Frederick Starr

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

For the contemporary American academic and musician, see S. Frederick Starr.

Frederick Starr (September 2, 1858 - August 14, 1933), also known as "Ofuda Hakushi" in Japan,[1] was an American academic, anthropologist, and "populist educator"[2] born at Auburn, New York.

He earned an undergraduate degree at the University of Rochester (1882) and a doctorate in geology at Lafayette (1885). While working as a curator of geology at the American Museum of Natural History (AMNH), he became interested in anthropology and ethnology; and Frederic Ward Putnam helped him become appointed as curator of AMNH's ethological collection.[2]

In this period, he became active in the Chautauqua circuit as a popular professor and, in 1888-89, as registrar. When William Rainey Harper, president of the Chautauqua Institution was named President of the University of Chicago, he appointed Starr as an assistant professor of anthropology.[2]

Starr was the curator in charge of ethnological subjects at the American Museum of Natural History in New York (1889-91), until he accepted a faculty position at the University of Chicago where he remained for the next 31 years.[3] He was an Assistant professor (1892-95), and he gained tenure the next year.[2]

In 1905-06 he made a careful study of the pygmy races of Central Africa, and made investigations in the Philippine Islands in 1908, in Japan in 1909-10, and in Korea in 1911.

Starr happened to be in Japan when the Great Kanto Earthquake of 1923 struck the main island of Honshu. In the absence of news from the devastated area, speculation about his safety was published in the New York Times. His plans to spend several months researching the vicinity of Mt. Fuji were not specific, nor was the extent of the quake area known. Reports that the area near Mt. Fuji were hard hit led to increased concerns.[4] Worries were allayed when Dr. Starr's name was published amongst the list of survivors which was prepared by the U.S. Embassy in Tokyo.[5] As chance would have it, Dr. Starr happened to be in Tokyo on September 1, 1923, when the earthquake struck; and he escaped to the relative safety of Zojo-ji, a famous Buddhist Temple in Tokyo's Shiba district in what is today Minato ward. A brief description from a letter to friends in Auburn, New York, was printed in the Times:

"We went to the temple grounds, but at midnight, the priests took us up higher and higher to the innermost temple. Here on the topmost step, I sat till morning, watching the brazen sky beyond the slope meaning ruin to millions."[6]

Dr. Starr died of bronchial pneumonia at age 74 in Tokyo, August 14, 1933. Services were held at Trinity Cathedral in Tokyo. Amongst those attending was Japanese Premier Makoto Saito.[7]

Contents

[edit] Honors

  • University of Chicago, Department of Anthropology, Starr Lectureship.[8]

[edit] Selected works

[edit] Notes

[edit] References

[edit] External links