Johnson, Arthur Monrad, 1878-
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Johnson, Arthur Monrad, 1878-
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Johnson, Arthur Monrad, 1878-
Johnson, Arthur Monrad
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Johnson, Arthur Monrad
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American Botanist.
Biography
Arthur Monrad Johnson (1878-1943) was Professor of Botany at the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA) and director of the Campus Botanical Garden from 1927 until his death in 1943. Before that he held academic positions at the University of Minnesota, Harvard University, and the University of Wisconsin.
Born in 1878 in Norway, he came to the United States with his parents while still a child. He received a B.S., M.A. in Arts, and Ph.D. in Botany from the University of Minnesota, and had further art instruction from Minneapolis Institute of Art and San Francisco Art School. Dr. Johnson's scientific publications included a major textbook in taxonomy and important articles on the genus Saxifraga. His drawings, watercolors, and oils of botanical subjects and landscapes were displayed at invitational exhibits in a number of major American cities.
Arthur Monrad Johnson was born at Fredrikstad in Norway in 1878. He attended the University of Minnesota, receiving his B.S. in 1904. For the next decade he was a high school teacher in Washington and Minnesota, after which he entered graduate school in botany at the University of Minnesota, completing the Ph.D. in 1919. From 1919 to 1927 he held a succession of academic posts at the University of Minnesota, Harvard University and the University of Wisconsin. In 1927, he joined the faculty of the Southern Branch of the University of California (now University of California-Los Angeles), where he remained until retirement. His main interests were taxonomy, ecology and plant geography. The genus Saxifraga occupied much of his attention.
While a high school teacher in Colfax, Washington, Johnson developed a liking for the Eastern Washington region. Perhaps it was for this reason that he directed that his research notes be left at Washington State University upon his death. This attraction to Eastern Washington he explained in 1938 to a young botanist who had complained of the seemingly botanical barrenness of the area:
Your remarks about the Palouse country as compared to California amused me. Of course California,--well it is California, and that's that. But, "when summer comes," I venture to predict that you will begin to attune yourself to the Palouse country. Perhaps you will never thrill over it, as I did, when I landed in Colfax in 1905, from Minnesota, but nevertheless I think you will develop a liking for it, for to my mind it is one of the most fascinating botanizing regions in America. This is true floristically, phytogeographically, and ecologically, the vegetation is soft, friendly, and inviting, like all northern vegetation, not the d--- spiny, prickly, rigid, tangled, skin-and-temper-tearing sort like that of much of southern California, which draws out all the curses of the English Language whenever one tries to press a specimen. Phytogeographically and ecologically I found the "contact" of the eastern, the northern and the boreal, and the southern (Sonoran) floras one of the most fascinating features of the Palouse and adjacent montane floras. I was always searching every nook and cranny for the "outliers" of these vegetation types. The various plant communities, too, were a constant source of interest, for they were many and diverse, and well defined. The buttes, the canyons, the bottom lands,--well, I scoured all of them. When you have covered the marvelous Snake River gorge, the Clearwater gorge, and that of the Palouse, and the foothills of the Bitterroots, if you then haven't gotten some thrills, well,--I think I should take you in hand for a special treatment. A. M. Johnson to Carl Sharsmith, March 6, 1938, Sharsmith Papers
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Angiosperms
Botanical artists
Botanical illustration
Botany
Botany
Botany
Plants
Saxifraga
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