Melville Hatch

Melville Hatch
Born November 25, 1898
Detroit, Michigan, United States
Died January 19, 1988(1988-01-19) (aged 89)
Seattle, Washington, United States
Citizenship United States
Education B.A., University of Michigan
M.A., University of Michigan
Ph.D., University of Michigan
Occupation professor, scientist
Employer University of Washington
Known for
  • Beetles of the Pacific Northwest (1971)
  • the "Melville Hatch Beetle Collection" at Oregon State University

Melville Harrison Hatch (1898-1988) was an American entomologist who specialized in the study of beetles. His long career at the University of Washington was highlighted by the publication of the seminal, five-volume work Beetles of the Pacific Northwest. Hatch is responsible for the identification and naming of 13 species.[1]

Early life and education

Melville Hatch was born in Detroit, Michigan and attended Detroit Central High School.[1] He began collecting insects at age 15 and went on to study biology at the University of Michigan, from where he graduated in 1919, afterwards going on to earn a Ph.D. in 1928.[2]

Career

Brief teaching stints at Millikin University and the University of Minnesota were followed by an appointment as assistant professor at the University of Washington, where Hatch would spend the rest of his career. He was subsequently chosen to chair the zoology department, following the retirement of Trevor Kincaid and, in 1962, was appointed curator of entomology at the university's Burke Museum of Natural History. [2] Over an eight-year period, beginning in 1959, Hatch served as editor of The Biologist, a magazine then published by Phi Sigma.[2]

In 1937 Hatch founded The Scarabs, a Seattle social club focused on discussion of insects, and was elected "High Scarab," a post he would hold until the early 1970s. (Members of The Scarabs have included Robert Michael Pyle and the noted Polish anthropologist Borys Malkin.)[3] In 1950 he authored a survey of scientific studies based on Trevor Kincaid's research, Studies Honoring Trevor Kincaid.[4]

In 1949 Hatch served on the University of Washington's Committee on Tenure and Academic Freedom, which considered the case of several faculty members who had been charged with "subversive communist activity." He was part of the majority that endorsed the dismissal of three. The committee, while making strong denunciations of communism, found no good cause to dismiss three other admitted communist faculty members and recommended their retention.[5] Rod Crawford, the curator of arachnids at the Burke Museum, would later note that Hatch's "essays show clearly enough that he had as little sympathy with Communist ideology as any Cold War American."[6]

Hatch's five-volume magnum opus, Beetles of the Pacific Northwest, was published in 1971. The mammoth work, considered a seminal guide to beetles in the Pacific Northwest, took Hatch 23 years to finish. In the late 1970s, Hatch's collection of more than half-a-million beetles was transferred to Oregon State University where it was designated the "Melville Hatch Beetle Collection."[7] Hatch was the recipient of the C. W. Woodworth Award in 1975.[8]

Death

Melville Hatch died in Seattle, Washington in 1988.[1]

Selected publications

References

  1. 1 2 3 "Melville H. Hatch, ESA Fellow (1938)". entsoc.org. Entomological Society of America. Retrieved 17 January 2015.
  2. 1 2 3 Capinera, John (2008). Encyclopedia of Entomology. Springer. p. 1771. ISBN 1402062427.
  3. "Scarabs". courses.washington.edu. University of Washington. Retrieved 17 January 2015.
  4. "Studies honoring Trevor Kincaid". Smithsonian Institution. Retrieved 17 January 2015.
  5. "Document 31: Report of Tenure Committee". washington.edu. Center for the Study of the Pacific Northwest. Retrieved 17 January 2015.
  6. Crawford, Rob. "Melville Harrison Hatch". crawford.tardigrade.net. Retrieved 17 January 2015.
  7. "Melville Hatch Beetle Collection". osac.science.oregonstate.edu. Oregon State University. Retrieved 17 January 2015.
  8. "Pacific Branch ESA C. W. Woodworth Award Recipients" (PDF). entsoc.org. Entomological Society of America. Retrieved 17 January 2015.
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