George Suckley

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George Suckley (1830–1869) was an American physician and naturalist notable as an explorer of the Washington and Oregon territories in the 1850s, and describer of several new fish species.

Life[]

He was born in New York City, and studied at the College of Physicians and Surgeons (today Columbia University), receiving an M.D. in 1851,[1] and subsequently serving as surgeon at New York Hospital.

In April 1853 Suckley was appointed assistant surgeon and naturalist to the Pacific Railroad Survey led by Isaac Stevens. Commissioned as a surgeon with the U.S. Army, Suckley resigned in 1856 resigned to pursue natural history full-time, publishing several works on the natural history of the Pacific Northwest.[2]

Upon the outbreak of the American Civil War, Suckley rejoined the Army, and worked as a surgeon throughout the war. He died in New York City a few years after the war.

Two fish species, Squalus suckleyi Girard 1855, and Girard 1856, and the bumblebee Bombus suckleyi[3] are named after George Suckley.

Works[]

References[]

  1. ^ "George Suckley", Augustus C. Long Health Sciences Library of Columbia University
  2. ^ "Major George Suckley, ca. 1862", University of Washington
  3. ^ Green, J. W. 1860. Review of the American Bombidae, together with a Description of several Species heretofe undescribed, being a Synopsis of the species of this family of Hymenopterous Insects thus far known to inhabit North America. Annals of the Lyceum of Natural History of New York 7:168–176.

External links[]


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