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Contents

   



(Top)
 


1 Early life  





2 The war and the first publication  





3 Life in Florida and further work  





4 Partial list of publications  





5 Honors  





6 References  














Julia Morton






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Julia Morton
Born(1912-04-25)April 25, 1912
DiedSeptember 10, 1996(1996-09-10) (aged 84)
OccupationBotanist

Julia Frances McHugh Morton (April 25, 1912 – September 10, 1996) was an American author and botanist. She was research professor of biology, and director of the Morton Collectanea at the University of Miami. She was elected a Fellow of the Linnean Society of London in 1974. Well known as a lecturer on toxic, edible and otherwise useful plants, she wrote 10 books and 94 scientific papers, and contributed to an additional 12 books and 27 papers.[1]

Early life[edit]

Morton was born Julia Francis McHugh, on April 25, 1912[2]inMiddlebury, Vermont, and grew up on a 100-acre (0.40 km2) farm in rural Vermont where she was interested in agriculture, the outdoors, and natural resources.[3] At the age of 15, her mother and sister died, and she went to New York City to live with her brother. She worked as a commercial artist for several years and married Kendal Paul Morton (1897–1964), a Canadian. By 1933 they had begun work on collating information on food, medicinal, and other useful plants. They assembled copies or clippings of existing material and filed it away in file cabinets. They housed this compilation in an office near the New York Public Library, and it soon became known as The Morton Collectanea in academia.[2]

The war and the first publication[edit]

When World War II started, the Mortons returned to Canada, where Kendal planned to enter military service and edit a military camp newspaper. However he failed his physical examination due to a heart murmur, and was exempted from service. Rather than remain in Canada or the US as civilians, the Mortons chose to move to the Bahamas. They placed most of the Collectanea in storage, but took entries on tropical fruits with them to Nassau, believing them likely to be useful.[2]

By consulting and adding to the files they brought with them to Nassau and by their studies of the plant life there, the Mortons prepared the manuscript and illustrations for their first publication, Fifty Tropical Fruits of Nassau. Julia proved to be an excellent photographer and photographically illustrated nearly all of her subsequent publications. The book of 101 pages was published in 1946. A contemporary review in Plant Physiology characterized it as "well recommended by qualified botanists" and calling it "richly illustrated" and "quite complete" [4]

Life in Florida and further work[edit]

After the war ended the Mortons were invited to work at the Subtropical Experimental Station in Homestead, Florida in association with George Ruehle and Dr. Bruce Ledin. Working with Ledin they produced the manuscript for the book 400 Plants of South Florida.[2] Their work came to the attention of the president of the University of Miami, Bowman Foster Ashe, who offered them positions as professors at the Coral Gables campus.[5]

Julia Morton along with her husband Kendal were among the founders of the original Rare Fruit Council, which was founded on March 11, 1955, in Miami. This "Tropical Fruit Study Group" was named Rare Fruit Council by Julia Morton after the group's initial meeting.[6]

President Ashe approved setting up the Collectanea at the new campus, and with the aid of professor Taylor Alexander, the files were installed in a new, more spacious location, and students employed to select and organize new material. This allowed the Collectanea to be expanded, and visiting scholars had room to work and free access to the material.[2] By 1996 the Collectanea had grown to 500 file drawers and included approximately 15,000 species, but remained a manually collated and indexed resource.[7]

Although their initial work was on edible plants, their area of interest increased to cover poisonous plants as well as useful ones, both edible and ornamental. Additional books were published, and a suggestion that Julia's plant photographs were suitable for charts inspired the creation of two wall posters of "Plants Poisonous to People," one focusing on internally poisonous plants, and the other on skin and respirator irritants.[2]

Kendal Morton died in 1964, according to her book 500 Plants of South Florida 1974, but Julia continued their research and field work. Morton did research into use of plants in the treatment of cancer in the West Indies at the behest of the National Cancer Institute. She also did research into edible plants to aid in survival situations in the Philippines and Southeast Asia during the Vietnam War, and wrote survival instructions for troops.[7] Morton also conducted surveys of cashew and other edible nut plantations in Venezuela, Colombia and Peru.[3][5]

Morton became known as an expert on plant poisonings and was often consulted by local authorities. She offered advice and worked to educate the public. Lawrence Kaplan, an emeritus professor of botany at the University of Massachusetts Boston and editor of the journal of the Society for Economic Botany, which Mrs. Morton helped found, said "She was the poison plant center in South Florida".[5] Starting in 1954 when she began consulting for them, the Poison Control Center referred most plant poison calls to her.[1][2] Although she received an honorary doctorate from Florida State University in 1973, she never formally attended college.

Morton continued to write, lecture, and answer inquiries at the Collectanea even after retiring. She retired from teaching in 1993, after being a University of Miami professor for about four decades. She was critically injured in an automobile accident on August 28, 1996, and died on September 10, 1996.[5]

Partial list of publications[edit]

This is a representative list rather than an exhaustive one:

Honors[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b c d e "About the Author". Center for New Crops & Plant Products. Purdue University. Retrieved 2008-10-15.
  • ^ a b c d e f g Howard, Richard A. (1997). "Julia Morton (1912–1996), Whose Protégé Has Been Economic Botany". Economic Botany. 51 (2): 99–106. doi:10.1007/BF02893099. S2CID 20693335.[dead link]
  • ^ a b c "Dr. Julia Morton". Florida-Agriculture.com. Florida Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services. Retrieved 2008-10-15.
  • ^ "While this book was written to acquaint visitors with the assortment and variety of the fruits of Nassau, it is well recommended by qualified botanists. The volume is richly illustrated and of the narrative-inventory type. Photographs of the fruits are quite complete and the text deals primarily with the history, description, and utility of the fruits, including the manner of preparation for the table." "Notes" (PDF). Plant Physiology. 22 (3). American Society of Plant Biologists: 329–31. July 1947. doi:10.1104/pp.22.3.329. PMC 405875. PMID 16654107. Retrieved 2008-10-15.
  • ^ a b c d Fountain, Henry (1996-09-14). "Obituary of Julia Morton". New York Times. Retrieved 2008-10-15.
  • ^ https://fshs.org/proceedings-o/1955-vol-68/294-299%20(WHITMAN).pdf[permanent dead link]
  • ^ a b Morton, Julia. "The Morton Collectanea: An information center in economic botany". Proceedings of the Progress in New Crops Symposium. 3. Purdue University: 147–150. Retrieved 2008-10-15.
  • ^ Hill, Albert F. (1948). "Review of Fifty Tropical Fruits of Nassa by Kendal Morton and Julia Morton". The Quarterly Review of Biology. 23 (1): 59. doi:10.1086/396125. ISSN 0033-5770.

  • Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Julia_Morton&oldid=1183102442"

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