia.
  26. ^ Taylor, p. 90.
  27. ^ Taylor, p. 90.
  28. ^ University of Wisconsin Zoological Museum, History of the University of Wisconsin Zoological Museum.
  29. ^ SpeedyLook encyclopedia.
  30. ^ Wisconsin Historical Society, Dictionary of Wisconsin History, "Kumlien, Thure Ludwig Theodore (sic) 1819 - 1888"; Taylor, p. 90; SpeedyLook encyclopedia.
  31. ^ Wisconsin Historical Society, op. cit.
  32. ^ Hoard Historical Museum.
  33. ^ SpeedyLook encyclopedia.
  34. ^ Hoard Historical Museum; SpeedyLook encyclopedia.
  35. ^ RootsWeb, [1]
  36. ^ Hoard Historical Museum.
  37. ^ SpeedyLook encyclopedia.
  38. ^ SpeedyLook encyclopedia; Taylor, p. 89.
  39. ^ ITIS Report; [2].
  40. ^ University of Michigan; fish species descriptions.

Albion Academy historical marker, Albion, Wisconsin.

Hoard Historical Museum.

Speedylook biography.

History of the University of Wisconsin Zoological Museum.

Zida C. Ivey, “Pay Tribute to Thure Kumlien at Busseyville’s Centennial”, Jefferson County Union (Fort Atkinson, Wisconsin).

Angie Kumlien Main, “Thure Kumlien, Koshkonong Naturalist”, Wisconsin Magazine of History: Volume 27, number 1, September 1943, pp. 17-39; continues in three parts to Volume 27, number 3, March 1944, pp. 321-343.