Elizabeth Teter Lunn Explained

Elizabeth Teter Lunn
Birth Date:June 14, 1904
Birth Place:Chicago, Illinois
Death Date:February 1, 1998 (aged 93)
Death Place:Avon, New York
Occupation:Biologist, college professor

Elizabeth Lodor Teter Lunn (June 14, 1904 – February 1, 1998) was an American biologist and college professor. She was head of the biology department at Lake Forest College from 1954 to 1964. The Elizabeth Teter Lunn Herbarium at Lake Forest is named in her memory.

Early life and education

Elizabeth Lodor Teter was born in Chicago,[1] the daughter of Lucius Teter and Clara Hahn Lodor Teter. Her father was a bank president.[2] She graduated from Wellesley College in 1925.[3] She pursued further studies at Northwestern University, where she earned a master's degree in 1932 and a PhD in 1939.[4] [5] Her dissertation was titled "The ecology of the forest floor, with particular reference to microarthropods".[6]

Career

Lunn taught biology at Lake Forest College from 1930 to 1935, and from 1946 to 1970; she was head of the biology department from 1954 to 1964. She helped to organize and advised the campus chapter of Beta Beta Beta,[7] [8] and gathered many specimens and photographs for the school's herbarium, from the Illinois Beach State Park and elsewhere in the state.[9] [10] She wrote Plants of Illinois Dunesland (1982)[11]

From 1935 to 1946 she did not teach at Lake Forest College. She worked in the oil industry as a laboratory chemist, and as a clerk for the United States Army Corps of Engineers. She was president of the Illinois Dunesland Preservation Society in 1968.[12] She served on the board of directors of the Lake County Tuberculosis Association. She was a trustee of the Illinois chapter of the Nature Conservancy.

Personal life

Elizabeth Teter married Richard Sanborn Lunn. Richard Lunn died in 1972. Elizabeth Teter Lunn died in 1998, in Avon, New York, aged 93 years. Her papers, including plant notebooks, in the Lake Forest College Archives and Special Collections. The Elizabeth Teter Lunn Herbarium at Lake Forest is named in her memory.

External links

Notes and References

  1. News: 1998-02-03 . Dr. Elizabeth Teter Lunn . 10 . Democrat and Chronicle . 2022-04-23 . Newspapers.com.
  2. News: 1950-10-23 . Lucius Teter, 78, Chicago Ex-Banker; Succumbs to a Heart Attack at Golden Wedding Party . en-US . The New York Times . 2022-04-23 . 0362-4331.
  3. Book: The Wellesley legenda . 1925 . Boston, etc. Pub. by the Senior class of Wellesley College. Wellesley College Library . 85 . Internet Archive.
  4. Web site: Elizabeth T. Lunn Collection . 2022-04-23 . Lake Forest College Archives and Special Collections.
  5. Web site: Early and Mid-Century: Hidden No More . 2022-04-23 . Northwestern University . en.
  6. Lunn, Elizabeth Teter. "The ecology of the forest floor, with particular reference to microarthropods." PhD diss., Northwestern University, 1939.
  7. Book: Lake Forest University . The Forester . 1959 . Donnelley and Lee Library . 40–41 . Newspapers.com.
  8. News: 1966-04-19 . Sally Lear . 3 . Belvidere Daily Republican . 2022-04-23 . Newspapers.com.
  9. Book: Schulze, Franz . 30 miles north : a history of Lake Forest College, its town, and its city of Chicago . 2000 . Lake Forest, Ill. . The College . 978-0-9638189-6-6.
  10. Web site: Lake Forest-Lake Bluff Historical Society Presents . 2022-04-23 . DailyNorthShore . en-US.
  11. Book: Lunn, Elizabeth T . Plants of the Illinois Dunesland . 1982 . Illinois Dunesland Preservation Society . Waukegan, Ill. . English . 9409165.
  12. Web site: History . 2022-04-23 . Illinois Dunesland Preservation Society.