|

Edward Harrison Taylor (1889-1978) "I think I shall go abroad and hunt adventure.
" When young Edward Harrison Taylor left
Maysville, Missouri, to attend the University of Kansas in 1908, he brought his
interest in reptiles with him. He boarded at the Lawrence home of the Kansas
governor, where his water snake pets were not immediately welcome. But when a
houseguest, Theodore Roosevelt, expressed great interest in the snakes, the
terrarium of serpents gained new status in the governor's household. Graduating early from KU, Ed Taylor proclaimed,
"I think I shall go abroad and hunt adventure," mostly in disdain of
joining the ranks of common job-hunters. A few days later, a notice of civil
service positions in the Philippines appeared and Ed Taylor breezed through
examinations to find himself aboard ship and Manila-bound. His first assignment was to establish a
boarding school in a remote area for children from headhunting tribes. With the
help of one water buffalo and a passel of enthusiastic youngsters, he cleared a
forest, built a school dormitory, and offered a curriculum of corn planting and
baseball. Later assignments included district
supervisor, the chief of fisheries in the Philippines and finally the director
of the Bureau of Science. In the midst of these duties, Ed Taylor
took every opportunity to explore mountain peaks, remote jungle trails, and
outlying islands, always with a snake bag tucked under his belt. His ability
to survive in the jungle became legendary, and his exploration of treetop flora
and remote regions secured many specimens new to science. When Taylor
returned to the United States and to KU, he did not abandon this love of
fieldwork and travel. In teaching comparative anatomy or guiding graduate
research, his attention to detail and his ability in storytelling were well
known. He took every opportunity to return to the field for collecting and
research. His landmark treatise on the lizard group Eumeces was followed by lengthy field surveys of
the reptiles and amphibians of Mexico, Costa Rica, and Thailand. Ultimately, his research totaled some
15,000 pages of scientific publication that established seven new families,
twenty-five new genera and over 500 new species. "In sheer bulk alone it
outweighs anything produced by any other herpetologist who ever lived,"
appraises Hobart M. Smith, a renowned former student and colleague. On a Philippine collecting trip, Taylor
had collected earthworms for a colleague, only to notice that one was not an
earthworm, but a new species of burrowing amphibian in the group called
caecilians. The last major effort in his career was a revision of these
caecilians, including descriptions of a large number of new species. At age eighty-nine in 1978, Professor
Taylor listened to the accounts of a younger herpetologist just returned from
South America. "Oh, how my feet itch to go into the field," he
lamented.
E. H. Taylor, 1934

If you find any broken links or non-working content, please e-mail the division webmaster--David Burnham--at dinosaur@ku.edu.
Comments or questions may be directed to the assistant director for public programs.
© Copyright 2005 KU Natural History Museum. All rights reserved.