Arnold Guyot Collection
1857-1882
(0.25 linear feet)

B G98

© American Philosophical Society
105 South Fifth Street * Philadelphia, PA 19106-3386

American Philosophical Society

105 South Fifth Street
Philadelphia, PA 19106-3386
Table of contents Abstract
One of the most prominent scientific refugees from the political turmoil of 1848, Arnold Guyot made fundamental contributions to the study of geology, glaciology, and meteorology on two continents. After emigrating to the United States, Guyot established himself as Professor of Geology and Physical Geography at Princeton, remaining untilhis death in 1884.

The Guyot Collection consists of 61 letters written by Louis Agassiz (15 items), his wife Elizabeth (32), and their son Alexander (14), to their friend and fellow naturalist, Arnold Guyot. Primarily personal in nature, the letters reflect a long and intimate friendship, making frequent mention of family and mutual friends. There is, however, comparatively little in the collection relating to their respective scientific endeavors, with only a few references to the situation at the Museum of Comparative Zoology and at Princeton, to publications of various sorts, to the difficulties of their mutual friend Leo Lesquereux, and to other colleagues.
Background note
One of the most prominent scientific refugees from the political turmoil of 1848, Arnold Guyot made fundamental contributions to the study of geology, glaciology, and meteorology on two continents. Born at Boudevilliers, Switzerland, in 1807, Guyot began his studies at the College of Neuchatel, where, like his classmate Leo Lesquereux (later a prominent paleobotanist), he originally intended for the ministry. After two years studying the classics in Germany and a two year course in theology at Neuchatel, he enrolled at the University of Berlin in 1829 to complete his path to the pulpit.

Yet in Berlin, Guyot's interests began to shift away from theology, if not from religion. Under the influence of friends like Louis Agassiz and the excitement of lectures he attended on philosophy and natural history, Guyot decided instead to pursue a doctorate in the sciences, writing a dissertation on "The Natural Classification of Lakes" (PhD, 1835) under the eminent geographer Carl Ritter. Throughout his stay in Berlin, and during the five years that followed, when he worked as a private tutor in Paris, Guyot traveled widely on naturalizing tours, collecting shells and rocks, making observations and scientific colleagues.

In 1838, Guyot took up the challenge of testing the theory of his friend Louis Agassiz that northern Europe had formerly been covered by glaciers, and although Agassiz took much of the credit for the results, Guyot won an invitation to return to join the faculty at Neuchatel to teach physical geography and history. Guyot became the first to describe the differential rate of flow within an ice sheet, to demonstrate that glacial flow occurred by molecular displacement rather than sliding of the entire ice mass, and the first, as well, to discuss the importance of the laminated structure of glacial ice.

When the Grand Revolutionary Council of Geneva closed the College in 1848, however, Guyot found himself without a job. During the summer, he (like Lesquereux) followed Agassiz to the comparative calm of the United States, and within a year, he published his first work in English. Based on a series of lectures he had delivered at the Lowell Institute, The Earth and Man (1849) was an instant success, drawing connections between physical environment and human society and character, and earning him a position with the Massachusetts Board of Education as a lecturer on geography and pedagogy.

Lured to Princeton in 1854, Guyot was appointed Professor of Geology and Physical Geography, a position he held for over three decades. Although he continued to do field work in physical geography for several years, his research shifted gradually toward meteorology. In his best known work, he made an extensive series of barometric measurements in the Appalachians to estimate elevation, and he helped establish a national system for weather monitoring, outfitting meteorological observation stations for the network being built by Joseph Henry of the Smithsonian. His Collection of Meteorological Tables, with Other Tables Useful in Practical Meteorology (Washington, 1852) became a standard in the field. He is remembered, as well, as an outstanding teacher, often bringing students into the field with him to learn basic skills, and as the key figure in building the Elizabeth Marsh Museum at Princeton into one of the nation's finest.

An evangelical Presbyterian, Guyot was also a key figure in the characteristically Princeton effort to reconcile religion and science during the 1870s and 1880s. His "Cosmogony and the Bible" (1874) and Creation, or the Biblical Cosmogony in the Light of Modern Science (1884) were sincere, and widely popular, efforts to proclaim that modern science supported, rather than undermined faith. His claimed, generally, that both the books of nature and scripture were complementary, having originated in the same author, and although he insisted that nature was divinely ordered, it was nevertheless bound by natural law. Although he was never warm to Darwinian natural selection, he even admitted that natural evolution of a limited sort was possible, stating that only three divine interventions were necessary to explain the natural world: the special creation of matter, life, and humanity.

Between 1861 and 1866, Guyot lectured at Princeton Theological Seminary on revealed religion, physical science, and ethnology, and he gave occasional courses at Union Theological Seminary in New York. Guyot remained at Princeton until his death in 1884.


Scope and content
The Guyot Collection consists of 61 letters written by Louis Agassiz (15 items), his wife Elizabeth (32), and their son Alexander (14), to their friend and fellow naturalist, Arnold Guyot. Primarily personal in nature, the letters reflect a long and intimate friendship, making frequent mention of family and mutual friends. There is, however, comparatively little in the collection relating to their respective scientific endeavors, with only a few references to the situation at the Museum of Comparative Zoology and at Princeton, to publications of various sorts, to the difficulties of their mutual friend Leo Lesquereux, and to other colleagues.

Letters from both Louis and Alexander are written in French, while Elizabeth's are in English.

Administrative information
Restrictions
None.

Provenance
Acquired from Charles Hamilton, March 25, 1971, and subsequent (accn. no. 1971-386ms and 1977-1281ms).

Preferred citation
Cite as: Arnold Guyot Collection, American Philosophical Society.

Processing information
Recatalogued by rsc, 2004.

Additional information
Related material
The main body of Guyot's papers reside in the Manuscripts Division of the Department of Rare Books and Special Collections, Princeton University, with a second smaller cache at the Historical Society of Princeton.

References
Guyot, A., The Earth and Man (Boston, 1849) Call no.: 551 G99e

Guyot, A., Collection of Meteorological Tables, with Other Tables Useful in Practical Meteorology (Washington, 1852) Call no.: 551.507 Sm6d, 1850

Added entries
Subjects
  • Geology
  • Lesquereux, Leo, 1806-1889
  • Museum of Comparative Zoology
  • Paleobotany
  • Paleontology
  • Scudder, Samuel Hubbard, 1837-1911
  • Contributors
  • Agassiz, Alexander, 1835-1910
  • Agassiz, Elizabeth Cabot Cary, 1822-1907
  • Agassiz, Louis, 1807-1873
  • Guyot, A. (Arnold), 1807-1884
  • Contact information
    American Philosophical Society
    105 South Fifth Street
    Philadelphia, PA 19106-3386

    [http://www.amphilsoc.org/]

    ©2003


    Detailed inventory

    Agassiz, Louis, to Arnold Guyot 1857 Dec. 11


    Agassiz, Alexander, to Arnold Guyot 1858 May 27


    Agassiz, Louis, to Arnold Guyot 1859 June 3


    Agassiz, Louis, to Arnold Guyot 1860 Oct. 3


    Agassiz, Louis, to Arnold Guyot 1861 Feb. 28


    Agassiz, Louis, to Arnold Guyot 1862 June 12


    Regarding projects for their friend Lesquereux.


    Agassiz, Louis, to Arnold Guyot 1862 Sept. 2


    No hope of getting Lesquereux to the Museum at Cambridge, since the Museum has no funds.


    Agassiz, Louis, to Arnold Guyot 1863 Sept. 23


    Agassiz, Alexander, to Arnold Guyot 1865 Nov. 6


    Agassiz, Elizabeth, to Arnold Guyot 1867 June 18


    Agassiz, Louis, to Arnold Guyot 1867 June 18


    Agassiz, Elizabeth, to Arnold Guyot 1867 June 27


    Agassiz, Elizabeth, to Arnold Guyot 1867 Dec. 27


    Death of Agassiz's mother.


    Agassiz, Louis, to Arnold Guyot 1869 Feb. 19


    Agassiz, Elizabeth, to Arnold Guyot 1869 May 18


    D. A. Brown has misused Agassiz's letters of recommendationin Brazil, causing hard feelings.


    Agassiz, Elizabeth, to Arnold Guyot 1869 July 6


    Agassiz, Elizabeth, to Arnold Guyot 1870 Jan. 20


    Agassiz, Elizabeth, to Arnold Guyot 1870 May 26


    Agassiz, Elizabeth, to Arnold Guyot 1871 Apr. 5


    Agassiz, Louis, to Arnold Guyot 1871 Sept. 8


    Agassiz, Louis, to Arnold Guyot 1872 Nov. 8


    Agassiz, Louis, to Arnold Guyot 1872 Dec. 31


    Scudder's work is passably good. Museum of Comparative Zoology.


    Agassiz, Alexander, to Arnold Guyot 1873 Apr. 24


    Agassiz, Elizabeth, to Arnold Guyot 1873 May 24


    Agassiz, Elizabeth, to Arnold Guyot 1873 June 8


    Agassiz, Alexander, to Arnold Guyot 1873 June 9


    Agassiz, Louis, to Arnold Guyot 1873 June 9


    Agassiz occupied with his naturalists' school.


    Agassiz, Louis, to Arnold Guyot 1873 July 9


    Agassiz, Louis, to Arnold Guyot 1873 July 14


    Guyot, Arnold, to Edward Seymour 1874 Feb. 19


    Will begin on a new edition of Earth and Man if Seymour can get rights.


    Guyot, Arnold, to Edward Seymour 1874 Feb. 27


    Agassiz, Alexander, to Arnold Guyot 1874 May 5


    Agassiz, Alexander, to Arnold Guyot 1874 Aug. 7


    Agassiz, Alexander, to Arnold Guyot 1875 Apr. 2


    Agassiz, Alexander, to Arnold Guyot 1875 July 29


    Agassiz, Alexander, to Arnold Guyot 1875 Nov. 5


    Agassiz, Elizabeth, to Arnold Guyot 1875 Nov. 5


    Agassiz, Elizabeth, to Arnold Guyot 1877 Mar. 12


    Auguste Agassiz has died.


    Agassiz, Alexander, to Arnold Guyot 1877 June 1


    Agassiz, Alexander, to Arnold Guyot 1877 Oct. 20


    Requests his comments on her biographical work on Agassiz.


    Agassiz, Elizabeth, to Arnold Guyot 1877 Oct. 25


    Agassiz, Elizabeth, to Arnold Guyot 1877 Oct. 26


    Agassiz, Elizabeth, to Arnold Guyot 1877 Nov. 2


    Agassiz, Elizabeth, to Arnold Guyot 1878 Jan. 24


    Agassiz, Elizabeth, to Arnold Guyot 1878 Mar. 16


    Agassiz, Elizabeth, to Arnold Guyot 1880 June 23


    Agassiz, Elizabeth, to Arnold Guyot 1880 July 17


    Agassiz, Elizabeth, to Arnold Guyot 1881 Mar. 31


    Agassiz, Alexander, to Arnold Guyot 1882 Mar. 3


    Agassiz, Alexander, to Arnold Guyot 1882 Mar. 5


    Agassiz, Alexander, to Arnold Guyot 1882 Apr. 21


    Agassiz, Elizabeth, to Arnold Guyot n.d. (Jan. 31)


    Agassiz, Elizabeth, to Arnold Guyot n.d. (Mar. 23)


    Agassiz, Elizabeth, to Arnold Guyot n.d. (Mar. 29)


    Agassiz, Elizabeth, to Arnold Guyot n.d. (Apr. 15)


    Louis is improving from congestive


    Agassiz, Elizabeth, to Arnold Guyot n.d. (May 19)


    Agassiz, Elizabeth, to Arnold Guyot n.d. (June 10)


    Agassiz, Elizabeth, to Arnold Guyot n.d. (June 7)


    Agassiz, Elizabeth, to Arnold Guyot n.d. (July 18)


    Agassiz, Elizabeth, to Arnold Guyot n.d. (July 22)


    Agassiz, Elizabeth, to Arnold Guyot n.d. (Aug. 30)


    Agassiz, Elizabeth, to Arnold Guyot n.d. (Nov. 29)


    Agassiz, Elizabeth, to Arnold Guyot n.d.