Hugo Leander Blomquist Explained

Hugo Leander Blomquist
Birth Date:June 5, 1888
Birth Place:Sorsele, Sweden
Death Place:Durham, North Carolina
Citizenship:United States
Nationality:Swedish
Field:Botany
Work Institutions:Duke University
Alma Mater:University of Chicago
Doctoral Advisor:William Jesse Goad Land
Author Abbrev Bot:H.L.Blomq.

Hugo Leander Blomquist (June 5, 1888 – November 28, 1964) was a Swedish-born American botanist. His well rounded expertise encompassed fungi, bacteria, bryophytes, algae, grasses, and ferns.

Early life

Although several sources state his birth year as 1885, Blomquist was actually born in 1888 in Sorsele, Sweden.[1] In 1892, his family emigrated to Kulm, North Dakota. He earned his B.S. in botany from the University of Chicago in 1916.[2] He enrolled in graduate school, but his studies were interrupted by World War I. From 1917 to 1919, Blomquist served as a musician first class in the U.S. Army. After the war, he briefly studied at Pasteur Institute before finishing his Ph.D. at the University of Chicago. He completed his doctorate in botany under William Jesse Goad Land in 1921.[3]

Career

Blomquist was hired as Assistant Professor of Biology at Trinity College, now Duke University, after his graduation in 1921. He was promoted to full professorship two years later, and in 1935, he became Chairman of Botany. Although retired in 1953, he remained as an emeritus professor. He was active in his field until a few years before his death.[3] Blomquist started the herbarium at Duke after arranging the purchase of the collections of P. O. Schallert.[4]

Throughout his career, Blomquist had a leading role in many botanical societies. He served as chairman of the Southeastern Section of the Botanical Society of America, president of the American Fern Society, president of the American Bryological and Lichenological Society, president of the Southern Appalachian Botanical Society, president of the North Carolina Academy of Science, and president/founding member of the Association of Southeastern Biologists. He was also a fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science and a member of several other groups.[3]

Legacy

About 3,500 of Blomquist's specimens are cataloged by the University of North Carolina Herbarium, and the Duke University Herbarium holds about 10,000 of his specimens. The H.L. Blomquist Garden of Southeastern Native Plants, part of the Sarah P. Duke Gardens at Duke University, is named for him.[5]

The Hugo L. Blomquist Professor of Psychology & Neuroscience is a distinguished professorship at Duke University.[6]

Selected publications

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Sorsele kyrkoarkiv, Husförhörslängder, SE/HLA/1010185/A I/12 (1886-1895). sok.riksarkivet.se.
  2. [Durden, Robert Franklin]
  3. [Lewis Edward Anderson|Anderson, Lewis E.]
  4. Web site: History of the Duke Herbarium . herbarium.duke.edu . 18 February 2024.
  5. Web site: Collectors of the UNC Herbarium - Hugo Leander Blomquist . https://web.archive.org/web/20130224142533/http://www.herbarium.unc.edu/Collectors/Blomquist_Hugo.htm . 2013-02-24 . herbarium.unc.edu.
  6. Web site: Hugo L. Blomquist Professor of Psychology and Neuroscience in Trinity College of Arts and Sciences - Scholars@Duke. scholars.duke.edu.
  7. Wherry. Edgar T.. Edgar T. Wherry. Review of Ferns of North Carolina by H. L. Blomquist. American Fern Journal. 25. 2. 1935. 59. 0002-8444. 10.2307/1544013. 1544013.
  8. Chase. Agnes. Mary Agnes Chase. Review of The Grasses of North Carolina by H. L. Blomquist. The Quarterly Review of Biology. 24. 4. 1949. 360. 0033-5770. 10.1086/397250.
  9. Conger. Alan D.. Review of Flowers of the South, Native and Exotic by Wilhelmina F. Greene, Hugo L. Blomquist. The Quarterly Review of Biology. 29. 2. 1954. 163. 0033-5770. 10.1086/400122.