William Barton Rogers

William Barton Rogers (December 7, 1804 – May 30, 1882) was an American geologist, physicist, and educator at William & Mary from 1828 to 1835 and the University of Virginia from 1835 to 1853. In 1861, Rogers founded the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT).[1] The university opened in 1865 after the American Civil War. Because of his affiliation with Virginia, Mount Rogers, the highest peak in the state, is named after him.

William Barton Rogers
3rd President of the National Academy of Sciences
In office
1879–1883
Preceded byJoseph Henry
Succeeded byOthniel Charles Marsh
1st President of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology
In office
1878–1881
Preceded byJohn Daniel Runkle
Succeeded byFrancis Amasa Walker
In office
1862–1870
Succeeded byJohn Daniel Runkle
Personal details
Born(1804-12-07)December 7, 1804
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA
DiedMay 30, 1882(1882-05-30) (aged 77)
Boston, Massachusetts, USA
NationalityUnited States
Known forFounder of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT)
Signature
Alma materCollege of William and Mary
Scientific career
FieldsChemistry, physics, geology
Institutions

Biography

Early life

Rogers was born on December 7, 1804, in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. He was the second son of Patrick Kerr Rogers and Hannah Blythe and was of Irish, Scottish, and English extraction. Patrick Rogers was born in Ireland and had immigrated at the end of the 18th century to America, where he graduated from the University of Pennsylvania and practiced medicine. When William Barton was born, Patrick Rogers was tutor at Penn.[2] In 1819 Patrick Rogers became professor of natural philosophy and mathematics at the College of William and Mary, where he remained until his death in 1828.[3]

William Barton Rogers had three brothers: James Blythe Rogers (1802–1852), Henry Darwin Rogers (1808–1866), and Robert Empie Rogers (1813–1884). The Rogers brothers would each grow up to be distinguished scientists.[4]

Education and scientific career

Rogers was educated by his father, attended the public schools of Baltimore, Maryland,[5] and graduated from the College of William and Mary. He delivered a series of lectures on science before the Maryland Institute in 1827, and succeeded his father as professor of natural philosophy and chemistry at William and Mary in 1828, where he remained until 1835. During this time, he carried on investigations on dew and on the voltaic battery, and prepared a series of papers on the greensand and calcareous marl minerals of eastern Virginia and their value as fertilizers.[3]

In 1833, his brother Henry had returned from England filled with enthusiasm for geology, and this had prompted Rogers to begin studies in the field. The practical value of his article on greensand caught the eye of the Virginia legislature. Rogers took this opportunity to lobby for a geological survey of Virginia, and he was called upon to organize it in 1835.[6]

By 1835, his brother Henry was state geologist of Pennsylvania, and together the brothers unfolded the historical geology of the Appalachian chain. Among their joint special investigations were the study of the solvent action of water on various minerals and rocks, and the demonstration that "coal beds stand in close genetic relation to the amount of disturbance to which the inclosing strata have been submitted, the coal becoming harder and containing less volatile matter as the evidence of the disturbance increases". In modern terms, this was the realization that the geological process of metamorphism had gradually transformed softer grades of coal, such as lignite, into harder grades, such as anthracite.

Together, the brothers published a paper on "The Laws of Structure of the more Disturbed Zones of the Earth's Crust", in which the wave theory of mountain chains was first announced. This was followed later by William Rogers' statement of the law of distribution of geological faults. These pioneering works contributed to a better understanding of the vast coal beds underlying some parts of the Appalachian region, and helped pave the way for the Industrial Revolution in the United States.

In 1842 the work of the survey closed.[3] State revenues had shrunk beginning in 1837, and the funding for the survey had been cut back. Meanwhile, Rogers had published six "Reports of the Geological Survey of the State of Virginia" (Richmond, 1836–40), though there were few copies, and recognition of their significance was slow to develop. They were later compiled by Jed Hotchkiss and issued in one volume with a map as Papers on the Geology of Virginia (New York, 1884).[6]

In 1835 Rogers also began serving as professor of "natural philosophy" at the University of Virginia (UVa). There he added mineralogy and geology to the curriculum, and did original research in geology, chemistry and physics.[7] While he was chair of the department of philosophy at UVA, he vigorously defended to the Virginia State Legislature the University's refusal to award honorary degrees, a policy which continues today. (Later, MIT would adopt a similar policy from its beginning, and continuing to the present).[8] During the time Rogers lived in Virginia, he was a slaveowner, with two slaves in his household in 1840 and six slaves in 1850;[9] one, his cook, was Isabella Gibbons. In 1849, he married Emma Savage of Boston.[5]

In 1853 he resigned from the University of Virginia, moving to Boston for two principal reasons. First, he wanted to increase his participation in scientific circles under the auspices of the Boston Society of Natural History and the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, in whose proceedings and in the American Journal of Science his papers had been published while at UVa. Second, and more importantly, Rogers wanted to implement his innovative scheme for technical education (which could not be achieved within the structure and institutional focuses of UVa), in which he desired to have associated, on one side, scientific research and investigation on the largest scale and, on the other side, agencies for the popular diffusion of useful knowledge. This project continued to occupy his attention until it culminated in the chartering of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (1861), of which he became first president.[3]

To raise funds and public awareness of his new Institute, Rogers delivered a course of lectures before the Lowell Institute on "The Application of Science to the Arts" in 1862.

In 1861, he was appointed inspector of gas and gas meters for the state of Massachusetts,[3] a post he accepted reluctantly. During his service, he improved the standards of measurement.[5]

MIT Presidency

For more detail, see History of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

An act of the Massachusetts State Legislature incorporated MIT in 1861, and Rogers became its first president in 1862.[5] He served as president of MIT until 1870, when he stood down because of declining health. By necessity, he returned to office in 1878 and continued to 1881, when he was made professor emeritus of physics and geology, which position he had held while he was president.[3]

He died after collapsing during a speech at MIT's 1882 commencement exercises. According to legend his last words were "bituminous coal":[10]

He fell to the platform  instantly dead. All his life he had borne himself most faithfully and heroically, and he died as so good a knight would surely have wished, in harness, at his post, and in the very part and act of public duty.[11]

Other affiliations

Rogers was chairman of the Association of American Geologists and Naturalists (AAGN; organized 1840) in 1845 and again in 1847, and contributed important memoirs to its Transactions, including observations on the temperature of coal mines in eastern Virginia. In 1847 he also called to order the first meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS), an enlargement of the AAGN. He was president of the AAAS in 1875, and elected its first honorary fellow in 1881, as a special mark of distinction. He was active in founding the American Social Science Association and its first president; also he was one of the corporate members of the National Academy of Sciences, and its president from 1878 until his death. In 1866, Harvard gave him the degree of LL.D.[3][7]

Works

Besides numerous papers on geology, chemistry, and physics, contributed to the proceedings of societies and technical journals, he was the author of:[3]

  • Strength of Materials (Charlottesville, 1838)
  • Elements of Mechanical Philosophy (Boston, 1852)
  • Papers on the Geology of Virginia (New York, 1884)

References

  1. Rogers, William B., Chairman, The Committee of Associated Institutions of Science and Arts, "Objects and Plan of an Institute of Technology: including a Society of Arts, a Museum of Arts, and a School of Industrial Science; proposed to be established in Boston" - Boston, 1861, and archived at the MIT Libraries Collection.
  2. Gilman, D. C.; Peck, H. T.; Colby, F. M., eds. (1905). "Rogers, William Barton" . New International Encyclopedia (1st ed.). New York: Dodd, Mead.
  3. One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Wilson, J. G.; Fiske, J., eds. (1900). "Rogers, James Blythe" . Appletons' Cyclopædia of American Biography. New York: D. Appleton.
  4. Elizabeth Andrews, Nora Murphy, and Tom Rosko, "William Barton Rogers: MIT's Visionary Founder," 2004.
  5. Merrill, George P. (1935). "Rogers, William Barton". Dictionary of American Biography. New York: Charles Scribner's Sons.
  6. Mitchell, Trent A. (1999). "Rogers, William Barton". American National Biography (online ed.). New York: Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/anb/9780198606697.article.1301419. (subscription required)
  7. Rines, George Edwin, ed. (1920). "Rogers, William Barton" . Encyclopedia Americana.
  8. "No honorary degrees is an MIT tradition going back to ... Thomas Jefferson". MIT News Office. 2001-06-08. Retrieved 2006-05-07.:"MIT's founder, William Barton Rogers, regarded the practice of giving honorary degrees as 'literary almsgiving ... of spurious merit and noisy popularity ... ' Rogers was a geologist from the University of Virginia who believed in Thomas Jefferson's policy barring honorary degrees at the university, which was founded in 1819."
  9. Peter Dizikes (2018-02-12). "MIT class reveals, explores Institute's connections to slavery". MIT News Office. Retrieved 2018-02-12.
  10. http://bituminouscoal.mit.edu/about
  11. Phillips, Henry Ayling (1915). George Ward Blodgett, Bachelor of Science in Civil Engineering. Cambridge: Riverside Press. pp. 27–30.

Further reading

  • Angulo A.J. (2009.) William Barton Rogers and the Idea of MIT. Johns Hopkins University Press, Baltimore, MD.
  • W. S. W. Ruschenberger, "A Sketch of the Life of Robert E. Rogers, with Biographical Notices of His Father and Brothers," in Proceedings of the American Philosophical Society, v. XXIII (1886).
  • Emma Barton (with William T. Sidgwick), ed., Life and Letters of William Barton Rogers (Boston, 1897)
  • J. R. Killian, Jr., "William Barton Rogers" in Technology Review, v. 60 (1958), pp. 105–8, 124-30.
  • R. R. Shrock, Geology at M.I.T. 1865-1965, vol. 1: The Faculty and Supporting Staff, 1977.
Academic offices
New office President of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology
1862 – 1870
Succeeded by
John Daniel Runkle
Preceded by
John Daniel Runkle
President of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology
1878 – 1881
Succeeded by
Francis Amasa Walker
Professional and academic associations
Preceded by
Joseph Henry
President of the National Academy of Sciences
1879 – 1883
Succeeded by
Othniel Charles Marsh
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