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John Addison Porter

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Alma mater
  
Yale College

Occupation
  
Professor


Name
  
John Porter

Children
  
John Addison Porter

John Addison Porter httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Born
  
March 15, 1822 (
1822-03-15
)
Catskill, New York

Parent(s)
  
Addison Porter and Anne Hogeboom

Relatives
  
father-in-law Joseph Earl Sheffield

Died
  
August 25, 1866, New Haven, Connecticut, United States

Spouse
  
Josephine Sheffield (m. 1855)

Education
  
Yale University, Yale College

John Addison Porter (March 15, 1822 – August 25, 1866) was an American Professor of Chemistry. He is the namesake of the John Addison Porter Prize and was a founder of the Scroll and Key senior society of Yale University.

Contents

John Addison Porter John Addison Porter Wikipedia

Academic life

Porter was born in Catskill, New York.

Porter graduated from Yale College in 1842. At Yale, he, along with William Kingsley, publisher of The New Englander, and eleven others, founded the senior or secret society Scroll and Key and incorporated the Kingsley Trust Association in 1841.

He and moved to Philadelphia for further study. In 1844 he became a professor at Delaware College and remained there until 1847 when he moved to Germany to study at the University of Giessen under Justus von Liebig.

In 1850 he returned to the United States and became a professor at Brown University. He left in 1852 to take the place of the retiring Professor John Pitkin Norton at Sheffield Scientific School (then Yale Scientific School). He was the Professor of Analytical and Agricultural Chemistry from 1852 to 1856, and Professor of Organic Chemistry from 1856-1864. He remained at Yale until he had to resign for health reasons in 1864, two years before his death in New Haven. In 1872 the Kingsley Trust endowed at Yale a prize in his honor to be given annually.

Personal life

In 1855 he married Josephine Earl Sheffield, daughter of Joseph E. Sheffield, whose name was to eventually adorn the school where he was professor for 12 years.

One of their sons was another John Addison Porter, who became the first person to hold the title "Secretary to the President", when he served in that capacity to William McKinley.

Literary works

  • First book of chemistry and allied sciences. 1857
  • Principles of chemistry. 1857, 1860, 1864, 1868
  • First book of science. 1858
  • Outlines of the first course of Yale agricultural lectures. 1860
  • Selections from the Kalevala, the Great Finnish Epic. 1868
  • Porter was the first person to translate any part of the Finnish national epic Kalevala into English using the German translation by Franz Anton Schiefner (the same version used by John Martin Crawford for his complete 1888 translation).

    John Addison Porter Prize

    The John Addison Porter Prize, established in 1872, is a prize at Yale University awarded annually to the best work of scholarship in any field "where it is possible, through original effort, to gather and relate facts or principles, or both, and to present the results in such a literary form as to make the product of general human interest."

    References

    John Addison Porter Wikipedia