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MICROSCOPICAL BOOKPLATES (EX LIBRIS)
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John Gustav Delly, Scientific Advisor, College of Microscopy, Westmont, IL |
The bookplate with the hand-written name of Thomas
L. Jones (Figure 50) is not a custom, personalized bookplate; it is a
generic “Science” bookplate. There is another bookplate of the same generic
design (Figure 51), signed Cy. L. Wall(?). Still, it’s a rather nice
bookplate, with microscope, chemical apparatus, medical apparatus (stethoscope,
forceps), and caduceus symbolism.
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Figure
50 |
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Figure
51 |
The bookplate of Dr. Ludwig Kofler (1865-1947) (Figure
52) has suggestions of botany, chemistry and pharmacy – the plant, the
distillation apparatus, and the balance, but dates from the 1920’s, before
his interest in thermomicroscopy (Figure 53). Most readers will know
Kofler’s name through the Kofler Hotstage, the Kofler Hotbar, and his
numerous books on thermal methods in the microscopical study of pharmaceuticals.
click image to enlarge (126K)
Figure
52 |
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Figure
53 |
The bookplate of Charles Atwood Kofoid (1865-1947) is very
interesting (Figure 54); there are planktonic organisms about to be hauled
into the plankton net being towed by the research vessel. Kofoid was
born in Illinois in 1865, did his undergraduate work at Oberlin College,
and received his PhD in Zoology from Harvard in 1894. He was at the University
of Michigan for a year, and for five and a half years, he was Superintendent
of the Illinois Biological Station, where he wrote numerous articles and
books, including the massive The Plankton of the Illinois River 1894-1899.
He next went to the University of California at Berkeley where he was
a leading member of the faculty for twenty-five years. Look at the upper
left end of the bookplate; the campanile (bell tower) seen outside the
window is the one on the Berkeley campus of the University of California.
Kofoid was one of the leading investigators in protozoology and limnology,
and was the developer of what came to be known as the Kofoid Bucket, a
device used in the collection of planktonic samples. Here is a color
plate from Kofoid’s spectacular 1921 publication on The Free-living
Unarmored Dinoflagellata (Figure 55); some of these forms appear in
his bookplate. The associates of Professor Kofoid are said to have been
always impressed by the succession of arrivals of packages of books, which
did not cease until his death in 1947. A few months before his death,
he gave the University more than 40,000 volumes, including many rare works
in the history of science and medicine. His obituary appears in Science
106 462-3 (1947).
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Figure
54 |
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Figure
55 |
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