From Wikitia - Reading time: 3 minMark Walrod Harrington | |
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| Born | August 18, 1848 Sycamore, Illinois |
| Died | September 10, 1926 Morris Plains, New Jersey |
| Nationality | American |
| Occupation | Scientist |
Mark Walrod Harrington (August 18, 1848 in Sycamore, Illinois; September 10, 1926 in Morris Plains, New Jersey) was an American scientist, the first civilian head of the National Weather Service|United States Weather Bureau, and former List of presidents of the University of Washington[1]. Considered a prominent scientist in the late 19th century, Harrington studied and published works in multiple disciplines, including botany[2][3], astronomy[4], meteorology[5], and geology, and knew a half-dozen languages[6]. His academic achievements were overshadowed by his disappearance in 1899, when he left home one day and disappeared for many years. His wife and son located him in 1908 at a psychiatric hospital in New Jersey where he had been admitted as patient John Doe No. 8[7].
Mark was the son of James Harrington and Charlotte Walrod Harrington. In 1878, he married Rose Martha Smith, with whom he had a son (Mark Raymond). Mark Raymond Harrington was a well-known Archaeology.
From 1879 to 1891, he was professor of Astronomie and director of the Detroit Observatory of the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor. During this time, he published an astronomical observation recorded by Johan Ludvig Emil Dreyer as NGC 7040 in the New General Catalogue. He founded The American Meteorological Journal in 1884, of which he published the first seven volumes.
In 1891, Harrington was appointed by President Benjamin Harrison as the first civilian chief of the United States Weather Bureau.[8] He served in this role until 1895, when he was ousted by Secretary of Agriculture Julius Sterling Morton, who convinced newly inaugurated President Grover Cleveland to let him fire Harrington[9].
In 1895, he was elected president of the University of Washington to succeed Thomas Milton Gatch[10]. He remained in this office until 1897.
He left his home one evening in 1899 and disappeared for about 7 years. According to news accounts, Professor Harrington had lost his memory but after several years in psychiatric institutions, developed a fondness for music.[11]
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