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Augusta Foote Arnold
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Augusta Newton Foote Arnold (October 24, 1844 – May 9, 1904) was an American author and naturalist who published three books – two cookery books under the pen name of Mary Ronald, and The Sea-Beach at Ebb-Tide, regarded as a seminal work on the intertidal biology of the United States.
Key Information
Personal life
[edit]Augusta was born in Seneca Falls, New York. Her father was Elisha Foote, a judge, mathematician, inventor, and a commissioner of the US Patent Office. Her mother was Eunice Newton, who is considered the first female scientist to perform experiments in her own laboratory. Eunice Newton Foote described and explained the "Green House Gas Effect" in 1856, three years before Irishman John Tyndall who is widely credited with that research. Her mother Eunice was also a women's rights campaigner, one of the signers of the seminal Declaration of Sentiments in that effort. Her older sister was the artist and writer Mary Foote Henderson, who married U.S. Senator John B. Henderson, the co-author of the Thirteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution which abolished slavery. Augusta and Mary both carried on their parents' legacy of science.[1] She was educated at private schools in Saratoga Springs, New York.[2]
Augusta Foote married Francis Benjamin Arnold on March 6, 1869, in the nation's capital.[3] He was the son of Benjamin Green Arnold (founding president of the Coffee Exchange in the 1880s) and Frances Snow,[4] and the brother of Charlotte Bruce Arnold (1842–1924).[5][6] The couple had two sons and a daughter:[2] Benjamin Foote Arnold (1870–1896),[2] Henry Newton Arnold (1873–1939), who served as Assistant Attorney General under George W. Wickersham in the Taft Administration,[7] and Frances A. Arnold (1874–1975).[5]
She died at age 59, on May 9, 1904, at her residence, 101 West 78th Street in New York City.[8] After a funeral at All Souls' Church, she was buried at Woodlawn Cemetery in Bronx, New York.[9]
Career
[edit]Augusta wrote three books, two under a pseudonym. Her first, in 1895, was The Century Cook Book, as Mary Ronald. In 1901 The Century Company of New York published her seminal biology-research handbook The Sea-beach at Ebb Tide - A Guide to the Study of the Seaweeds and the Lower Animal Life Found between Tide-Marks.[10] A second cookbook, Luncheons - A Cook's Picture Book (A Supplement to the Century Cook Book) was issued in 1905.[2]
Arnold's second book was her only work of scientific writing. It was a guide to the flora and invertebrate fauna of the inter-tidal zones of the coasts of the United States, particularly the eastern coast. This book was promoted in the nation's most popular children's magazine of that era, the St. Nicholas Magazine, and it may have influenced a generation of American naturalists. Two prominent workers in that field, Rachel Carson and Ed Ricketts, cited Arnold's book in their bibliographies. The popular writer John Steinbeck, who was an avid supporter of coastal research and discovery, was known to have been a reader of the magazine. American marine biologists Myrtle E. Johnson, Richard Knapp Allen, and Joel Hedgpeth, mention or comment on The Sea Beach at Ebb-Tide in their writings.[11]
Arnold was a member of the Torrey Botanical Club and of the American Association for the Advancement of Science, indicating that she viewed herself as a serious scientist.[11]
Eponyms
[edit]Although the identity of the person honored by the specific name of the Pacific leaping blenny (Alticus arnoldorum), is unclear, Anthony Curtiss who described that species is known to have read The Sea-Beach at Ebb-Tide and gave several other taxa a similar epithet, which is thought to be in commemoration of Augusta Foote Arnold.[12]
Gallery
[edit]A sample of plates from The Sea-Beach at Ebb-Tide:
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Frontispiece
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Fulgur canalliculava whelk and egg cases
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Ulva compressa, 1753 Enteromorpha, 1820 Thread Weed, 2010
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Polysiphonia dendroidea, a piece magnified
References
[edit]- ^ Elizabeth Wagner Reed (1992). "Eunice Newton Foote". American women in science before the Civil War. Archived from the original on October 6, 2016. Retrieved February 24, 2019.
- ^ a b c d "Augusta Foote Arnold family papers 1893–1903". New York Public Library. Retrieved February 24, 2019.
- ^ Burke, Arthur Meredyth (1991). The Prominent Families of the United States of America. Genealogical Publishing Co. p. 404. ISBN 9780806313085. Retrieved June 13, 2019.
- ^ Browning, Charles Henry (1883). Americans of Royal Descent. Porter & Costes. p. 139. Retrieved June 13, 2019.
- ^ a b Early American Silver in The Metropolitan Museum of Art. Metropolitan Museum of Art. 2013. p. 191. ISBN 9781588394910. Retrieved June 13, 2019.
- ^ "Teapot, ca. 1782 Paul Revere Jr. American". www.metmuseum.org. The Metropolitan Museum of Art. Retrieved June 13, 2019.
- ^ "HENRY N. ARNOLD, ONCE LAWYER HERE; Assistant Attorney General in Taft Administration Dies in Washington BLACK TOM CASE COUNSEL Rough Rider With Roosevelt in Cuba--Major During the World War" (PDF). The New York Times. June 8, 1939. Retrieved June 13, 2019.
- ^ "DIED. ARNOLD". The New York Times. May 10, 1904. Retrieved June 13, 2019.
- ^ "DIED. ARNOLD" (PDF). The New York Times. May 11, 1904. Retrieved June 13, 2019.
- ^ Augusta Foote Arnold (1901). The Sea-Beach At Ebb Tide. ISBN 1331919789.
{{cite book}}: ISBN / Date incompatibility (help) - ^ a b Robert Jan 'Roy' van de Hoek (May 2008). "Augusta Foote Arnold". Ballona Institute. Retrieved February 24, 2019.
- ^ Christopher Scharpf; Kenneth J. Lazara (October 26, 2018). "Order BLENNIIFORMES: Family BLENNIIDAE". The ETYFish Project Fish Name Etymology Database. Christopher Scharpf and Kenneth J. Lazara. Retrieved February 24, 2019.
External links
[edit]Augusta Foote Arnold
View on GrokipediaEarly Life and Family Background
Birth and Parentage
Augusta Newton Foote, later known as Augusta Foote Arnold, was born on October 24, 1844, in Seneca Falls, Seneca County, New York.[6][7] She was the second daughter of Elisha Foote and Eunice Newton Foote.[8][9] Her father, Elisha Foote (c. 1810–1883), was a lawyer, judge, mathematician, and inventor who held patents for agricultural and mechanical devices; he also served as a commissioner in the United States Patent Office and contributed to early electrical experiments.[10][11] Her mother, Eunice Newton Foote (1819–1888), was an amateur scientist and inventor who conducted pioneering experiments on the effects of sunlight and carbon dioxide on temperature, published in the American Journal of Science in 1856, predating similar work by John Tyndall.[9][8] Both parents descended from early American settler Nathaniel Foote (1592–1640), a founder of Wethersfield, Connecticut, as detailed in family genealogies tracing their lineage through multiple generations.[6][10]Upbringing and Influences
Augusta Foote Arnold was born on October 24, 1844, in Seneca Falls, Seneca County, New York, to Elisha Foote, a judge, mathematician, inventor, and former commissioner of the United States Patent Office, and Eunice Newton Foote, a scientist known for her pioneering experiments on the heat-absorbing properties of carbonic acid gas.[3][6][5] The family lived in Seneca Falls during her early years, a location that served as a focal point for antebellum reform efforts, including abolitionism, temperance, and women's rights; her parents were active in these circles, with Elisha supporting patent innovations and Eunice contributing to scientific inquiry alongside social advocacy.[10][12] Arnold's upbringing occurred in an environment rich with intellectual stimulation from her parents' shared commitment to empirical science and rational inquiry. Eunice and Elisha, who married in 1841 and settled briefly in Seneca Falls near reformers like Elizabeth Cady Stanton, provided their daughter with foundational exposure to experimental methods and natural observation, as evidenced by the family's later scientific outputs.[13][5] This parental influence—rooted in Elisha's inventive patents and Eunice's 1856 publication on atmospheric gases—directly shaped Arnold's enduring affinity for natural history, distinct from prevailing cultural norms that often limited women's scientific engagement.[13][5]Education and Intellectual Development
Formal Education
Augusta Foote Arnold received her formal education at private schools in Saratoga Springs, New York, following her family's relocation to the area in the spring of 1860 when she was 15 years old.[5] These institutions provided young women from affluent families with instruction in literature, languages, and basic sciences, reflecting the limited but structured opportunities available to females in mid-19th-century America. Her sister Mary Foote Henderson, two years her senior, attended the nearby Temple Grove Ladies' Seminary (later Skidmore College), suggesting comparable educational experiences within the family shaped by their parents' emphasis on intellectual development.[14] Arnold's schooling concluded in her late teens, after which she married Francis Benjamin Arnold in 1869 and pursued independent scholarly interests.[4]Self-Directed Studies in Science
Arnold's self-directed studies in science were profoundly shaped by her family environment, as her parents, Eunice Newton Foote and Elisha Foote, were both engaged in scientific inquiry—her mother conducting early experiments on atmospheric gases and her father pursuing inventions and mathematical studies.[5] This heritage fostered an independent pursuit of natural history, focusing on botany, mycology, and especially marine biology, without reliance on advanced formal institutions typically inaccessible to women of her era.[3] Her methodology emphasized empirical observation and hands-on collection, involving regular specimen gathering during summer excursions along the Atlantic coast from New York to Maine, as well as in Florida and California.[15] These materials were examined microscopically to discern morphological details, supplemented by consultations with contemporary experts such as William Gilson Farlow in cryptogamic botany and references to foundational texts by authorities like William Henry Harvey and Carl Agardh on algae.[15] This approach yielded detailed classifications of seaweeds and intertidal invertebrates, prioritizing systematic taxonomy over common nomenclature due to the latter's inconsistencies.[15] Arnold augmented her fieldwork through affiliations with scientific societies, including the Torrey Botanical Club for plant studies and the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS), which provided access to peer networks and resources.[3] She also collaborated with institutions like the Smithsonian for specimen verification and illustrations, as seen in her correspondence with curator Mary Jane Rathbun on crustaceans.[3] These efforts culminated in comprehensive guides, demonstrating a rigorous, observer-driven epistemology grounded in direct evidence rather than abstract theory.[15]Personal Life
Marriage and Family
Augusta Foote married Francis Benjamin Arnold, a New York City coffee importer, on March 6, 1869, in Washington, D.C.[16][6] The couple resided primarily in New York and had three children: Benjamin Foote Arnold (born 1871, died 1897), Henry Newton Arnold, and Frances Arnold.[4][17]Residence and Daily Life
Augusta Foote Arnold and her husband, Francis Benjamin Arnold, a coffee importer associated with firms like Arnold, Sturgess & Co., resided in Manhattan, New York City, following their marriage in 1869.[18] The family home was located at 101 West 78th Street, an Upper West Side address typical of affluent professional households in late 19th-century New York.[19] Arnold died there on May 9, 1904, after a period of illness.[19] Her daily life balanced domestic responsibilities as the mother of three children with intellectual pursuits in natural history and authorship.[4] Active in scientific communities, she participated in the Torrey Botanical Club and the New York Mycological Club, engaging in fieldwork, specimen collection, and collaborative studies that informed her publications on marine biology and botany.[20] These activities complemented her home-based writing, including cookery manuscripts prepared under the pseudonym "Mrs. Ronald," reflecting a routine integrated with household management and empirical observation.[21]Literary Career
Cookery Publications
Augusta Foote Arnold published her cookery works under the pseudonym Mary Ronald to maintain professional separation from her scientific writings. Her primary contribution, The Century Cook Book, appeared in 1895 from The Century Company, offering an extensive collection of recipes suited for American households of the era, including instructions for breads, meats, vegetables, and confections drawn from practical experience.[22] The book emphasized economical preparation and seasonal ingredients, reflecting Arnold's focus on accessible domestic science amid the late 19th-century rise of formalized cookery instruction.[23] In 1902, Arnold released Luncheons: A Cook's Picture Book, a supplemental volume to The Century Cook Book published by the same firm, which provided detailed guidance on preparing and presenting luncheons with over 200 photographic illustrations of dishes such as salads, sandwiches, and light entrees.[24] This work highlighted visual documentation to aid novice cooks, aligning with emerging trends in culinary literature that prioritized clarity and aesthetics over rote memorization. A further edition of The Century Cook Book with an added supplement of 100 recipes was issued posthumously in 1922, extending its utility into the early 20th century.[25] These publications established Arnold as a contributor to American culinary documentation, though her authorship remained less publicized compared to her natural history endeavors.[4]Natural History Authorship
Augusta Foote Arnold's natural history authorship centers on her sole major work in the field, The Sea-Beach at Ebb-Tide: A Guide to the Study of the Seaweeds and the Lower Animal Life Found Between Tide-Marks, published in May 1901 by The Century Company in New York and printed by The De Vinne Press.[15] This 490-page volume features over 600 illustrations, including original drawings, to aid identification of intertidal species.[15] Unlike her prior cookery publications, it targets amateur naturalists and students, offering systematic descriptions of seaweeds—classified into blue-green, grass-green, olive-green, brown, and red groups—and lower animal forms such as sponges, polyps, worms, mollusks, and echinoderms encountered on North American shores.[15] The book's preface outlines its empirical foundation, derived from direct observations of organisms in diverse habitats like rocky, sandy, and muddy beaches, with examples from locations including Bar Harbor, Maine.[15] Arnold employs a practical, observational methodology suited to non-experts, providing guidance on collecting, preserving, and studying specimens while introducing basic morphology to enhance comprehension without overwhelming technical detail.[15] She acknowledges contributions from experts and institutions, such as the Smithsonian Institution and sources like the Cambridge Natural History, integrating verified data to support her accounts.[15] Contemporary reception, as noted in a 1901 Popular Science Monthly review, praised the work for addressing a specific demand for accessible seashore natural history literature, distinguishing it from more specialized texts.[26] The guide's focus on the dynamic intertidal zone during ebb tide underscores causal relationships in marine ecosystems, emphasizing phenomena observable during storms or low tides for authentic study.[15] Reprinted by Dover Publications in 1968, it remains a referenced resource for its detailed, field-oriented approach to marine biology.[27]Contributions to Natural History
Key Observations in Marine Biology
Arnold's seminal work, The Sea-Beach at Ebb-Tide (1901), provided detailed empirical accounts of intertidal organisms along North American coasts, particularly the northeastern United States, based on her personal collections and direct observations during low tides. She emphasized the adaptive strategies of seaweeds and lower invertebrates to extreme conditions of exposure and submersion, documenting over 600 species with illustrations derived from specimens. Her findings highlighted the intertidal zone as a dynamic habitat where organisms form dense, interdependent communities, with seaweeds serving as foundational structures for animal attachment and shelter.[15] Among seaweeds, Arnold observed Ulva lactuca forming ribbon- or leaf-like green mantles across littoral rocks, with fronds exhibiting waved margins and varying shapes from orbicular to incised, thriving on wave-exposed surfaces.[15] She noted Fucus species' gelatinous texture enabling resilience against desiccation, while providing substrates for periwinkles (Littorina litorea) and hydroids, whose striped shells mimicked the host algae for camouflage on northern rocky shores like Bar Harbor.[15] For green algae such as Cladophora rupestris, she described dark green, grass-like tufts up to 10 inches tall on low-water mark rocks, with rigid filaments and seasonal variations in density.[15] Enteromorpha clathrata appeared as soft, densely tufted tubular branches, common across regions and forming thread-like networks.[15] Invertebrate observations included burrowing mollusks like Polynices heros, identifiable by sand mounds on beaches, which drilled into prey shells using a file-like radula while residing just below the surface.[15] Sea urchins (Strongylocentrotus drobachiensis) were recorded in rock pools as moss-like green clusters, abundant in sites like Anemone Cave at Bar Harbor.[15] Sponges demonstrated destructive adaptations, with Cliona sulphurea boring into shells via absorption, forming yellow honeycomb patterns from Cape Cod southward.[15] Microciona prolifera grew as red, lobe-forming incrustations up to six inches, transitioning from flat layers to tubular structures in Long Island Sound.[15] Arnold insightfully detailed symbiotic associations, such as Hydractinia polyclina forming pinkish coatings on hermit crab shells for mutual concealment and defense, prevalent from New Jersey northward.[15] Hydroids like Clava leptostyla created red, velvet-like carpets in tide pools, with colonies of short cylindrical tubes.[15] These accounts underscored causal linkages in intertidal ecology, where tidal rhythms dictate organismal distribution and interactions, predating broader recognition of such zonation patterns.[15]Methodological Approach and Empirical Focus
Augusta Foote Arnold's methodological approach in natural history centered on direct field observation and systematic collection of intertidal specimens, prioritizing hands-on exploration of tide-exposed zones to document seaweeds and lower invertebrates in their natural habitats.[15] She advocated timing excursions to spring tides, when the lowest exposures reveal the greatest diversity, and recommended meticulous searching under rocks, within tide pools, and through sieving sand to uncover concealed organisms.[28] Essential tools included pocket lenses for magnifying minute structures like hydroids and polyzoans, knives for dislodging attached forms, and nets or sieves for capturing mobile life, underscoring a practical, accessible empiricism suited to amateur naturalists while grounded in precise anatomical and ecological recording.[15] Her empirical focus emphasized habitat-specific notations made on-site, capturing conditions such as substrate type, water depth, and associations among species to reveal ecological interdependencies, as in her descriptions of organic associations comprising millions of individuals.[15] Preservation techniques involved immediate transfer to seawater-filled containers followed by graduated alcohol solutions, with seaweeds pressed between blotters under weights to maintain form for later study.[28] Arnold integrated contemporary taxonomic classifications, drawing from authorities like Louis Agassiz and Addison Emery Verrill, to organize observations into scientific groupings without speculative leaps, fostering a habit of sustained observation that she described as awakening fascination in biology through repeated, verifiable encounters.[15] This approach reflected a commitment to causal realism in marine biology, linking observable traits—such as color variations under different lights or life cycle alternations—to environmental factors, while cautioning against over-reliance on preserved specimens alone, which could obscure living behaviors best seen in situ with aids like a water-glass for subsurface views.[29] By design, her methods democratized empirical inquiry, enabling non-professionals to contribute to knowledge accumulation through disciplined, locality-based data, though she noted limitations in identifying rare or microscopic forms without expert consultation.[15]Involvement in Education and Institutions
Role at Barnard College
Augusta Foote Arnold was appointed as a life trustee of Barnard College in 1889, coinciding with the institution's founding as an affiliate of Columbia University dedicated to women's higher education.[30][31] She served on the original board of 22 trustees, representing the "Transplanted Yankees" group of New England-origin members with Unitarian affiliations, which formed a significant portion of the early leadership.[31][30] Arnold's tenure lasted 11 years until her resignation in 1900, during which she resided at 101 West 78th Street in Manhattan and contributed as a volunteer alongside her pursuits in authorship and natural history.[30] Specific committee assignments or policy influences attributable to Arnold are not detailed in institutional records, though her involvement supported the college's tenuous early years in a rented brownstone on Madison Avenue.[31]Death and Posthumous Recognition
Final Years and Passing
In the years following the 1901 publication of The Sea-Beach at Ebb-Tide, Arnold maintained her engagement with educational institutions, serving as a trustee of Barnard College amid its early development as a women's affiliate of Columbia University.[5] Residing at 101 West 78th Street in Manhattan with her husband Francis Benjamin Arnold and surviving children—son Henry Newton Arnold and daughter Frances Arnold—she focused on family matters after the 1897 death of her elder son Benjamin Foote Arnold.[4] Her family papers from this period document ongoing literary and domestic pursuits, including manuscripts related to her prior works.[32] Arnold died on May 9, 1904, at her Manhattan residence, aged 59.[19] She was interred in Woodlawn Cemetery, Bronx, New York.[6] No public record specifies the cause of death, though contemporary notices identify her as the wife of Francis B. Arnold and daughter of the late Judge Elisha Foote.[19]Enduring Impact of Works
Augusta Foote Arnold's The Sea-Beach at Ebb-Tide (1901), a guide to seaweeds and lower animal life in the intertidal zone, remains a foundational text for understanding historical baselines of coastal ecosystems along the United States' eastern seaboard.[27] The work's empirical descriptions of approximately 100 marine invertebrates, including species distributions from New England to southern California, provide valuable pre-20th-century observational data amid contemporary concerns over habitat alteration and climate impacts.[33] Its digitization on Project Gutenberg has ensured ongoing accessibility for researchers and enthusiasts, facilitating studies in seashore biology. Modern scientific discourse continues to reference Arnold's vivid portrayals, such as her depiction of Maine tide pools as "veritable gardens of the sea," in discussions of rockweed ecology and intertidal biodiversity conservation.[34] In Acadia National Park contexts, her observations on organic associations among marine species underscore enduring principles of intertidal community dynamics.[12] The book's encouragement of hands-on exploration, even during storms, positions it as an early influence on public science engagement, predating popularized marine advocacy by figures like Sylvia Earle.[35] Arnold's cookery publications, including The Century Cook Book (1895), contributed to domestic science literature but exhibit less documented long-term scholarly influence compared to her natural history output.[4] Overall, her works exemplify 19th-century transitions toward accessible, observation-driven natural history, with The Sea-Beach at Ebb-Tide sustaining niche relevance in marine education and archival ecology.[27]References
- https://en.wikisource.org/wiki/Popular_Science_Monthly/Volume_60/November_1901/Scientific_Literature