Thomas Condon

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Thomas Condon
File:Thomas condon of oregon.jpg
Thomas Condon at age 80
Born 1822
Ballynafauna, near Fermoy, Ireland[1]
Died 1907
a farm near Eugene, Oregon[2]
Cause of death influenza[2]
Resting place Eugene Masonic Cemetery[3]
Nationality Irish
Citizenship United States
Alma mater Auburn Theological Seminary
Occupation teacher, minister, geologist
Spouse(s) Cornelia Holt[4]
Children 10[5]
Parent(s) John and Mary Roche Condon[1]

Thomas Condon (1822–1907) was an Irish Congregational minister, geologist, and paleontologist who gained recognition for his work in the U.S. state of Oregon.[6]

Condon arrived in New York from Ireland in 1833 and graduated from theological seminary in 1852, after which he traveled to Oregon by ship.[6] As a minister at The Dalles, he became interested in the fossils he found in the area.[6] He found fossil seashells on the Crooked River and fossil camels and other animals along the John Day River.[6] Many of his discoveries were in the present-day John Day Fossil Beds National Monument.[6] He corresponded with noted scientists, including Spencer Baird of the Smithsonian, Edward Cope of the Academy of Natural Sciences, Joseph Leidy, O.C. Marsh, and John C. Merriam,[7] and provided specimens to major museums.[6]

Condon was appointed the first State Geologist for Oregon in 1872.[8] He resigned that post to become first professor of geology at the University of Oregon. Previously he was a teacher at Pacific University in Forest Grove.[9]

In The Two Islands and What Came of Them, a geology book published in 1902, Condon wrote about two widely separated regions of Oregon that contain its oldest rocks, the Klamath Mountains of the southwest and the Blue Mountains of the northeast.[10] The book attempted to summarize what was then known about the state's geology and to draw conclusions about its geologic past.[7]

Legacy

Condon Hall at the University of Oregon, which originally housed the geology department, was named for Condon,[11] as were the Thomas Condon Paleontology Center at the Sheep Rock unit of the John Day Fossil Beds National Monument, near Dayville, Oregon, temporary Lake Condon, formed periodically by the Missoula Floods, and the Condon Fossil Collection of the University of Oregon Museum of Natural and Cultural History, which was founded by Condon in 1876.[12] He is the namesake of Condon Butte in Lane County.[13] Condon, Oregon, was named for a nephew of Condon.[14]

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 Clark, p. 2
  2. 2.0 2.1 Clark, p. 437
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  4. Clark, p. 75
  5. Clark, pp. 190 and 238
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Works cited

  • Clark, Robert D. The Odyssey of Thomas Condon (1989). Portland, Oregon: The Oregon Historical Society Press. ISBN 0-87595-200-3.

Further reading

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External links