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  2. He died of cholera [2] when Baird was ten years old. [5] As a young boy he attended Nottingham Academy in Port Deposit, Maryland and public school in Carlisle, Pennsylvania. [2] Baird attended Dickinson College and earned his bachelor's and master's degrees, finishing the former in 1840.

  3. North America. Spencer Fullerton Baird (born Feb. 3, 1823, Reading, Pa., U.S.—died Aug. 19, 1887, Woods Hole, Mass.) was an American naturalist, vertebrate zoologist, and in his time the leading authority on North American birds and mammals.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  4. The second Smithsonian Secretary, Spencer Fullerton Baird, served from 1878 to 1887. A naturalist, ornithologist, ichthyologist, and renowned collector from Carlisle, Pennsylvania, Baird dedicated his career to creating a strong US National Museum at the Smithsonian. Born in 1823 in Reading, Pennsylvania, Baird established himself at a very ...

  5. Jun 17, 2021 · Meet Spencer Baird, naturalist, collector, and museum organizer who founded the field of fisheries science and much more. Spencer Fullerton Baird was born in Reading, Pennsylvania in 1823. Time spent as a child exploring the countryside with his brother fueled his passion for natural history.

  6. SPENCER FULLERTON BAIRD. Upon the death of Professor Henry, in 1878, Professor Baird succeeded him as Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution. He effected some changes in its policy, more especially in the distribu-tion of its funds, which will be referred to hereafter, but in the main his thoughts and labor continued to be devoted to the Fish

  7. Jun 8, 2018 · Baird, Spencer Fullerton. ( b. Reading, Pennsylvania, 3 February 1823; d. Woods Hole, Massachusetts, 19 August 1887) zoology, scientific administration. Baird’s father was Samuel Baird, a lawyer of local prominence; his mother was the former Lydia MacFunn Biddle of Philadelphia. Upon Samuel’s death in 1833, Lydia and her seven children ...

  8. Portrait of Spencer Baird, second Secretary (1878-1887) of the Smithsonian Institution, as a young man. Baird arrived in Washington in 1850 to become Assistant Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution, a post he held for 28 years. Upon the death of Joseph Henry, the first Secretary of the Smithsonian (1847-1878), he became Secretary.

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