POWELL, JOHN WESLEY

Powell meeting the Paiutes in 1874
John Wesley Powell was born 24 March 1834 at Mount Morris in western New
York state. His parents moved to Illinois, where he was educated at Wheaton
and Oberlin colleges. He became interested in botany and geology at an early
age, and began geological work with a series of field trips, including a
trip the length of the Mississippi River in a rowboat; he also traveled
the Ohio and Illinois rivers.
In 1861 he enlisted in the Union Army and was commissioned a captain when
he recruited a company of artillery. At the battle of Shiloh he lost his
right arm at the elbow. He nevertheless returned to active duty and was
promoted to the rank of major.
After his discharge in 1865, he was appointed professor of geology and curator
of the museum at Illinois Wesleyan University at Bloomington. He later became
a lecturer and curator at the museum of Illinois Normal University.
In 1867 he commenced a series of expeditions to the Rocky Mountains and
the canyons of the Green and Colorado rivers. During his most famous expedition,
from 24 May through 30 August 1869, he and his party made a daring nine-hundred-mile
journey with four boats, traveling from the Union Pacific Railroad crossing
of the Green River in Wyoming down through the Grand Canyon. He repeated
much of the journey again in 1871 and 1872 to make a more thorough study
of the Green and Colorado rivers.
In addition to his work in geology and botany, he studied the West's Native
Americans and their languages. He founded and was named the first director
of the Smithsonian Institution's Bureau of Ethnology, a position he held
until his death. In 1879 the United States Geological Survey was organized
and in 1880, following Clarence King's resignation, Powell became the director
of the survey, a position he held until 1894.
While Powell is most widely known as the first explorer of the Colorado
River, he also made significant contributions as an administrator and as
an advocate for conservation and careful planning in the use of western
lands. He argued that because of their arid nature, western public lands
should be classified as to their potential use for irrigation, pasturage,
timber, and mineral or coal extraction. Powell also maintained that the
traditional 160-acre farm as provided for in the Homestead Act was much
too small for grazing purposes in the West. Instead, grazing farms there
should be expanded to no less than 2,560 acres in order profitably to support
herds.
His principal publications were: Exploration of the Colorado River of
the West and its Tributaries (1875), which was revised and enlarged
as Canyons of the Colorado in 1895; Report on the Geology of the
Eastern Portion of the Uinta Mountains (1876); Report on the Lands
of the Arid Regions of the United States (1879); Introduction to
the Study of Indian Languages (1880); and Truth and Error, or the
Science of Intellection (1898).
John Wesley Powell married Emma Dean in March 1862, and the couple had one
child, a daughter, Mary Dean Powell, born 8 September 1871 in Salt Lake
City. Powell died in Haven, Maine, on 23 September 1892 and is buried in
the officers' section of Arlington National Cemetery.
See: William Culp Darrah, Powell of the Colorado (1951); Wallace
Stegner, Beyond the Hundredth Meridian: John Wesley Powell and the Second
Opening of the West (1954); John Upton Terrell, The Man Who Rediscovered
America: A Biography of John Wesley Powell (1969); "The Exploration
of the Colorado River in 1869," Utah Historical Quarterly 15
(1947); "The Exploration of the Colorado River and the High Plateaus
of Utah in 1871-1872," Utah Historical Quarterly 16 and 17 (1948-1949),
and "John Wesley Powell and the Colorado River Centennial Edition,"
Utah Historical Quarterly 37 (Spring 1969).
Margaret S. Bearnson