Charles Herty
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Charles Holmes Herty, Sr. |
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Born | December 4, 1867 Milledgeville, Georgia, United States |
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Died | July 27, 1938 Savannah, Georgia, United States |
Citizenship | American |
Field | Chemist |
Institution | University of Georgia University of North Carolina |
Alma mater | University of Georgia (B.P. 1886) Johns Hopkins University (Ph.D. 1890) |
Academic advisor | Ira Remsen |
Known for | Georgia Bulldogs Football Southern United States Turpentine collection system |
Dr. Charles Holmes Herty, Sr. (December 4, 1867 - July 27, 1938) was an American academic, scientist and businessman. Serving in academia as a chemistry professor to begin his career, Herty concurrently promoted collegiate athletics including creating the first varsity football team at the University of Georgia. His academic research gravitated towards applied chemistry where he revolutionized the turpentine industry in the United States. While serving as the president of the American Chemical Society, Herty became a national advocate for the nascent American chemical industry and left academia to preside over the Synthetic Organic Chemical Manufacturers' Association (SOCMA) and the Chemical Foundation. He was also instrumental in the creation of the National Institutes of Health. Towards the end of his career, Herty's research and advocacy led to the creation of a new pulp industry in the Southern United States that utilized southern pine trees to create newsprint.
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[edit] Early life, education and family
Born in Milledgeville, Georgia, in 1867, Herty attended the University of Georgia (UGA) in Athens, was a member of the Phi Kappa Literary Society and graduated with a Bachelor of Philosophy (B.P.) degree in 1886. He continued his studies at Johns Hopkins University where he earned his Ph.D. in chemistry in 1890 under the direction of Ira Remsen. Herty's dissertation topic was The Double Halides of Lead and the Alkali-Metals.[1]
Herty married Sophie Schaller of Athens on December 23, 1895, and they had three children: Charles "Holmes", Jr., Frank Bernard and Sophia "Dolly" Dorothea. Holmes became a metallurgist and vice-president of Bethlehem Steel and was elected to the National Academy of Sciences. Frank worked for the Union Gas Company in Brooklyn, New York. Dolly attended Vassar College as a undergraduate, Cornell University for her Masters of Science in botany and returned to Vassar to teachplant physiology.[2]
[edit] Early academic and professional life
Upon completing his doctoral studies in 1890, Herty returned to Georgia as an assistant Chemist at the Georgia Agricultural Experiment Station which was temporarily located in Athens at the time. In 1891, he became an instructor in the UGA Chemistry Department in Franklin College with a promotion to Adjunct Professor of Chemistry in 1894.[3]
Herty was granted a sabatical leave for the 1899-1900 academic year. After securing letters of introduction from American colleagues William McMurtrie, Remsen, Edgar Fahs Smith, and Francis Venable, Herty left for Europe and interacted with Walther Hermann Nernst, G. Lunge, Otto N. Witt and Alfred Werner. Herty's European trip provided the stimulus to experiment with Georgia pine trees as a source of paper after learning of the German use of tannenbaume for that same purpose.[1]
A Witt lecture on the poor processes used by the American Naval store and the almost certain likelihood that those processes would completely destroy the longleaf pine (Pinus palustris) led Herty to study the naval store industry's use of those trees to produce timber and turpentine.[1] After engaging in literature and field research to better understand the industry and its processes, Herty confirmed the validity of Witt's claim that the pine species would be completely destroyed. Herty also elucidated massive inefficiencies in the destructive collection processes. After conferring with forester W. W. Ashe of the North Carolina Geological Survey, Herty simplified a cup and gutter system used for many decades in France to combat bothe problems. The "Herty system" required less forestry expertise and labor, both necessities to insure the method's financial success in the U.S.
The initial Herty system utilized two v-shaped galvanized iron gutters to collect the resin. The simplicity of the method allowed it to be taught to the existing workforce in the turpentine industry. Herty's method yielded more resin that was also higher in quality; however, the most important success of this new method was that it lengthened the useful lifetime of the pine trees from only a few years to decades. This extended use not only saved the trees but the naval store industry as well. Herty's less destructive collection method also allowed the trees to eventually be milled as lumber. Herty subsequently moved from an iron gutter to a ceramic one, and his involvement with the Chattanooga Pottery Company in the production of the ceramic gutters eventually led to the creation of the Herty Turpentine Cup Company in 1909.
In November of 1901, Herty resigned from UGA due to a dispute with the chair of the department. On January 1, 1902, he joined the United States Bureau of Forestry.
After continued recruitment efforts by Venable, the president of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill (UNC) at the time, Herty finally accepted a long-offered appointment as the head of that school's chemistry department in January of 1905 and served as the Smith Professor of Applied Chemistry, officially beginning his duties in July of that year. In 1908, Herty was appointed the dean of UNC's School of Applied Sciences and served in that position until 1911. During his tenure at UNC, Herty continued to receive numerous job offers from groups including UGA as the Chair of Forestry, the United States Department of Agriculture Bureau of Soils, the Forest Products Laboratory, the University of Virginia, and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology; however, Herty remained at UNC.
While on the UNC faculty, Herty was an active member of the American Chemical Society (ACS) and the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) and served as the president of the North Carolina section of the ACS in 1906, chairman of the Division of Physical and Inorganic Chemistry in 1909, and councillor-at-large from 1909 until becoming president of the entire ACS organization in 1915. In that same year he joined the American Forestry Association.[4] Herty was also active in Orange County society and business. He was a member of the county commission and president of the local school board from 1910 until 1916. As part-owner of several local businesses including the Chapel Hill Telephone Company and the Chapel Hill Bank, Herty became a well-known member of the community.
[edit] Later professional life
After serving two terms as the ACS president (1915 and 1916), Herty resigned his UNC position after being unanimously elected as the first full-time editor of the ACS publication Journal of Industrial and Engineering Chemistry (JIEC) with an annual salary of US$6,000. Herty moved to New York City to begin his editorial duties. In addition to those duties, Herty also served as the chairman of the ACS Press and Publicity Committee beginning in 1918 which he leveraged to turn the Committeee into the ACS News Service on December 9, 1918. The News Service began publishing the Chemical & Engineering News in 1924.[2] Herty remained editor of the IJEC through the latter half of 1921.
On October 28, 1921, a group of synthetic organic chemical manufacturers created the Synthetic Organic Chemical Manufacturers' Association (SOCMA). As part of that meeting, they also convinced Herty to become president of this new organization and his focus now shifted to the federal government in Washington, D.C.. Herty also focused on improving the relationship between academia and the organic chemical industry.
In November of 1926, Herty resigned from SOCMA to become an adviser to the Chemical Foundation where he would work alongside his long-time friend and collaborator, Francis P. Garvan, the president of the Foundation from 1919 to 1937.
The Chemical Foundation was created in 1919 to oversee German patents seized by the United States Office of Alien Property during World War I to aid the growth of the nascent American chemical industry. Garvan and A. Mitchell Palmer were the Alien Property Custodians for President Woodrow Wilson and were tasked with the creation of the foundation.[5]
Another function of the foundation was the promotion of the field of chemistry and its contributions to society. This goal required the identification and funding of chemical research in academia, industry and government. It also required seeking out donors to fund research deemed important. An example of Herty’s efforts occurred in 1928, when Herty worked on behalf of his alma mater, UGA, to fund a research professorship and laboratory equipment for Professor Alfred Scott to study the turpentine-derivative resene.
In 1926, Herty began a professional relationship with U.S. Senator Joseph Ransdell based on their mutual interest in public health issues and protectionism. Herty was instrumental in assisting the Senator in the four-year struggle to gain the 1930 passage of the Ransdell bill which created the National Institute of Health from the existing Hygenic Laboratory within the United States Public Health Service.
In 1927, Herty stepped down from his full-time responsibilities at the Foundation to become a chemical consultant to universities, trade associations, municipal governments, and private firms located in the southern U.S.; however, he continued to work on several Foundation initiatives including the Ransdell bill for an annual retainer of US$5,000 through 1930.
Herty formed the Savannah Paper and Pulp Laboratory in Savannah, Georgia (known today as the Herty Institute). By 1933, the plant had developed a feasible process for pulp conversion. On March 31, 1933, the first newspaper was printed using paper created with the Herty process. On September 26, 2001 the Savannah lab was named a National Historic Chemical Landmark (NHCL).[2][6]
[edit] Athletics
Herty was the first faculty director of athletics at UGA. He also assumed the position of Instructor in Physical Culture in 1894 and was named Physical Director two years later. He led efforts to improve the athletic fields, establish the first campus gymnasium in the basement of Old College, create intramural and varsity baseball teams, and build tennis courts. In 1890, Herty began the UGA football program and coached the team for its inaugural season.
UGA played their first game on January 30, 1892 against Mercer University in Athens and won 50-0. The team lost its second game of the season to Auburn University 0-10 and finished the inaugural season with a record of 1-1. Frank "Si" Herty, the coach's cousin, served as the captain of the team. That first football field would eventually be named Herty Field in honor of the coach. The area was turned into a parking lot in the 1940s; however, it was converted into a greenspace in 1999.[7]
Herty was also directly involved in the creation of the Southern Intercollegiate Athletic Association (SIAA).[1][2][8], which held its first meeting in Atlanta on December 22, 1894.
[edit] Death and legacy
Herty died on July 27, 1938, in Savannah, Georgia, from complications due to a series of heart attacks in the months preceding his death. Services were held at St. John's Episcopal Church in that same city. Herty's body was cremated in Macon, Georgia and his remains interred in a private ceremony at Memory Hill Cemetery in Milledgeville.[1][9]
On June 13, 1938, the Southland Paper Mills, Inc. was organized, the next year the mill site was dedicated to Herty on May 27, 1939, and the first commercial newsprint made of Southern pine started production at this facility on January 17, 1940. The St. Regis Paper Company purchased controlling interest in Southland and evenually purchased it outright in 1977, and in 1984 Champion International Corporation bought St. Regis to become the largest manufacturer of "white paper" and the second largest domestic producer of newsprint.[10]
In 2000, Herty was posthumously inducted into the Paper Industry International Hall of Fame.[4]
Herty, Texas and Herty Elementary School in that same area are named in his honor. Numerous college buildings are named after Herty including a dormitory at Georgia College & State University and the science and agriculture building at Savannah State University.[11] Other namesakes include a UGA scholarship fund provided by the Alumni Association, the Herty Forest Institute in Waycross, Georgia, the liberty ship SS Charles Herty (launched in 1943), and Herty Drive and Herty Field on the northwest campus of UGA. A plaque with his portrait was also hung by order of the Georgia General Assembly at the Georgia State Capitol in 1946.[12] The Charles H. Herty Medal has been awarded annually since 1933 by the Georgia Section of the American Chemical Society.[13]. The medal is inscribed with the words pro scientia et patria - Herty 1933 which translates roughly as "for science and country".[2]
Preceded by No team |
Georgia Bulldogs Head Football Coach 1892 |
Succeeded by Ernest Brown |
[edit] Notes
- ^ a b c d e Reed, Germaine M. [1995]. Crusading for Chemistry: The Professional Career of Charles Holmes Herty. Athens, Georgia and London: University of Georgia Press. ISBN 0-8203-1671-7.
- ^ a b c d e The Filter Press, Volume 11, Number 6 (PDF) pp.3-5. Georgia Section of the American Chemical Society (September 2001). Retrieved on 2006-12-20.
- ^ Reed, Thomas Walter (ca. 1949). History of the University of Georgia pp. 1231-1234. University of Georgia. Retrieved on 2007-02-11.
- ^ a b Paper Industry International Hall of Fame bio for Charles H. Herty. Paper Industry International Hall of Fame, Inc. Retrieved on 2007-02-11.
- ^ Steen, Kathryn (March 2001). "Patents, Patriotism, and "Skilled in the Art" USA v. The Chemical Foundation, Inc., 1923-1926". Isis Vol. 92 (No. 1): pp. 91-122. Retrieved on 2007-02-11.
- ^ Raber, Linda R. (November 5, 2001). "For Science and County: ACS honors Charles Herty with National Historic Chemical Landmark in Georgia". CENEAR Vol. 79 (No. 45): pp. 42-43. Retrieved on 2007-02-11.
- ^ "Having a Field Day", Columns Faculty/Staff News, University of Georgia, September 9, 1999. Retrieved on 2007-01-03.
- ^ Waggoner, W.H. (1983). Chemistry at the University of Georgia. Athens, Georgia: Agee Publishers Inc.
- ^ Find-A-Grave Entry for Charles H. Herty. Retrieved on 2007-02-11.
- ^ Southland Paper Mills, Inc. Records:1939-1990. East Texas Research Center, Ralph W. Steen Library, Stephen F. Austin State University, Nacogdoches, TX. Retrieved on 2007-02-11.
- ^ Herty Hall. Savannah State University. Retrieved on 2007-02-11.
- ^ Charles Holmes Herty Cast. Georgia Secretary of State Website. Retrieved on 2007-02-11.
- ^ Charles H. Herty Medal. Georgia Section of the American Chemical Society. Retrieved on 2007-02-11.
[edit] Related pages
[edit] External links
- Charles Herty Birthplace State Historical Marker
- Herty Field State Historical Marker
- Pioneer Turpentining Experiment State Historical Marker
- Herty Field pictures:1899 and 1999, Carl Vinson Institute of Government, University of Georgia
Persondata | |
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NAME | Herty, Charles |
ALTERNATIVE NAMES | Herty, Charles Holmes; Charles H. Herty |
SHORT DESCRIPTION | Chemist, academic, businessman, football coach |
DATE OF BIRTH | December 4, 1867 |
PLACE OF BIRTH | Milledgeville, Georgia, Georgia (U.S. state), United States |
DATE OF DEATH | July 27, 1938 |
PLACE OF DEATH | Savannah, Georgia, Georgia (U.S. state), United States |
Categories: Georgia Bulldogs football coaches | 1867 births | 1938 deaths | American chemists | People from Georgia (U.S. state) | University of Georgia faculty | University of Georgia alumni | Johns Hopkins University alumni | University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill | USDA Forest Service | Forestry | National Institutes of Health