![]() |
![]() |
|
1825 - 1883
IMAGE NOT YET AVAILABLE
Curtis LeVant Van Dusen Curtis L. Van Dusen was an American nursery operator in Geneva, NY, whose nursery Curtis L. Van Dusen Nursery Co. (est. 1839) he rescued from financial ruin after the crash of 1873. |
1876 - 1962
IMAGE NOT YET AVAILABLE
Harry Bates Brown Harry Bates Brown was an American agricultural scientist and educator who earned his Ph.D. at Cornell University. He is perhaps best known for developing several valuable cotton varieties. Cornell connected |
|
1926 - 2014
IMAGE NOT YET AVAILABLE
Robinson Abbott Robinson Shewell Abbott was an American biologist and professor at Smith College, who earned a Ph.D. at Cornell University in 1956. |
|
1903 - 1989
IMAGE NOT YET AVAILABLE
Myrtle T. Adams Myrtle T. Adams was known as a plant collector and spouse of Joseph William Adams. |
|
1892 - 1984
George Aiken George D. Aiken was an American horticulturist and nursery operator in Putney, VT, with the firm known as Darrow & Aiken (with George M. Darrow) as well as the firm Geo. D. Aiken. He published two books on horticulture, "Pioneering with Wildflowers" (1933) and "Pioneering with Fruits and Berries" (1936). Aiken was also a politician, serving as Governor of Vermont (1937-1941) and U.S. Senator from Vermont (1941-1975), among other offices. |
|
1766 - 1849 |
1838 - 1914
IMAGE NOT YET AVAILABLE
Mary Albertson Mary A. Albertson was an American botanist and astronomer, and curator of the Maria Mitchell Memorial and Observatory, Nantucket, Massachusetts. |
1838 - 1919
IMAGE NOT YET AVAILABLE
William Alcott William Penn Alcott was an American clergyman and amateur botanist, and a relative of Louisa May Alcott. |
|
1901 - 1985
IMAGE NOT YET AVAILABLE
Edward Alexander Edward J. Alexander was an American botanist and curator at the New York Botanical Garden, and editor of the journal Addisonia. He collected many live plants and seeds for NYBG on a Mexican expedition in the 1940s. |
|
1880 - 1963
IMAGE NOT YET AVAILABLE
Harry A. Allard Harry A. Allard was an American botanist credited with the co-discovery of photoperiodism. His research extended to plant pathology (tobacco mosaic), plant breeding, as well as pioneering acoustical studies of insects. |
|
1899 - 1967
IMAGE NOT YET AVAILABLE
Leland Allen Leland Norcross Allen was an American seed analyst who earned his Master's degree at Cornell University. He devised novel methods for seed quality assurance. |
-
IMAGE NOT YET AVAILABLE
Mabel Allen Mabel Allen was an American collector of New York State plants, and herbarium assistant at Cornell university. |
1836 - 1913
IMAGE NOT YET AVAILABLE
Oscar Allen Oscar Dana Allen was an American bryologist (and father of bryologist John Alpheus Allen), who is also credited with determining the atomic weight of cesium. |
1911 - 1963 |
|
1888 - 1962
IMAGE NOT YET AVAILABLE
Carl Alm Carl Gustav Alm was a Swedish botanist and phytogeographer at the Botanical Museum of Uppsala, and director of the Linnaean Garden, Uppsala. |
|
1707 - 1741
IMAGE NOT YET AVAILABLE
Johann Amman Johann Amman was a Swiss-Russian physician and botanist who collected extensively in eastern Europe, and in 1739 published Stirpium Rariorum in Imperio Rutheno Sponte Provenientium Icones et Descriptiones, describing and illustrating Ukrainian flora. |
1881 - 1966
IMAGE NOT YET AVAILABLE
Emma N. Andersen Emma N. Anderson was an American bryologist and faculty member at University of Nebraska College of Agriculture. |
1908 - 1996
IMAGE NOT YET AVAILABLE
Carolle Anderson Carolle Elizabeth Anderson was an American educator and community leader with a Ph.D. from Cornell University. |
|
1895 - 1986
IMAGE NOT YET AVAILABLE
George E. Arceneaux George Arceneaux was an American plant breeder and former head of the sugar cane breeding program at USDA. He is largely credited with restoring the Louisiana sugar cane industry by developing improved varieties |
|
1865 - 1961
IMAGE NOT YET AVAILABLE
Eleonora Armitage Eleonora Armitage was a British bryologist and also had interests in the genus Iris and collected widely in Europe and the Caribbean region |
|
1901 - 1977
Chester Arnold Chester Arthur Arnold was an American paleobotanist who earned B.S. and Ph.D. degrees at Cornell University, where he studied with Loren Petry and specialized in Pennsylvanian and Devonian plant fossils. He was a professor and curator of the paleobotanical collection at the University of Michigan. |
1856 - 1919
IMAGE NOT YET AVAILABLE
George Arnold George Arnold was a Cornell-educated horticulturalist associated with the seed farm and trial grounds at James Vick's Sons in Spencerport, New York. |
|
1858 - 1933
IMAGE NOT YET AVAILABLE
Isabel Arnold Isabel Arnold was an American educator whose plant collections were made mostly in the Upper Chemung Valley, Steuben County, New York. |
|
1916 - 2006
IMAGE NOT YET AVAILABLE
George Asai George N. Asai was the American-born son of Japanese immigrants to the United States, who completed his B.S. and Ph.D. in Horticulture at Cornell University and worked for many years as a gardener for the New York City Housing Authority. |
|
1921 - 1989
IMAGE NOT YET AVAILABLE
Earlene Atchison Earlene Atchison was an American cytotaxonomist who worked mostly with Fabaceae (bean family) and tropical trees. |