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Charles Russell Orcutt

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Charles Russell Orcutt

Birth
Hartland, Windsor County, Vermont, USA
Death
25 Aug 1929 (aged 65)
Port-au-Prince, Arrondissement de Port-au-Prince, Ouest, Haiti
Burial
Port-au-Prince, Arrondissement de Port-au-Prince, Ouest, Haiti Add to Map
Memorial ID
View Source
Reports of Deaths of American Citizens Abroad, 1835- 1974 on ancestry.com. Died of malaria, embalmed and buried at Communal Cemetery so since this was the only cemetery available on F.A.G. I placed him here.

The following from Find A Grave contributor Barbara LeClaire:
"Slightly famous man
"Who's Who on the Pacific Coast, 1913 Record for Charles Russell Orcutt Who's Who on the Pacific Coast, 1913" ancestry.com
Writer of "American Plants" Editor of "West American Scientest"
Son of Herman Chandler and Eliza Eastin(Gray)Orcutt."

Contributor: Pat McArron (47348594):
Charles Russell Orcutt was born on 27 April 1864 in Hartland, Vermont. His father, Heman Chandler Orcutt (1825-1892), was a farmer with a keen interest in natural history. His mother, Eliza Eastin (Gray) Orcutt (1825-1909), was a poet born of a literary family. As a boy, Charles collected specimens of shells, minerals, and plants, which he displayed in a case built by his father, who was also a carpenter. Along with his parents and his older brother John Heman Orcutt (1856-1928), Charles moved to San Diego in 1879. He worked with his father on the family farm and nursery, collecting plant specimens in the San Diego area. In 1882, Charles and his father accompanied Charles Christopher Parry and Cyrus Pringle on a collecting expedition to Baja California. From these men, Charles learned to properly catalog, collect, and preserve specimens.

Orcutt’s primary biological interests were malacology and botany, but he also had an interest in minerals and mining. He also dabbled in real estate. He married Olive Lucy Eddy (1857-1952) in 1892. Olive had earned a Doctor of Medicine degree at the University of Michigan’s Homeopathic Medical College at Ann Arbor. She, along with her younger sister Clara, was the editor of the Southwest News and later the Alhambra Review, both Los Angeles weekly newspapers. Charles and Olive had four children: Charles Eddy Orcutt (1893-1952), Mary Orcutt Bisbee (1895-1977), Eunice Orcutt Ivec (1897-1973), and Heman Cortis Orcutt (1899-1981).

Charles Russell Orcutt published a number of journals and wrote articles for newspapers and scientific and popular periodicals. He spent most of his years away from his family in San Diego on collecting excursions to Texas, Baja California, Mexico, and the Caribbean. From 1927 until his death, Orcutt collected for the United States National Museum (Smithsonian Institution) in Jamaica and Haiti. He died of Malaria in JŽéréŽmie, Haiti on 25 August 1929.

Although Orcutt never realized his grand ambitions, his name is immortalized in scores of botanical and mollusca specie names, and his archives are held by many colleges and institutions. The purpose of this website is to make accessible his published works. Most are available online in .pdf format from Google Books, Biodiversity Heritage Library, and The Internet Archive and Open Library. But most of the journals, notably West American Scientist are out of sequence or incomplete. They are presented here in the most complete form available, in sequence, with bookmarks indicating journal numbers.
~ source: Larry Orcutt
Reports of Deaths of American Citizens Abroad, 1835- 1974 on ancestry.com. Died of malaria, embalmed and buried at Communal Cemetery so since this was the only cemetery available on F.A.G. I placed him here.

The following from Find A Grave contributor Barbara LeClaire:
"Slightly famous man
"Who's Who on the Pacific Coast, 1913 Record for Charles Russell Orcutt Who's Who on the Pacific Coast, 1913" ancestry.com
Writer of "American Plants" Editor of "West American Scientest"
Son of Herman Chandler and Eliza Eastin(Gray)Orcutt."

Contributor: Pat McArron (47348594):
Charles Russell Orcutt was born on 27 April 1864 in Hartland, Vermont. His father, Heman Chandler Orcutt (1825-1892), was a farmer with a keen interest in natural history. His mother, Eliza Eastin (Gray) Orcutt (1825-1909), was a poet born of a literary family. As a boy, Charles collected specimens of shells, minerals, and plants, which he displayed in a case built by his father, who was also a carpenter. Along with his parents and his older brother John Heman Orcutt (1856-1928), Charles moved to San Diego in 1879. He worked with his father on the family farm and nursery, collecting plant specimens in the San Diego area. In 1882, Charles and his father accompanied Charles Christopher Parry and Cyrus Pringle on a collecting expedition to Baja California. From these men, Charles learned to properly catalog, collect, and preserve specimens.

Orcutt’s primary biological interests were malacology and botany, but he also had an interest in minerals and mining. He also dabbled in real estate. He married Olive Lucy Eddy (1857-1952) in 1892. Olive had earned a Doctor of Medicine degree at the University of Michigan’s Homeopathic Medical College at Ann Arbor. She, along with her younger sister Clara, was the editor of the Southwest News and later the Alhambra Review, both Los Angeles weekly newspapers. Charles and Olive had four children: Charles Eddy Orcutt (1893-1952), Mary Orcutt Bisbee (1895-1977), Eunice Orcutt Ivec (1897-1973), and Heman Cortis Orcutt (1899-1981).

Charles Russell Orcutt published a number of journals and wrote articles for newspapers and scientific and popular periodicals. He spent most of his years away from his family in San Diego on collecting excursions to Texas, Baja California, Mexico, and the Caribbean. From 1927 until his death, Orcutt collected for the United States National Museum (Smithsonian Institution) in Jamaica and Haiti. He died of Malaria in JŽéréŽmie, Haiti on 25 August 1929.

Although Orcutt never realized his grand ambitions, his name is immortalized in scores of botanical and mollusca specie names, and his archives are held by many colleges and institutions. The purpose of this website is to make accessible his published works. Most are available online in .pdf format from Google Books, Biodiversity Heritage Library, and The Internet Archive and Open Library. But most of the journals, notably West American Scientist are out of sequence or incomplete. They are presented here in the most complete form available, in sequence, with bookmarks indicating journal numbers.
~ source: Larry Orcutt


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  • Created by: Addie
  • Added: Apr 10, 2011
  • Find a Grave Memorial ID:
  • Find a Grave, database and images (https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/68185238/charles_russell-orcutt: accessed ), memorial page for Charles Russell Orcutt (27 Apr 1864–25 Aug 1929), Find a Grave Memorial ID 68185238, citing Mass Graves, Port-au-Prince, Arrondissement de Port-au-Prince, Ouest, Haiti; Maintained by Addie (contributor 47097158).