William Libbey

William A.

Libbey III (March 27, 1855 – September 6, 1927) was an American professor of physical geography at Princeton University. He was twice a member of the U.S. Olympic Rifle Team, and rose to the rank of colonel in the New Jersey National Guard. He is also known for his first ascent of Mount Princeton in 1877. He also competed at the 1912 Summer Olympics.

William Libbey
William Libbey
William A. Libbey III
Medal record
Men's Shooting
Representing the William Libbey United States
Olympic Games
Silver medal – second place 1912 Stockholm team running deer,
single shots

Biography

William Libbey 
Libbey's Princeton home, Thanet Lodge, also known as Greenholm, built in 1902, now home to the Lewis School of Princeton

Early life

He was born in Jersey City, New Jersey to William Libbey, Jr., a wealthy New York City merchant, and Elizabeth Marsh (Libbey). As an undergraduate at Princeton Libbey was responsible for the adoption of orange and black as the school colors. During his freshman year he wore a tie, on a dare from classmate Melanchthon Jacobus, with the colors of William III of England, Prince of Orange-Nassau, after whom Nassau Street had been named in 1724, and later Nassau Hall in 1756. The next year he arranged for the manufacture of 1,000 yards of orange and black ribbon and proceeded to sell it, from the Grand Union Hotel, at an intercollegiate regatta in Saratoga, New York as "Princeton's colors." After the Princeton crew team won, he sold out and orange and black have been Princeton's definitive colors ever since.

Professor

Libbey graduated from Princeton in 1877 and that summer went on the Princeton scientific expedition to the West. It was there that on the afternoon of July 17, 1877, at 12:30 pm he reached the summit of Mount Princeton. Following his summer in the West, Libbey studied in Berlin and Paris.

Libbey returned and received his doctorate in geology in 1879, the first awarded by Princeton. In 1880 he was appointed as director of the Elizabeth Marsh Museum of Geology and Archaeology as well as an associate professor to teach physical geography. In 1883 he was appointed as a full professor and continued to teach the physical geography classes.

In 1897 Libbey was involved with the controversy concerning whether the Acoma people had once lived on Enchanted Mesa. After great exertion, he spent a couple of hours on the mesa top and concluded that nothing was there and that it had never been occupied. Subsequent work by archaeologists have shown that Libbey's conclusion was hasty.

Libbey was an elected member of the American Philosophical Society.

At the 1912 Summer Olympics he won the silver medal as a member of the American team in the team running deer, single shots competition.

Libbey died in Princeton, New Jersey.

References

National Rifle Association of America
Preceded by
James Drain
President of the NRA
1916–1921
Succeeded by

Tags:

William Libbey BiographyWilliam Libbey

🔥 Trending searches on Wiki English:

John F. KennedyFIFA World CupEva MendesDing LirenM. Night ShyamalanDune MessiahWorld War IYami GautamRussian invasion of UkraineMelissa BarreraRobert DurstJesse PlemonsStripchatAmber HeardGhoul (Fallout)Amy WinehouseTrap (2024 film)InstagramLeonardo DiCaprioXVideosBarack ObamaBlowing from a gunLate Night with the DevilLucas VázquezRule 34Dexter (TV series)List of highest-grossing Malayalam filmsNehal WadheraColumbine High School massacreMoisés AriasCassandra NovaCharlize TheronMel BOnce Upon a Time in HollywoodPeter FramptonRohan MarleyLuke NewtonHamasLily JamesPriscilla PresleyDrake (musician)Chennai Super KingsDavid BowieOppenheimer (film)PolandDan SchneiderX-Men '97Doreen Lawrence27 ClubSteve JobsCowboy CarterNATOGukesh DDusty RhodesAEW World ChampionshipPortrait of JennieIchthyotitanJennifer GarnerBreathe (2024 film)Wrexham A.F.C.EFL ChampionshipShutter Island (film)Bruce WillisAnna FreudRebel MoonPost MaloneThe Sympathizer (miniseries)Terry WaiteEuropean UnionNorth KoreaThailandLana RhoadesDune (franchise)Shingō, AomoriDavid DastmalchianAtomic bombings of Hiroshima and NagasakiGoogle ScholarUkraine🡆 More