Constantine Samuel
Rafinesque (1783-1840) was a botanist and professor. Originally born in Turkey,
he came to Philadelphia in 1802. He met Thomas Jefferson in July 1804 while
traveling through Maryland, Virginia and the District of Columbia to study the
local flora. Although this was their only meeting, they corresponded
sporadically for the next twenty years.
During their first bout
of correspondence, Rafinesque expressed keen interest in the Lewis and Clark
Expedition. Jefferson suggested that he might prove useful in a proposed
expedition along the Red River.[1] Rafinesque did not join this expedition,
having left the country for Italy before receiving the letter. He remained
there for the next ten years.
Rafinesque returned to
the U.S. in 1815, and accepted a position as a botany professor at Transylvania
University in 1819. Rafinesque wrote to Jefferson after a silence of nearly
fifteen years to inquire after a professorship at the University of
Virginia.[2] Jefferson promised to "lay [his] letter before the board in
due time."[3] Rafinesque was ultimately unsuccessful in securing a
position at the new university, despite applying to Jefferson several more
times over the next few years.[4]
Rafinesque remained at
Transylvania University and did extensive archaeological and linguistic work on
the early people in the Ohio Valley. In 1826, he moved to Philadelphia where he
continued to write until his death by cancer.
Footnotes
↑ Letterpress copy
available at the Library of Congress.
↑ Rafinesque to
Jefferson, 16 September 1819. University of Virginia
↑ Jefferson to
Rafinesque, 7 November 1819. Ibid.
↑ See Edwin M. Betts,
"The Correspondence Between Constantine Samuel Rafinesque and Thomas
Jefferson" Proceedings of the American Philosophical Society 87(1944):
368-380.
Further Sources
Boewe, Charles, ed.
Profiles of Rafinesque. Knoxville, Tenn.: University of Tennessee Press, 2003.
Rafinesque, C.S. A C.S.
Rafinesque Anthology. Edited by Charles Boewe. Jefferson, N.C.: McFarland,
2005.
Transylvania University
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