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Collectors
and Collections
Students in the spring
2003 Introduction to Collections Management course researched significant
figures in the history of the Logan Museum of Anthropology to make them
known to a wider audience. Working with correspondence, field notes, accession
information, and in one case personal communication, students compiled
biographical and contextual information to augment the Museum’s
files. Students learned that the culture of a museum itself can be as
interesting and complex as the cultures curated within its walls.
Nicolette B. Meister
Adjunct Assistant Professor, Museum Studies, and Curator of Collections,
Logan Museum of Anthropology
Click on the following
names for biographical and collection information:
Frank
Granger Logan (1851-1937) – Trustee of Beloit College and founder
of Logan Museum of Anthropology.
Horatio
Nelson Rust (1826-1906) – Collector of Native American and South
American ethnographic and archaeological material; founding collection
of the Logan Museum.
George
Lucius Collie (1857-1954) – Class of 1881; Logan Museum curator;
helped established Anthropology Department at Beloit College; led field
expeditions to Europe and North Africa.
Roy
Chapman Andrews (1884-1960) – Class of 1906; led expeditions
to the Gobi Desert.
Alonzo
Pond (1894-1986) – Class of 1918; Logan Museum assistant curator;
led field expeditions to North Africa.
Paul
H. Nesbitt (1904-1985) – Class of 1926; Anthropology faculty
member and Logan Museum curator; led field expeditions to the American
Southwest.
Andrew
Hunter Whiteford (1913-2006) – Class of 1937; Anthropology
faculty member and director of the Logan Museum; led field expeditions
to South America and Mexico.
Alfred
W. Bowers (1901-1990) – Anthropology researcher; led field expeditions
to the Dakotas; Mandan, Hidatsa, and Arikara archaeology and ethnology.
Albert
Green Heath (1888-1953) – Collected Native American ethnographic
material; collection purchased by the Logan Museum in 1956.
Helen-Margaret
Greene (1901-?) – Donated collection of Southwestern ethnographic
material to the Logan Museum in the 1960s.
Herbert
Spencer Zim (1909-1994) and Sonia Bleeker Zim (1909-1971)
– Donated collections of ethnographic and archaeological material
to the Logan Museum in the late 1960s through the early 1970s.
Harley
Harris Bartlett (1886-1960) – Collected ethnographic material
from Indonesia, Taiwan, and Philippine Islands. |
Frank
Granger Logan (1851-1937)
|
Frank G. Logan (1851-1937) |
Few people had as much
influence on the Logan Museum as Frank Granger Logan. Born in New York State,
the son of a farmer and school teacher, Logan moved Chicago in 1870 and
later established F.G. Logan & Company, one of the country’s foremost
businesses in securities and grain. After his retirement in 1901, he and
his wife Josephine Hancock became full-time philanthropists, supporting
the Chicago Art Institute, Chicago Civic Opera, and Beloit College.
Frank Logan’s
relationship with Beloit College began in 1893 when he was appointed a
Trustee of the College. The same year, Logan donated the Horatio Nelson
Rust Collection of around 3,000 archaeological and ethnographic items,
which were formally accepted by the College in 1894, founding the Logan
Museum. Logan continued to donate many significant collections including
the Perkins and Elkey collections of archaeological items donated in 1904
and 1905 respectively. In addition, Logan financed five archaeological
expeditions to Europe and Africa to obtain Paleolithic and Neolithic specimens,
and numerous archaeological expeditions to the American Southwest and
Northern Great Plains. By 1929, Logan had donated to the Logan Museum
$325,000 in cash and stocks and $150,000 in collection items.
Frank Logan also had
a significant impact on the establishment of the Department of Anthropology
at Beloit College in 1923. He championed courses in anthropology, archaeology,
and human evolution, and insisted on the educational focus of the Museum.
The Logan legacy lives on not only in name, but in the Museum’s
mission and through the Beloit College Museum Studies program and Anthropology
department.
Researched by Katie
Schuelke `04 (Anthropology and Museum Studies) |
Horatio
Nelson Rust (1826-1906)
A native of Amherst,
Massachusetts, Horatio Nelson Rust was a lifelong antiquarian and amateur
archaeologist. He began collecting archaeological and ethnographic items
as a traveling salesman on the East Coast. He accepted artifacts for trade
or payment and he soon took contracts for the sale or collection of artifacts
from institutions in the East including the Peabody Museum and Smithsonian
Institution. During the Civil War he served as a medical volunteer and became
involved in anti-slavery, benevolent, and intellectual societies. Rust moved
to California in the 1880s where he served as a United States Indian Agent.
Rust
sold portions of his collection at various times to several museums. In
1892, he sold around 3,000 artifacts to Frank Granger Logan for $15,000.
Logan secured a job for Rust at the World’s Columbian Exposition
of 1893 in Chicago. There, Rust designed several exhibitions using the
Logan-Rust Collection that focused on the “evolution of domestic
arts.” The Collection received an award for the best archaeological
exhibit. The Logan-Rust Collection was formally accepted by the College
in 1894 with the promise that “the museum doors will be thrown open
to the student body.”
The collection was
the founding collection of the Logan Museum of Anthropology and helped
to establish Beloit College as a center for undergraduate teaching and
research in anthropology.
Research by Matthew
Schauer `05 (History and Museum Studies) |
George Lucius Collie (1857-1954)
|
George Lucius Collie, 1904. |
George Collie
was nearly synonymous with the Logan Museum for five decades. An 1881 graduate
of Beloit College, he served as principal of Delavan High School in southeastern
Wisconsin for four years. After resigning in 1889, he studied at Harvard
University, where he received his Ph.D. in geology in 1892. Collie returned
to Beloit that year as a professor of geology and soon became the first
curator of the newly established Logan Museum. He served as dean of the
College, acting president on two occasions, and, upon the departure of Ira
Buell in 1917, director of the Logan Museum.
Collie
developed a strong working relationship with Frank Logan, obtaining large
gifts throughout the period of the Logan family’s association with
the College. With Logan’s assistance and cooperation, Collie expanded
the scope of collections and exhibits to include material from prehistoric
peoples worldwide, complementing the Native American focus of the earliest
accessions. In the 1920s, Collie and his student (and assistant curator)
Alonzo Pond’18 negotiated complex political terrain in France while
excavating and purchasing over 21,000 Paleolithic artifacts with Logan’s
enthusiastic support.
George
Collie’s initiative and his carefully cultivated relationship with
Frank Logan helped him to develop the Logan Museum into a true teaching
museum, solidifying its international reputation for excellent collections,
facilitating Museum-based research around the world, and establishing
Beloit College’s renowned Department of Anthropology. Collie handed
over the anthropology museum and department to his successor Paul Nesbitt
in 1930-31.
Researched
by Mercedes Asp `05 (Classical Philology and Museum Studies) |
Roy
Chapman Andrews (1884-1960)
|
...left to right:
Roy Chapman Andrews, George Collie, and Alonzo Pond c. 1928. |
The city of Beloit’s
most famous native son and Beloit College’s most widely known and
celebrated graduate, Roy Chapman Andrews was the 20th century’s
prototypical explorer—a bold, dashing figure who braved bandits, sandstorms,
shipwrecks, and other brushes with death around the world. Most notably,
Andrews led the American Museum of Natural History’s Central Asiatic
Expeditions into the Gobi of Mongolia and China, recovering thousands of
fossils including the first nests of dinosaur eggs.
Andrews graduated
from Beloit College in 1906 and headed immediately for the American Museum
of Natural History. Beginning his career by cleaning floors, he quickly
worked his way up to become a curator and, by 1935, the museum’s
director. He conducted research on zoology and paleontology, but his greatest
skills were as an organizer and promoter of multidisciplinary expeditions.
He excited crowds about his explorations via mass-media presentations,
and he obtained significant support for his work through direct appeals
to New York’s social elite. Books and magazine articles—including
a 1923 Time Magazine cover
story — widened his appeal.
Andrews hired Logan
Museum assistant curator Alonzo Pond’18 as archaeologist for his
1928 Gobi expedition. The Logan Museum houses some of the 1928 collections,
as well as some material from the team’s 1925 archaeological studies,
but most artifacts are housed with the rest of the Central Asiatic Expedition’s
collections at the American
Museum of Natural History. Andrews retired from the American Museum
in 1941. He is buried in Oakwood Cemetery on Beloit’s east side.
Andrews’ life is the subject of many books, including Alonzo Pond’s Andrews: Gobi Explorer (1972) and Dragon Bones and Dinosaur
Eggs by Ann Bausum`79. The Beloit-based Roy
Chapman Andrews Society promotes Andrews’ legacy and honors
today’s explorers for outstanding achievements in scientific discovery.
Researched by Alexandra
Trumbull `04 (Anthropology, Modern Languages, and Museum Studies) |
Paul
H. Nesbitt (1904-1985)
|
Paul Nesbitt, 1934 field school to Hudson Ruin,
New Mexico.
|
Paul Nesbitt’26
graduated from Beloit College with a degree in economics, but his principal
interests were in anthropology. His mentor George Collie’1881 helped
arrange for him to excavate at Seeberger Cave in eastern Iowa in 1926. His
Beloit connection remained strong, as he excavated with the Logan Museum
team at the French Paleolithic site of La Ruth (1927), which he wrote up
as his Masters thesis in anthropology at the University of Chicago (1928).
Groomed to be Collie’s replacement, Nesbitt returned to Beloit as
anthropology professor and Logan Museum curator, positions he held until
1945.
Nesbitt
directed eight seasons of Beloit College field school excavations at archaeological
sites in New Mexico between 1929 and 1939. This work not only provided
material for his Ph.D. dissertation (accepted by the University of Chicago
and published by the Logan Museum in 1938) but also trained several students
who went on to distinguished careers in anthropology (John Bennett, Don
Lehmer, Bud Whiteford, Chandler Rowe, Hale Smith). Nesbitt permitted women
students on his field schools from 1935 onward. He also conducted occasional
excavations of the Beloit College mounds. The Southwestern collections
form a large segment of the Logan Museum’s holdings and are frequently
accessed for research and teaching.
Leaving Beloit for
U.S. Army Air Force training in desert warfare research, Nesbitt became
director of the Museo Nacional de Arqueologia y Anthropologia in Guatemala
(1945-1948) and, subsequently, director of the Arctic, Desert, and Tropic
Information Center (where he hired his old Logan Museum colleague Alonzo
Pond’18) and professor of anthropology at the Air University, Maxwell
Air Force Base, Alabama. In 1967 he became chairman and professor of anthropology
at the University of Alabama. He retired in 1974. By then, his interests
had expanded to include a wide range of ethnological topics and he had
conducted field work around the world. Nesbitt wrote two popular books
with Alonzo Pond, The Survival Book (1959) and A Pilot’s
Survival Manual (1978).
Researched by Marin
Bey `05 (Anthropology and Museum Studies) |
Alonzo
W. Pond (1894-1986)
|
Alonzo Pond in Algeria, 1925-1930. |
Alonzo Pond was admitted
to Beloit College with the Class of 1918, graduating in 1920 after spending
two years with the French and American armies in World War I. After graduation,
he returned to France to study prehistory at the American School in Europe
at the University of Paris and then enrolled in graduate school in anthropology
at the University of Chicago. In 1924, George Collie hired Pond to be assistant
curator of the Logan Museum, with the principal task of building the Museum’s
collections of Paleolithic material from Europe and Africa.
Liberally funded by
Logan and enthusiastically supported by Collie, Pond acquired significant
archaeological collections from French excavators and landowners. Pond’s
major field work for the Logan Museum from 1925 through 1930 focused on
northeastern Algeria. There, he led surveys and excavations of dozens
of prehistoric sites, particularly “escargotieres” (snail
shell middens) of the Capsian culture. Students from Beloit College and
from the universities of Wisconsin and Minnesota worked under his direction
and recovered tens of thousands of artifacts. Pond’s field methods
were state-of-the-art; he was a particularly astute observer and recorder
of archaeological stratigraphy. The Logan Museum’s French and North
African collections are regularly used teaching and research resources
for Beloit College staff and students and attract researchers from around
the world.
The Great Depression
forced the College to release Pond in 1931. He then worked as an archaeologist
and project supervisor for the National Park Service, the Civilian Conservation
Corps, and Cave of the Mounds at Blue Mounds, Wisconsin, while maintaining
a busy schedule of lecturing, writing, and broadcasting about his overseas
expeditions. Pond reunited with Beloiter Paul Nesbitt from 1949 through
1958 as a desert survival expert at Nesbitt’s Arctic, Desert, and
Tropic Information Center at Maxwell Air Force Base, Alabama. He then
moved to northern Wisconsin, where he developed resort attractions and
continued to write and publish. His archives, films, and other records
are housed at the Logan Museum, the Wisconsin
Historical Society, and the Smithsonian
Institution’s National Anthropological Archives.
Researched by Nathaniel
Howe `05 (History and Museum Studies)
|
Andrew
Hunter Whiteford (1913-present)
|
| Andrew Whiteford and Moreau Maxwell examining artifacts
in the Logan Museum, 1947. |
Andrew “Bud”
Whiteford enhanced Beloit College’s reputation for excellence in teaching
undergraduate anthropology. A 1937 anthropology graduate of Beloit College,
Whiteford eventually returned to the College in 1943 as Curator of the Logan
Museum and Professor of Anthropology and later as Director of the Logan
Museum. While Director of the Logan Museum, Whiteford facilitated the acquisition
of much important material, including the significant Albert Green Heath
collection of Native American art and artifacts.
Whiteford
conducted archaeological fieldwork in the American Southwest, Southeast,
Midwest, and conducted ethnographic studies and collecting expeditions
in Colombia, Mexico, Ecuador, Bolivia, and Peru. He was an advocate for
undergraduate archaeological and ethnographic field work opportunities,
hands-on training in museum anthropology, and the importance of using
museums to teach anthropology.
After retiring from
Beloit College in 1974, Whiteford held visiting professorships at Michigan
State University and the University of New Mexico, and research curatorships
at the School of American Research, Wheelright Museum of the American
Indian, and the State Historical Society of Wisconsin. In addition to
mentoring countless students who have gone on to accomplished careers
in anthropology, three of Whiteford’s four children are professional
anthropologists.
Researched by Emily
Hildebrandt `04 (Anthropology, History, and Museum Studies)
|
Alfred
W. Bowers (1901-1990)
|
| left to right: Bear in the Flat (Mandan), Crows
Heart (Mandan), and Alfred Bowers. Fort Berthold, North Dakota, probably
1930-31. |
Alfred W. Bowers conducted
archaeological, ethnographic, and ethnohistoric research concerning Native
peoples of North America. A 1928 graduate of Beloit College, he led Logan
Museum field expeditions in North and South Dakota in 1929, 1930, and 1931.
After receiving his Ph.D. from the University of Chicago, he taught anthropology
at the University of Idaho (1949-1967) and Stanislaus State College (1967-1971).
Bowers focused his research on the Northern Great Plains, especially the
Mandan, Hidatsa, and Arikara Indians—the Three Affiliated Tribes—of
the Fort Berthold Reservation in North Dakota. His books on the social and
ceremonial organization of the Mandan (1950) and Hidatsa (1965) Indians
are standard, authoritative sources that were reprinted in the 1990s.
The
Logan Museum houses over 13,000 objects from Bowers’ 1929-1931 excavations
and surface collections at Mandan, Arikara, and earlier Plains Village
archaeological sites. The Museum also contains a small amount of ethnographic
material collected by Bowers. Manuscripts and records relating to the
field work are on file at the Logan Museum and will be augmented by original
field notes and maps to be transferred from the Bowers family. Parts of
the Bowers archaeological collection also are housed at Indiana University
and the Illinois State Museum. Together, the Bowers collections form an
important body of original material on the cultures and history of the
Native people of the northern Great Plains, especially the Three Affiliated
Tribes.
Researched by Lisa
Howe `05 (Classical Civilizations and Museum Studies) |
Albert
Green Heath (1888-1953)
Albert Green Heath was
born in 1888 in Chicago, Illinois. He attended Williams College and then
the University of Chicago, graduating in 1912. Heath became an avid collector
and dealer of Native American objects at an early age, developing an impressive
collection which he called the Museum of Amerind Arts or the Museum of American
Indian Art. Heath traveled extensively throughout North America buying,
trading, and selling Native American objects. His summer home in Harbor Springs,
Michigan afforded him the opportunity to develop relationships with the
local Odawa population. An amateur anthropologist, Heath recorded detailed
information on the former owners and provenance of items in his collection.
Heath was very interested in preserving his collection for entertainment
and education purposes. When he died in 1953, his cousin Helen Friedmann,
Beloit class of 1918, pushed for the collection to go to Beloit College.
In 1955, despite interest from other museums 2,635 objects were sold to
the Logan Museum of Anthropology for $9,000. In order to recoup the acquisition
expense, the Logan Museum sold “duplicate” items, giving museums
first priority. The sale was later opened to private collectors and the
public. Of the full collection of 2,635 objects, 1,699 were sold and 936
became part of the Logan Museum’s permanent collection.
The collection contains objects from various Native American
tribes and from peoples in other parts of the world including Oceania,
Mesopotamia, and Asia. In 1992, Beloit College published an overview, The Albert Green Heath Collection, by Daniel W Eck. The publication
is available for purchase in the Logan Museum Gift Shop for $3.00.
Researched by Nikki Burt `04 (Anthropology and Museum Studies) |
Helen-Margaret
Greene (1901-?)
Helen-Margaret Greene
was born in New York City in 1901. She traveled throughout the United States,
Europe, and North Africa and moved to Taos, New Mexico in 1951. She developed
a deep interest in Native American culture and spent over three years living
among the Hopi composing a Hopi-English, English-Hopi dictionary. Greene
became an avid collector of Hopi textiles, basketry, katsinas, jewelry,
and other Puebloan art in the 1960s. During this time there was a resurgence
of interest in anything American Indian, especially arts and crafts, and
many collectors, including Helen-Margaret Greene, bought directly from Native
artists.
Greene wanted her collection to be preserved in a small museum
outside of the Southwest. She wanted to provide students outside the Southwest
the opportunity to study Southwestern Native American material culture.
At the recommendation of her friend Alice Marriott, a well known ethnologist,
Greene was appointed a Research Associate of the Logan Museum in 1961.
She donated her collection of 305 ethnographic objects from the Hopi,
Zuni, Acoma, Laguna, San Ildefonso Pueblos, as well as Navajo, Apache,
Havasupai, and Tohono O’odham items, to the Logan Museum throughout
the 1960s.
Researched by Stacy Pickruhn `03 (Anthropology and Museum Studies) |
Herbert
Spencer Zim (1909-1994) and Sonia Bleeker Zim (1909-1971)
|
Beloit College gave Herbert and Sonia Zim honorary
Doctor of Science degrees in 1967. |
Herbert Spencer Zim and
Sonia Bleeker Zim were accomplished authors: Herbert was well known for
his scientific books for children and Sonia for her books on anthropology
for young adults. Their collection of nearly 1,000 ethnographic and archaeological
artifacts acquired during their world-wide travels was donated to the Logan
Museum between 1961 and 1976.
Herbert
attended Columbia University, where he received B.A., M.A., and Ph.D degrees.
He was a professor of Science Education at the University of Illinois
at Urbana and wrote or edited more than 100 science books. In 1945 he
originated the highly successful Golden Guides series, serving
as its editor-in-chief for more than twenty years. One of these guides, North American Indian Arts (1970), was written by Andrew
Hunter Whiteford, former Director of the Logan Museum, and illustrated
by Owen Vernon Shaffer, former Beloit College Art Department faculty member
and Director of the Wright Art Center. This book contains illustrations
of many artifacts in the Logan Museum, has been in print for over 30 years
and is available for purchase in the Gift Shop.
Sonia Bleeker did
graduate work in anthropology at Columbia University where she studied
under Franz Boas. Her interest in anthropology led her and Herbert all
over the world where they did research for the anthropology books she
wrote for young adults about Native Americans, pre-Columbian cultures,
and various African tribes.
The Herbert Spencer Zim Papers are housed at the Elmer L. Anderson Library
in the Children’s Literature
Research Collection at the University of Minnesota. Archives on Herbert
Zim and Sonia Bleeker Zim are also part of the de
Grummond Children’s Literature Collection at the University
of Southern Mississippi.
Researched by Kate Lindenmeyer `04 (Anthropology and Museum Studies) |
Harley
Harris Bartlett (1886-1960)
In 1961 Hazel Bartlett
donated over 400 ethnographic objects from Indonesia, Tibet, Malaysia, and
the Philippines to the Logan Museum of Anthropology. The material was collected
by Ms. Bartlett’s brother, Harley Harris Bartlett, who was a professor
of botany and director of the Botanical Gardens at the University of Michigan.
Harley Bartlett traveled around the world during the first half
of the 20th century collecting vast botanical collections for the University
of Michigan, the U.S. government, and major American companies and agencies,
such as the United States Rubber Company. In 1918 Bartlett took his first
research trip to Sumatra, an island in Indonesia, where he became acquainted
with the indigenous Batak people. He studied their language and collected
ethnographic materials as well as plant specimens. He wrote numerous articles
about the language and culture of the Batak people.
The rare Batak manuscripts collected by Bartlett are considered
by scholars the most important part of his collection. Researchers from
around the world have visited the Logan Museum to study and translate
the manuscripts, which have been published nationally and internationally.
The Harley Harris Bartlett Archives are housed at the Bentley
Historical Library, University of Michigan.
Researched by Stephanie Haney `05 (Art History and Museum Studies) |
History
of the Logan Museum |
|