Joseph Pitty Couthouy

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Joseph Pitty Couthouy (6 January 1808 - 4 April 1864) was an American naval officer, conchologist, and invertebrate palaeontologist.

Born: Boston, Massachusetts. Died: Died in battle in Louisiana.

He entered the Boston Latin School in 1820. He married Mary Greenwood Wild on 9 March 1832.

Couthouy applied to President Andrew Jackson for a position on the Scientific Corps of the U.S. Exploring Expedition. President Jackson said that all positions were filled, to which Couthouy replied "Well General, I'll be hanged if I don't go, if I have to go before the mast!" The President replyed "Go back to Boston and I will see if anything can be done for you."

A few days later his commission was received. He sailed with the expedition on 18 August 1838, but was returned home from Honolulu in November 1840 by Lt. Charles Wilkes for "disobedience of orders." Although he meticulously labeled all of his specimens from the expedition, Dall recounts how "The authorities in Washington had appointed a reverened gentleman who knew nothing of science, with a fat salary, to unpack and take care of the specimens sent home by the expedition." This gentleman, then separated the specimens from the tags thus rendering many of them useless. Couthouy returned to Washington and tried to work up what he could of the collection and was then informed "to crown all of his misfortunes" that his pay was to be reduced by forty-four percent. He then returned to his profession as a master in the merchant marine, visiting South America and the Pacific. In 1854, he took command of an expedition to the Bay of Cumana, where he spent three unsuccessful years in search of the wreck of a Spanish treasure ship, the San Pedro, lost there in the early part of the century.

A good linguist he spoke fluent Spanish, French, Italian, and Portuguese and had mastered several dialects used in the Pacific Islands.

In the U.S. Civil War, Couthouy was ordered to command the USS Columbia on 31 December 1862, which was wrecked, and Couthouy made prisoner. He later commanded the USS Osage and finally the USS Chillicothe where on 3 April 1864, while off Grand Ecore, Louisiana, he was shot during an ambush and died the following day.

[edit] References

  • Abbott, R.T., and M.E. Young (eds.). 1973. American Malacologists: A national register of professional and amateur malacologists and private shell collectors and biographies of early American mollusk workers born between 1618 and 1900. American Malacologists, Falls Church, Virginia. Consolidated/Drake Press, Philadelphia.
  • Dall, W.H. 1888. Some American conchologists. Proceedings of the Biological Society of Washington 4:95-134.
  • Johnson, R.I. 1946. Occasional Papers on Mollusks, Museum of Comparative Zoology, Harvard University 1(5):33-40.