Hugo Iltis

Hugo Iltis

Hugo Iltis in 1927 at the Volkshochschule
in Brno, Czechoslovakia
Born (1882-04-11)April 11, 1882
Brno (Brünn), Austria-Hungary
Died June 22, 1952(1952-06-22) (aged 70)
Fredericksburg, Virginia
Known for Biography of Gregor Mendel

Hugo Iltis (April 11, 1882, Brno – June 22, 1952, Fredericksburg, Virginia) was a Czech-American biologist.

Life and work

Iltis was born on April 11, 1882, in Brünn, Austria-Hungary. His family was of Jewish descent, and the family name translates as "polecat". He was the son of the town physician Dr. Moritz Iltis. He became a citizen of the newly established Republic of Czechoslovakia in 1919.

He attended the lower grades and the German-language gymnasium in Brünn and then went on to study biology and botany at the University of Zurich, Switzerland, from 1900-1903 as an assistant to Arnold Dodel-Port and later Alfred Ernst (the successor of Dodel-Port in 1902). He studied botany at the University of Prague under Hans Molisch from 1903-1905 where he received his Ph.D. in 1905.

In 1906, he served as secretary for Naturforschender Verein in Brünn, which was the society through which Gregor Mendel published his papers. In 1910, he raised funds for the Mendel Memorial in Brünn, and served as secretary for the International Committee for the Mendel Memorial. He gave the commemorative speech at the unveiling of the memorial. He was also the secretary for the Mendel Centenary in 1922, a celebration of the hundredth anniversary of Mendel's birth.

Hugo Iltis (1882-1952) in 1910
Unveiling of the Mendel Monument in 1910. Iltis organized the funding of the Monument.

He taught biology (with the civil service title "professor") at the German-language gymnasium in Brünn from 1905 to 1938, and he also held an appointment as a Privatdozent for botany and genetics at the Deutsche Technische Hochschule (German Polytechnical Institute) in Brünn from 1911-1938. He was the founder and director of the Masaryk People's University (Masaryk Volkshochschule) in Brno, an adult education evening school, from 1921 to 1938. This Volkshochschule was the largest institution for adult education in Czechoslovakia with an enrollment above 2000. He founded the Mendel Museum in Brno in 1932 and curated it to 1937. The museum contained many valuable manuscripts and relics of the life and work of Mendel.

A socialist, Iltis spent much of his time from 1930-1938 combating the racist biology (eugenics) of the Nazis.[1] He was a key organizer and host of the 1932 Brno congress of the World League for Sexual Reform.

With the help of Franz Boas and Albert Einstein, the Iltis family received a United States visa in 1939.[2] His wife Anni Iltis and their two boys left behind their life in Brno and joined him in January 1939 in France following a harrowing train ride through Germany and France. They sailed for the U.S. from the port Cherbourg on the passenger ship RMS Aquitania.

Initially, he taught for 5 weeks at the International School,[3] run by Peter Ray Ogden. Following a chance meeting with Dean Alvey, he was offered a professorship in biology at Mary Washington College in Fredericksburg, Virginia, where he taught for approximately 12 years.[4] and the founder and curator of the Mendel Museum of Genetics, now housed at the University of Illinois Archives.[5] He died at Fredericksburg on June 22, 1952.[1] His younger son was the plant morphologist and taxonomist Hugh Iltis.[6] His elder son was the entomologist Fred Iltis.

Later in life, to his great surprise, he learned from his wife's sister Lisi Liebscher that his wife Anni Iltis was a distant cousin of Gregor Mendel.

He was a fellow in the A.A.A.S., a member of the Genetics Society of America, the American Genetics Association, the Virginia Academy of Science, and the American Association of University Professors.

He was listed in: Köpfe Europas, Wer Ist's?, Who Knows What?, and American Men of Science.

Archives of his work are stored in the University of Wisconsin Library Special Collections. [7]

Works

References

  1. 1 2 L. C. Dunn, Hugo Iltis: 1882-1952, Hugo Iltis: 1882-1952 Science, vol. 117 (1953), pp. 3-4.
  2. Letter from Einstein to Boas.
  3. International School oral history transcript]
  4. Papers of Hugo Iltis at the Hunt Institute for Botanical Documentation.
  5. Iltis Mendelania Collection, 1841-1984 - University of Illinois Archives.
  6. Paul Berg & Maxine Singer, George Beadle, an uncommon farmer: the emergence of genetics in the 20th century, CSHL Press, 2003, p. 296.
  7. Iltis Family Collection, University of Wisconsin Library Special Collections
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