Chapter ID: CBB701025048

The Rutgers Geology Museum: America’s first geology museum and the past 200 years of geoscience education (2018)

unapi

Lauren Neitzke-Adamo (Author)
A.J. Blandford (Author)
Julia Criscione (Author)
Richard K. Olsson (Author)
Erika Gorder (Author)


Geological Society of America
Pages: 217-236
Publication date: 2018
Language: English


The Rutgers Geology Museum is America's first geology museum. Rocks, fossils, and minerals had been collected into 'cabinets of curiosities' since first contact between Europeans and Native Americans, and beginning in the late eighteenth century, many of these small personal cabinets were expanded, organized, and made available to the public at natural history and philosophical societies in Philadelphia and Boston. In the first decades of the nineteenth century, geology was widely recognized as an important new science that influenced the organization of collections on display at the growing number of colleges, academies, societies, lyceums, and museums that began popping up all over the United States, but it was not until 1872 that the first museum dedicated specifically to geology was built at Rutgers College. Rutgers University, known as Rutgers College until 1924, is itself one of the oldest colleges in America. Originally chartered as Queens College in the British colony of New Jersey in 1766, Rutgers, along with Harvard (1636), William and Mary (1693), Yale (1701), University of Pennsylvania (1740), Columbia (1754), Princeton (1755), Brown (1764), and Dartmouth College (1769), was among the nine colonial colleges founded before the American Revolution. Since its inception, the Rutgers Geology Museum's primary mission has been to educate the public on natural history-related topics. How this was accomplished has varied greatly through the years and originated with the "cabinet" of minerals that was displayed to students, alumni, and professors in the days of Dr. Lewis Beck, the first geology professor at Rutgers College. Through the efforts of Dr. George Cook, professor and vice president of Rutgers College, Geology Hall was erected in 1872 as the permanent home for the collections, and the museum and its collections became the focal point of the natural history courses taught at the time. The many professors and curators who tended to the museum and its collections over the next half century helped shape and dictate the future of science and geology education at the university, and with the creation of the Department of Geology in 1931, the museum became a center of leading geologic research and the outlet to present the results to the community. Today, the museum strives to connect with the local K-12 and university communities to inspire the next generation of geoscientists to continue building upon the legacy that the many Rutgers University geologists worked so hard to build.

...More
Citation URI
stagingisis.isiscb.org/p/isis/citation/CBB701025048

This citation is part of the Isis database.

Similar Citations

Chapter Claudine Cohen; (2018)
Exhibiting life history at the Paris Muséum d’Histoire Naturelle (nineteenth–twenty-first centuries) unapi

Chapter Patricia Coorough Burke; Peter M. Sheehan; (2018)
Museums at the intersection of science and citizen: An example from a Silurian reef unapi

Book Gary D. Rosenberg; Renee M. Clary; (2018)
Museums at the Forefront of the History and Philosophy of Geology: History Made, History in the Making unapi

Chapter Christian Koeberl; Franz Brandstätter; Mathias Harzhauser; Christa Riedl-Dorn; (2018)
History and importance of the geoscience collections at the Natural History Museum Vienna unapi

Chapter Dallas C. Evans; (2018)
The Children’s Museum of Indianapolis: A history of leveraging field expeditions and lab work to enhance public engagement unapi

Chapter Alan E. Leviton; Michele L. Aldrich; (2018)
Geology and paleontology at the California Academy of Sciences, 1895-2016: A brief overview unapi

Chapter Gary D. Rosenberg; (2018)
Carl Akeley’s revolution in exhibit design at the Milwaukee Public Museum unapi

Chapter Renee M. Clary; Amy Moe-Hoffman; (2018)
The role of the Dunn-Seiler Museum, Mississippi State University, in promoting public geoliteracy unapi

Chapter Stefano Dominici; Elisabetta Cioppi; (2018)
All is not lost: History from fossils and catalogues at the Museum of Natural History, University of Florence unapi

Chapter Gary D. Rosenberg; Renee M. Clary; (2018)
Something to be said for natural history museums unapi

Chapter Sally Newcomb; (2018)
The museums of Philadelphia unapi

Chapter J.C. Aubele; L.S. Crumpler; (2018)
Twenty-first-century natural history: Planetary geology in natural history museums unapi

Chapter Jere H. Lipps; (2018)
Natural history museums: Facilitating science literacy across the globe unapi

Chapter John A. Diemer; (2018)
Fossil collections and mapping the Silurian: An example from Scandinavia unapi

Chapter Lisbet Tarp; (2018)
Museum Wormianum: Collecting and learning in seventeenth-century Denmark unapi

Chapter Marianne Klemun; (2018)
Different functions of learning and knowledge—Geology takes form: Museums in the Habsburg Empire, 1815–1848 unapi

Book Andrea Tenca; (2020)
Dinosauri, demoni, operai. Una storia culturale del sottosuolo tra scienza e letteratura unapi

Chapter Warren D. Allmon; Gregory P. Dietl; Jonathan R. Hendricks; Robert M. Ross; (2018)
Bridging the two fossil records: Paleontology’s “big data” future resides in museum collections unapi

Chapter John Hankla; Samantha Sands; Megan Sims; Jeremy Wyman; (2018)
Live science in the Valley of the Last Dinosaurs: A public window into the world of paleontology unapi

Article Joseph H. Hartman; (2020)
The importance of the museum in antebellum U.S. western territorial exploration: understanding the relevance of collecting fossils and their conservation to solving long-standing geologic and paleontologic problems - Part 1 unapi

Authors & Contributors
Clary, Renee M.
Rosenberg, Gary D.
Aldrich, Michele L.
Allmon, Warren D.
Cioppi, Elisabetta
Cohen, Claudine
Journals
Earth Sciences History: Journal of the History of the Earth Sciences Society
Publishers
Geological Society of America
Unicopli
Concepts
Earth sciences
Paleontology
Science and society
Natural history
Geology
Museums
People
Akeley, Carl Ethan
Murchison, Roderick Impey
Worm, Ole
Time Periods
19th century
20th century
21st century
20th century, late
17th century
18th century
Places
Vienna (Austria)
Paris (France)
Denmark
France
Scandinavia; Nordic countries
Florence (Italy)
Institutions
Habsburg, House of
California Academy of Sciences
Smithsonian Institution (Washington, D.C.)
Comments

Be the first to comment!

{{ comment.created_by.username }} on {{ comment.created_on | date:'medium' }}

Log in or register to comment