Manuscripts, Archives, and Special Collections, Washington State University Libraries
Guide to the Harold St. John Papers
1912-1957
Cage 319
Table of Contents
Summary Information
- Repository
- Manuscripts, Archives, and Special Collections, Washington State University Libraries
- Creator
- St. John, Harold
- Title
- Harold St. John Papers
- ID
- Cage 319
- Date [inclusive]
- 1912-1957
- Extent
- 4600.0 items.
- General Physical Description note
- 2.5 linear feet of shelf space.
- Language
- English
- Abstract
- Correspondence, notes, and other papers regarding taxonomic studies of Pacific Northwest plants, the teaching of botany and the administration of herbariums at Washington State University and the University of Hawaii. Significant correspondents include: R.K. Beattie, F.V. Coville, Alice Eastwood, Aven Nelson, C.V. Piper, B.L. Robinson, C.P. Smith, and W.N. Suksdorf.
Preferred Citation note
[Item Description]. Cage 319, Harold St. John Papers. Manuscripts, Archives, and Special Collections, Washington State University Libraries, Pullman, WA.
Biographical/Historical note
Harold St. John was born in 1895 and attended Harvard University, graduating in 1914. Graduate education, work with a Canadian botanical survey and service in the United States army occupied him until 1920, when he received the Ph. D. from Harvard and accepted a teaching position at the State College of Washington, now Washington State University.
St. John had been a student of Merritt L. Fernald and Benjamin Robinson, the successors of Asa Gray at Harvard and the leaders of the International Rule school among American botanists. His early experience also placed considerable emphasis on field botany. Not surprisingly he became close associated of Wilhelm Suksdorf, of whom he wrote a biography.
In conjunction with such Washington botanists as Suksdorf, he began planning for a revised survey of the state’s plants in the early 1920s. Originally he had intended to produce an updated edition of Piper and Beattie’s Flora of Southeast Washington. Piper encouraged the project but died shortly after it began. St. John accordingly began to work on lines of his own, preparing a new work which ultimately appeared in 1936, by which time St. John had moved to a position at the University of Hawaii.
The 1936 Flora of Southeast Washington quickly became the standard field and herbarium guide to the vegetation of the inland Northwest and a later edition remains in wide use in the mid-1970s. The guide was characterized by what the author saw as a rigid application of the International Rule, although it also documents the extent to which the nomenclature dispute had been resolved by the mid-1930s. It also contains many references to regional and ecological variations among species, and other such ideas, which began to supersede the nomenclature dispute as one of the main development in botany. The impact of genetics, however, was little noted in the book.
As with R. Kent Beattie, St. John saw himself as a direct successor of C. V. Piper, although he took the opposite direction of Beattie in the nomenclature dispute. Consequently he remained more of a describer of an guide to plants than did Beattie who essentially became a botanical historian. As Piper’s successor, St. John was quite successful, being the most prominent certain amount of criticism for certain philosophic stands. His major failure occurred when the attempted to inspire a second generation Flora of Western Washington and could not induce anyone to complete it.
St. John remained at the University of Hawaii until retirement in 1958, after which he held various visiting assignments.
Scope and Contents note
The papers of Harold St. John consist of his correspondence, both incoming and outgoing, relative to taxonomic studies of Northwest vegetation. The major portion dates from his years at Washington State University although a large number of items date from his years at the University of Hawaii and document his continued interest in Northwest botany. A few notes are included with the papers.
Arrangement note
The papers are arranged with the correspondence in a chronological sequence, and notes separated into a short second series.
Administrative Information
Publication Information
Manuscripts, Archives, and Special Collections, Washington State University Libraries © 1976
http://www.wsulibs.wsu.edu/mascTerrell Library
P.O. Box 645610
Pullman, WA, 99164-5610
509-335-6691
mascref@wsu.edu
Conditions Governing Access note
This collection is open for research use.
Immediate Source of Acquisition note
The papers of Harold St. John, b. 1895, were donated to the Washington State University Herbarium in 1958 by Dr. St. John.
Related Materials
Related Archival Materials note
Additional Botanical manuscripts in MASC may be found in the following collections:
Cage 318 Beattie, Rolla Kent Papers, 1899-1956
Cage 53 Botanical papers, 1881-1973
Cage 316 Cusick, William Conklin Papers, 1906-1924
Cage 317 Piper, Charles Vancouver Papers, 1888-1926
Cage 315 Suksdorf, Wilhelm Nicolaus Papers, 1867-1935
Controlled Access Headings
Occupation(s)
- Botanists -- United States -- Correspondence
Personal Name(s)
- Beattie, R. Kent (Rolla Kent), b. 1875
- Coville, Frederick V. (Frederick Vernon), 1867-1937
- Eastwood, Alice, 1859-1953
- Nelson, Aven, 1859-1952
- Piper, Charles V. (Charles Vancouver), 1867-1926
- Robinson, Benjamin Lincoln, 1864-1935
- Smith, Charles Piper, 1877-
- St. John, Harold, 1892- --Archives
- Suksdorf, Wilhelm, 1850-1932
Subject(s)
- Botany -- Research -- Northwest, Pacific
- Science
- Washington (State)
Other Finding Aids note
A print index to the correspondence can be found in:
Northwest botanical manuscripts : an indexed register of the papers, 1867-1957, of Wilhelm Nikolaus Suksdorf, William Conklin Cusick, Charles Vancouver Piper, Rolla Kent Beattie, and Harold St. John in the Washington State University Library. Washington State University Library. Pullman : The University, 1976.
General note
Harold St. John
Collection Inventory
Correspondence |
||||
| Box | Folder | |||
|
1912-1920 30 |
1 | 1 | ||
|
1921 200 |
1 | 2 | ||
|
1922 200 |
1 | 3 | ||
|
1923 210 |
1 | 4 | ||
|
1924 210 |
1 | 5 | ||
|
1925 285 |
2 | 6 | ||
|
1926 200 |
2 | 7 | ||
|
Jan-June 1927 220 |
2 | 8 | ||
|
July-Dec 1927 240 |
2 | 9 | ||
|
Jan-Mar 1928 200 |
3 | 10 | ||
|
Apr-June 1928 250 |
3 | 11 | ||
|
July-Sept 1928 250 |
3 | 12 | ||
|
Oct-Dec 1928 230 |
3 | 13 | ||
|
Jan-June 1929 290 |
3 | 14 | ||
|
July-Dec 1929 200 |
4 | 15 | ||
|
1930 300 |
4 | 16 | ||
|
1931 230 |
4 | 17 | ||
|
1933-1935 125 |
4 | 18 | ||
|
1933-1935 125 |
4 | 19 | ||
|
1935-1936 150 |
5 | 20 | ||
|
1937 130 |
5 | 21 | ||
|
1938-1939 120 |
5 | 22 | ||
|
1940-1943 160 |
5 | 23 | ||
|
1944-1957 130 |
5 | 24 | ||
|
Notes ca 1920-1930 50 |
5 | 25 | ||
|
|
||||