Lucien Marcus Underwood Explained

Lucien Marcus Underwood
Birth Date:26 October 1853
Birth Place:New Woodstock, New York, USA
Death Place:Redding, Connecticut
Fields:Botany, Mycology, Pteridology
Nationality:American
Workplaces:Syracuse University
Alma Mater:Syracuse University
Thesis Title:The geological formations crossed by the Syracuse and Chenango Valley Railroad
Thesis Url:https://en.wikisource.org/wiki/The_geological_formations_crossed_by_the_Syracuse_and_Chenango_Valley_Railroad
Thesis Year:1879
Doctoral Advisor:Alexander Winchell
Author Abbrev Bot:Underw.
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Lucien Marcus Underwood (October 26, 1853 – November 16, 1907) was an American botanist and mycologist of the 19th and early 20th centuries.

Early life and career

He was born in New Woodstock, New York.[1] He enrolled at Syracuse University in 1873 and graduated in 1877. He earned his masters in 1878 and finally and completed his PhD in 1879 under Alexander Winchell. During his graduate school, he taught at Cazenovia Seminary for two years.

After a year's teaching at Hedding College, in 1880 he was appointed professor of geology and botany in Illinois Wesleyan University. In 1883, he was appointed professor of geology, botany, and zoology at Syracuse. In 1890, he accepted the Morgan Fellowship at Harvard University to study the Sullivant and Taylor collection of hepatics. In 1891 he became professor of botany in De Pauw University. In 1896, after one year stint as a biology professor at Alabama Polytechnic Institute (Auburn),[2] Underwood became a professor of botany at Columbia University and joined the staff of the New York Botanical Garden in 1907.

Works

Underwood published numerous papers in botanical journals, and was the author of Our Native Ferns and how to study them (Bloomington, Ill., 1881; 4th ed., 1893), Descriptive Catalogue of North American Hepaticae (New York, 1884) and “Hepaticae” in Gray's Manual of Botany. He also prepared the exsiccata work An Illustrated Century of Fungi with 100 specimens (1889), and together with Orator F. Cook the exsiccata work Hepaticae Americanae with 160 specimens (1887–93) and Hepaticae Americanae with 200 specimens (1887–99).[3]

Underwood's papers are maintained at the LuEsther T. Mertz Library of the New York Botanical Garden.

Personal life

After losing large amounts of money on Wall Street, Underwood attempted to murder his wife and daughter before committing suicide at the family's home in Redding, Connecticut.

Notes and References

  1. New Woodstock, N.Y. is in Madison County. Woodstock, New York is in Ulster County.
  2. Web site: Montgomery Advertiser: June 12, 1896.
  3. Triebel, D. & Scholz, P. 2001–2024 IndExs – Index of Exsiccatae. – Botanische Staatssammlung München: http://indexs.botanischestaatssammlung.de. – München, Germany.