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John Henry Comstock

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Nationality
  
American

Institutions
  
Cornell University


Name
  
John Comstock

Fields
  
Entomology

John Henry Comstock httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsbb

Born
  
February 24, 1849 Janesville, Wisconsin (
1849 -02-24
)

Alma mater
  
Cornell University, Yale University

Died
  
March 20, 1931, Ithaca, New York, United States

Spouse
  
Anna Botsford Comstock (m. 1878)

Education
  
Cornell University, Yale University

Books
  
An Introduction to Entom, Insect Life: An Introducti, The Spider Book: A Manual fo

Similar People
  
Anna Botsford Comstock, Andrew Dickson White, John Lindley, Ibn al‑Baitar

Famous Entomologist: John Henry Comstock


John Henry Comstock (February 24, 1849 – March 20, 1931) was an eminent researcher in entomology and arachnology and a leading educator. His work provided the basis for classification of butterflies, moths, and scale insects.

Contents

John Henry Comstock httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Early life and education

Comstock was born on February 24, 1849 in Janesville, Wisconsin. He studied at Cornell University, graduating in 1874. He also studied at Yale University and the University of Leipzig. In 1878 he married Anna Botsford. She was a wood engraver who beautifully illustrated many of his articles. Comstock became a professor of Nature Studies at Cornell.

Career

Comstock worked as an instructor at Cornell until 1879. He worked at Vassar College from 1877 to 1879. Between 1879 and 1881 he became the chief Entomologist of the USDA in Washington, D.C. In 1882 he became professor of Entomology and Invertebrate Zoology at Cornell. He also did work in insect morphology and is best known as the co-proposer of the Comstock-Needham system with James George Needham. In 1893, John Henry Comstock and Simon Henry Gage founded the Comstock Publishing Company in order to make textbooks on microscopy, histology, and entomology available at a reasonable price to students and to publish the works of Anna Botsford Comstock on nature study.

Comstock, through his own work and that of his students, had a significant influence in the development of entomology departments throughout the United States.

He suffered a stroke on August 5, 1926, and continued to live as an invalid until his death on March 20, 1931.

The John Henry Comstock Award

The Entomological Society of America gives out an award in each of its six branches to the outstanding graduate student of the year. This award is the John Henry Comstock Graduate Student Award.

Publications

Comstock published many articles including:

  • Introduction to Entomology (1908).
  • A Manual for the study of insects (1930) jointly creditted and illustrated by Anna Botsford Comstock.
  • The Spider book: a manual for the study of the spiders and near relatives (1912).
  • Notes on Entomology (Ithaca, 1875).
  • Annual Reports of Entomologist (Washington, 1879–1881).
  • Report on Cotton Insects (1879).
  • Second Annual Report of the Department of Entomology of Cornell University, including a monograph on Diaspinae (Ithaca, 1883).
  • an article on Hymenoptera in the "Standard Natural History" (Boston, 1884).
  • References

    John Henry Comstock Wikipedia


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