Isabel Bassett Wasson

{{short description|American petroleum geologist}}

{{Use mdy dates|date=May 2011}}

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| birth_date = {{birth date|1897|01|11}}

| birth_place = Brooklyn, New York

| death_date = {{death date and age|1994|02|21|1897|01|11}}

| death_place = La Grange Park, Illinois

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| citizenship = United States

| nationality = American

| fields = Earth science, geology, ornithology

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Isabel Bassett Wasson (January 11, 1897 – February 21, 1994) was one of the first female petroleum geologists in the United States, the first female ranger at Yellowstone National Park, and also one of the first interpretive rangers (male or female) hired by the National Park Service.

Biography

File:Isabel Bassett Wasson.jpg

Wasson was born Isabel Deming Bassett in Brooklyn, New York on January 11, 1897, daughter of urban planner Edward Bassett and Annie Preston Bassett, and sister of inventor and engineer Preston Bassett. Wasson graduated Phi Beta Kappa from Wellesley College in 1918, majoring in history so she could take a wide range of science courses. She took classes in geology after graduation at the University of Chicago and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. She met her future husband, petroleum geologist Theron Wasson, whom she married in 1920, while working towards a master's degree in geology at Columbia University, which she finished in 1934. They had three children: Elizabeth W. Bergstrom, a biologist; Edward B. Wasson, a petroleum geologist; and Anne Harney Gallagher, an art historian. Wasson worked as a petroleum geologist in her husband's office at the Pure Oil Company from the early 1920s until 1928.{{Cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=6m8fAQAAMAAJ&q=Theron+Wasson |title=National Petroleum News |date=1927 |publisher=National Petroleum Publishing Company |language=en}} She published two scholarly articles on geology, one co-authored with her husband about an oil field discovered by Pure Oil in 1914,Wasson, Theron and Isabel B. Wasson. Cabin Creek field, West Virginia. AAPG Bulletin, July 1927, v. 11, p. 705-719.[http://aapgbull.geoscienceworld.org/content/11/7/705. Citation online] and another by herself about the ages of rock formations in Ohio and new terminology for them; the latter was cited in a number of other papers and a recent book.Wasson, I.B. 1932. Sub-Trenton formations in Ohio. Journal of Geology, v. 40 no. 8, p. 673-687.Ojakangas, Richard W., Albert B. Dickas, and John C. Green, editors. 1997. Middle Proterozoic to Cambrian Rifting, North America. Special Paper 312, Geological Society of America. After 1928 she spent over 50 years in River Forest, IL, teaching science in the local public schools, lecturing, bird watching (ornithology), and mentoring generations of young naturalists. She was quoted in this 1986 Chicago Tribune article as an expert on local geology at age 89.{{Cite web |date=1986-02-26 |title=BOOM RODE INTO RIVER FOREST ON LAKE STREET, TRAIN TRACKS |url=https://www.chicagotribune.com/news/ct-xpm-1986-02-26-8601150230-story.html |access-date=2023-09-05 |website=Chicago Tribune}} She was honored for her contributions to local history in 1982 when the Wasson Room was named after her in a local school to hold local history resources.Cooper, Charlotte. 1982. Wasson Room preserves the past. Forest Leaves, May 19, 1982. Her interests included archaeology; she discovered a Native American religious mound in Thatcher Woods, near her house in River Forest, in the 1930s. An article about her discovery called her "the one who started the environmental education movement in America back in the 1920s and '30s.""River Forest's sacred snake mound." April 11, 2005. http://www.oakpark.com/News/Articles/4-11-2005/Museums-&-Tourism/Article about the snake mound with her original drawing of it. http://moundbuilder.blogspot.com/2015/01/chicago-illinois-serpent-mound.html Theron and Isabel divorced in 1953 and she did not remarry. From 1953 to 1954, Wasson served as President of the Chicago Ornithological Society. Wasson also taught classes at the Morton Arboretum in Lisle, Illinois. She died in La Grange Park, IL, in 1994.{{cite web|url=https://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9803E7DE1F3BF936A15751C0A962958260 |title=Isabel Wasson obituary|work=New York Times |date=February 25, 1994 |accessdate=May 9, 2011}}{{cite web|url=https://www.chicagotribune.com/1994/02/24/isabel-bassett-wasson-a-teacher-and-geologist/ |title=Isabel Bassett Wasson, A Teacher And Geologist|work=Chicago Tribune |date=February 24, 1994 |access-date=February 11, 2015}}Bassett, Howard and Lorion.[https://www.worldcat.org/oclc/1116118 The Descendants of Charles and Elvira Bassett.] 1972.

Wasson became one of the first interpretive rangers hired by the National Park Service, and the second ranger and first female ranger at Yellowstone National Park. She was hired when Horace Albright, then the Park Superintendent, heard her lecture on geology to a group of her family and friends who were visiting the park in the summer of 1919 on a tour of national parks organized by the Brooklyn Daily Eagle. Albright invited her to return in the summer of 1920 to lead interpretive tours and give lectures about the geology of the park, which she did. After she was hired she wrote to the Wellesley alumnae magazine, "Next summer I am to be a ranger in Yellowstone Park. You never heard of a woman ranger? Well, neither have I."{{Cite book |last=Turner |first=Erin H. |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=nyrMWR3MHqEC&dq=%22Isabel+Wasson%22&pg=PA67 |title=It Happened in Yellowstone: Remarkable Events That Shaped History |date=2012-01-24 |publisher=Rowman & Littlefield |isbn=978-0-7627-7632-0 |language=en}} She gave over 200 public talks on the geology of the park that summer, and is credited with setting the template for interpretive talks by NPS rangers. Albright also asked her to train the hotel bellhops to give talks similar to hers, but she concluded that they lacked the background in geology to do this. She suggested instead that the park hire college students on summer break to give talks, and this became a tradition at Yellowstone and many other parks.[https://archive.today/20140929214845/http://yellowstone.areaparks.com/parkinfo.html?pid=31875 Oral history by Wasson, recorded 1978, describes her work at Yellowstone; item 00-6 (cassette) accessdate=June 16, 2012]Watry, Elizabeth A. Women in Wonderland: Lives, Legends and Legacies of Yellowstone National Park. Chapter 7. (Helena, Montana: Riverbend Publishing, 2012) [http://www.riverbendpublishing.com/women-in-wonderland.html] Albright invited her to return again in the summer of 1921, but she declined because she was pregnant. She inquired about returning in 1922 but others had been hired to do similar work.Smith, Diane Marie, (Thesis for MA in History).[http://etd.lib.montana.edu/etd/view/item.php?id=290 "What One Knows One Loves Best": A Brief Administrative History Of Science Education In The National Parks, 1916–1925.], Montana State University, 2004. Accessed June 16, 2012.{{cite journal|url=http://npshistory.com/newsletters/crm/crm-v20n3.pdf |last=Krieger, Karen. |title=Women of Yellowstone, Cultural Resource Management|volume= 20| issue = 3 |year=1997 |accessdate=May 9, 2011}}{{cite web|author=Robert Goss |url=http://geyserbob.org/bio-uvw.html |title=Calls her "Yellowstone's 1st woman ranger" |accessdate=May 9, 2011}}{{cite web|url=http://www.nps.gov/yell/learn/historyculture/upload/MatchlessWonders.pdf |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160201205438/http://www.nps.gov/yell/learn/historyculture/upload/MatchlessWonders.pdf |url-status=dead |archive-date=February 1, 2016 |title=Managing the "Matchless Wonders," A HISTORY OF ADMINISTRATIVE DEVELOPMENT IN YELLOWSTONE NATIONAL PARK, 1872–1965, Nature is the Supreme School-Teacher |author=Kiki Leigh Rydell and Mary Shivers Culpin. |accessdate=May 9, 2011}}{{cite web |url=http://www.ypf.org/site/News2?page=NewsArticle&id=5243 |title=Yellowstone Figures Profiled in Ken Burns Film |author=Yellowstone Park Foundation |accessdate=February 11, 2015 |url-status=dead |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20150211184113/http://www.ypf.org/site/News2?page=NewsArticle&id=5243 |archivedate=February 11, 2015 |df=mdy-all }}

References

{{Reflist|30em}}

Further reading

  • Kaufman, Polly Welts. National Parks and the Woman's Voice: A History. (Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press, 1997, and 2nd edition, 2006)
  • Wasson, Isabel B. A Village Grows up on a Sandbar. Forest Leaves (River Forest, Ill.), June 22, 1977.
  • Geologist unveils underground 'river' mystery. Oak Leaves (Oak Park, Ill.), 1952. Summarized here: http://www.oakpark.com/News/Articles/5-31-2005/The-'underground-river'-myth-is-water-under-the-bridge/
  • Wasson, Isabel B. Birds. (Chicago: Follett Publishing Co., 1963)
  • Wasson, Isabel B. Authority versus experience. Religious Education 23: 144–149 (Chicago: Religious Education Association, July–September 1938).
  • Wasson, Isabel B. What I want the schools to teach my child. Educational Trends 6(8): 14–16 (Evanston: Northwestern University, October–November 1938).

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Category:American petroleum geologists

Category:1897 births

Category:1994 deaths

Category:American women geologists

Category:American ornithologists

Category:American women ornithologists

Category:People from Brooklyn

Category:Columbia Graduate School of Arts and Sciences alumni

Category:Massachusetts Institute of Technology School of Science alumni

Category:University of Chicago alumni

Category:Wellesley College alumni

Category:People from La Grange Park, Illinois

Category:People from River Forest, Illinois

Category:Yellowstone National Park

Category:20th-century American geologists

Category:20th-century American women scientists

Category:Scientists from New York (state)

Category:20th-century American zoologists