John Wesley Powell

John Wesley Powell (March 24, 1834 - September 23, 1902) was an American western explorer. He is famous for his three-month river trip in 1869 through the Grand Canyon. He was born in Mount Morris, New York and gained his education in Illinois at Wheaton College and Oberlin College. Powell had a deep interest in the natural sciences. In 1856 he rowed the Mississippi River from St. Anthony to the sea, in 1857 he rowed the Ohio River and in 1858 the Illinois River. He was elected to the Illinois Natural History Society in 1859. During the Civil War he first served with the 20th Illinois Volunteers. Despite losing much of his right arm at the Battle of Shiloh he returned to the army and was present at Champion Hill and Black River Bridge. Further medical attention to his arm did little to slow him, he was made a major and served as chief of artillery with the 17th Army Corps. In 1862 he married Emma Dean. After leaving the Army he took the post of professor of geology at the Illinois Wesleyan University. He also lectured at Illinois Normal University and became curator of the museum there. From 1867 he led a series of expeditions into the Rocky Mountains and around the Green and Colorado rivers. In 1869 he set out to explore the Grand Canyon. He gathered nine men, four boats and food for ten months and set out from Green River, Wyoming on May 24. Passing through dangerous rapids, the group passed down the Green River to its junction with the Colorado River (then also known as the Grand River upriver from the junction), near present-day Moab, Utah. One man quit after the first month and another three in the third, only days before the group reached the mouth of the Virgin River on August 30, after traversing almost 1,500 km. Powell retraced the route in 1871 with another expedition, producing an accurate map and various papers. In 1881 he became the second director of the US Geological Survey, a post he held until 1894. He was also the head of the Bureau of Ethnology at the Smithsonian Institution until his death. In 1895 he published a book based on his explorations of the Colorado originally titled Canyons of the Colorado, now known as The exploration of the Colorado River and its canyons. Powell was buried in Arlington National Cemetery. As an ethnologist and early anthropologist, Powell subscribed to a particularly rigid form of cultural evolutionary theory. In his writings, he divides all societies into "Savages," "Barbarians," and "Civilizations." For the savages, Powell clearly had in mind the Native Americans he encountered in his travels; for the barbarians he probably was thinking of the Huns and other European chiefdoms that had conquered Rome in antiquity. By civilization, Powell clearly had his own society in mind. In his view, all societies naturally progress toward civilization; those who have not have not fulfilled their potential. His view is held as typical of the nineteenth-century cultural evolutionists and is now wholeheartedly rejected by anthropologists. Lake Powell is named after him.

Reference

  • Powell, John Wesley (1895). Canyons of the Colorado. Flood & Vincent. (Reissued 1961 as The exploration of the Colorado River and its canyons. New York: Dover Press. ISBN 0-486-20094-9.)

External link

Powell, John Wesley Powell, John Wesley

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
dukat
caucasian psychosis
catch me if you can
bleach (album)
real time
necessity
leaders of the new school
permanent
local h
starvation
olympic mountains
christian hip hop
hardcore hip hop
smith set
donald j. carty
robert hue
neo soul
the nation of gods and earths
blackstreet
electricity market
alain madelin
one party dominant system
isao takahata
meriwether lewis
william clark
company flow
hi tek
clay s. jenkinson
organized konfusion
chautauqua
italian proverbs
great basin national park
la vita nuova
lavolta
supersonic transport
bristlecone pine
list of governors of mississippi
consent
italian musical terms
ishaq shahryar
scene
breathplay
ronnie musgrove
gunplay