H. W. Harkness

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H(arvey) W(illson) Harkness

Born 1821
Pelham, Massachusetts
Died 1901
San Francisco, California
Residence Sacramento, California (1850–1869),
San Francisco, California (1869-1901)
Nationality American
Field Mycology, Natural history
Institution California Academy of Sciences
Known for Earliest cataloging of California fungal species
IPNI abbrev. The standard author abbreviation Harkn. may be used to indicate this person in citing a botanical name.

Harvey Willson Harkness (1821–1901) was an American mycologist and natural historian best known for his early descriptions of California fungal species. Born and raised in Massachusetts and trained as a physician, Harkness came to California during the Gold Rush in 1849. He rose to prominence as physician, educator, real estate developer, and newspaper editor in Sacramento, becoming part of the social circle of early California notables such as Leland Stanford, Charles Crocker, Collis Huntington, and Mark Hopkins. Harkness was a participant in the ceremony marking the completion of the First Transcontinental Railroad, representing California and bearing the Golden Spike that was driven by Leland Stanford marking the completion of the railroad. [1]

Having earned a large fortune in Sacramento real estate, Harkness retired his medical practice in 1869 and relocated to San Francisco. There, he joined the faculty of the California Academy of Sciences, becoming its president from 1887-1896. He devoted himself to research into the natural history of the Pacific States, publishing articles on the age of the Lassen Cinder Cone [2] and the nature of the fossil footprints discovered near Carson City, Nevada [3].

The bulk of his research was devoted to cataloging the previously undescribed fungi of California. In the last 30 years of his life, Harkness authored or coauthored a number of papers on California fungi, ranging from simple species lists to a detailed monograph of California hypogeous fungi.

[edit] Legacy

  • Harkness and his correspondents described scores of fungal species that were new to science. His 1899 monograph, California Hypogeous Fungi, alone described some 55 new species of hypogeous fungi.
  • Mount Harkness, a mountain near Lassen Peak, is named for him.
  • There is an H. W. Harkness Elementary School in Sacramento, California, commemorating his role as first Superintendent of Schools for Sacramento.

[edit] External links