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Up for sale a RARE! "limnology Pioneer" Edward Asahel Birge Hand Written Letter.
ES-1755
Edward Asahel Birge (September 7, 1851 –
June 9, 1950) was an American professor and administrator at the University of Wisconsin–Madison.
He was one of the pioneers of the study of limnology, and served as acting president of the university
from 1900 to 1903 and as president from 1918 to 1925. Birge was born in Troy, New York. He received a bachelor's degree from Williams College in 1873. He moved on to Harvard University, where
he studied under Louis Agassiz and was awarded a Ph.D.
in zoology in 1878. While still completing his Ph.D., Birge
was appointed an instructor at the University of Wisconsin–Madison in natural
history in 1875. He was later appointed as dean in 1891. Birge became known as
a scientist and administrator. He served as dean, director of the Wisconsin
Geological and Natural History Survey,[1] and under President Charles Kendall Adams,
unofficial deputy to the president. In 1900, an ailing Adams left the
university. Birge was named acting president in Adams' absence. He hoped to be
named permanently to the post, but was passed over in favor of Charles R. Van Hise in
1903 after a boardroom battle between university regents William F. Vilas, who favored Birge, and Governor Robert M. La Follette, who
favored Van Hise. Birge remained dean of the College of Arts and Sciences. Van
Hise died unexpectedly in 1918, and Birge was once again asked to serve as
president of the university. This time he was formally named to the post, and
served as president until 1925. He was regarded as an efficient administrator
but was criticized then and later for refusing to make substantial changes to
the university to adapt to the increase in students in the wake of World War I. From 1921
through 1922, Birge engaged in a running debate with William Jennings Bryan,
who considered evolution a heresy and labeled Birge
an atheist in several speeches. Birge, a taught Bible classes for most of his professional life, wrote a pamphlet
defending evolution as supported by the Bible. Birge and his close
collaborator Chancey Juday were pioneers of North
American limnology (the study of inland
waters, such as rivers and lakes).
Together they founded an influential school of limnology on Lake Mendota, as a component of the University of Wisconsin.
Birge retired from the administration in 1925 but continued his limnological
research until the early 1940s, primarily in partnership with Juday. In 1950 he
shared the Einar Naumann Medal of the International Association of
Limnology with Juday. He died in 1950. Birge Hall on
the University of Wisconsin–Madison campus
is named for him.