Henry G. Ferguson


Henry Gardiner Ferguson was an American geologist with the United States Geological Survey. He worked primarily in Nevada and was a pioneer in the geology of the central Great Basin, producing many publications including multiple USGS geological maps of central Nevada.
Ferguson was a lifelong friend and colleague of Levi Noble, a mentor to Ralph Roberts, and worked extensively with Siemon Muller.
Along with his wife Alice Ferguson, he helped found the Moyaone Reserve community in Accokeek, Maryland.

Early life

Henry Ferguson was born on January 21, 1882, in San Rafael, California, the son of Emma Jane and Henry Ferguson. Shortly thereafter his family moved to the East Coast and Ferguson earned a BA, a BS, and an MA from Harvard University. Post-graduation geological jobs in Michigan and the Philippines inspired him to do graduate study in geology at Yale University. Although his PhD requirements were finished by 1912, he did not receive his actual degree until an informal oral exam in 1924, with his 1924 USGS bulletin on the Manhattan mining district in Nevada being accepted as his dissertation.

Career

Ferguson was employed by the USGS from 1912 until his mandatory formal retirement in 1952 at the age of 70; he worked primarily as a field geologist. His early work dealt with ore deposits and economic geology; among his early published papers were two articles describing the geology of mining areas in northern California at Weaverville in the Klamath Mountains and Allegany in the Sierra Nevada. Subsequently, his primary fieldwork area was west-central Nevada, where his early work continued to describe the geology of mining districts, while his later work was more focused on structural geology. According to geologist Thomas Nolan in 1966, "Most of our present concepts of the geology of the western Great Basin are based on pioneering work." Ferguson continued to do fieldwork in Nevada after his retirement from the USGS, but in 1957 he suffered the loss of an eye when the steel head of a geologic pick shattered.
, 1950s
During the 1930s, Ferguson began a two-decade collaboration with the paleontologist and geologist Siemon Muller. They did extensive field mapping in west-central Nevada, culminating in the publication of their 1949 paper, "Structural Geology of the Hawthorne and Tonopah Quadrangles, Nevada." Between 1951 and 1954, Ferguson, Muller, Stanley H. Cathcart, and Ralph Roberts published seven US Geological Survey 1:125,000 quadrangle maps of Nevada, including Winnemucca and Golconda.
Ferguson was also a lifelong friend and confidant of Levi Noble. According to Wright and Troxel, in the late 1930s the USGS dispatched Ferguson to assist Noble in interpreting and publishing Noble's extensive Death Valley fieldwork. In the 1950s, Noble recalled that "the major interpretations in grew out of his conversations with Ferguson."
Ferguson made one of the earliest reports of Paleozoic deformation in Nevada in his 1924 bulletin on the Manhattan district. In 1941, Ralph Roberts, on one of his first assignments as a USGS employee, joined senior geologists Ferguson and Siemon Muller on a project mapping the Sonoma Range in Nevada. Roberts' work in the Battle Mountain/Antler Peak area of Nevada, done partially with Ferguson's mentorship and funding assistance, demonstrated that the Paleozoic deformation was a full scale orogeny; this was later described as the Antler orogeny in Roberts' 1949 Yale PhD dissertation. Roberts and Ferguson were coauthors on a 1958 paper that helped lead to the discovery of the Carlin gold deposits.
Ferguson worked for the USGS Military Geology Unit during World War II ; this included a heavy-mineral sand analysis by Ferguson that contributed to the identification of the source location of the Japanese balloon bombs.
Ferguson was also intermittently head of the USGS Metals division. In 1953, he received the Department of the Interior's "Distinguished Service Award".
Mount Ferguson, a mountain in the Gabbs Range in Nevada, east of Walker Lake, was named for Henry Ferguson.

Personal life

In 1914, Henry married Alice Lowe, a Washington socialite, painter and avid amateur archeologist. Following the wedding, they went on a year-long honeymoon in South America, and then settled into a house in NW Washington, D.C.. In 1922, Alice Ferguson purchased a farm named Hard Bargain in Accokeek, in southern Maryland, as a weekend retreat for her husband and herself. When Native American artifacts were discovered on the property, Alice started archeological excavations, with the occasional assistance of Henry and his geologist colleagues, such as Thomas Nolan. The area became known as the Accokeek Creek Site and was eventually included in Piscataway Park. Over time, the Fergusons continued to purchase neighboring rural land, and the area grew and developed into a community known as the Moyaone Reserve.
Alice died in 1951, but Henry continued to live at Hard Bargain and was active in the community until his death in 1966. In 1954, he established the non-profit Alice Ferguson Foundation in his wife's memory; the foundation remains very active in environmental education and is based at Hard Bargain. In 1957, Ferguson was one of the founders of the Accokeek Foundation, an organization dedicated to preserving the "natural beauty along the Maryland shore of the historic Potomac River." In 1953, he donated money to open the first Accokeek public library, and in the late 1960s, the Henry G. Ferguson Elementary School in Accokeek was named after him.
Henry was known by friends, professional colleagues, and community members as "Fergie." In the 1950s and early 1960s, Fergie would deliver eggs around the Moyaone Reserve neighborhood while driving his old wood-paneled Ford station wagon, with neighborhood children hanging onto the sides.
Henry Ferguson died in Washington, D.C., on November 29, 1966.

Selected publications

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