Oakes Ames (1874–1950) was
the youngest son of Governor Oliver and Mrs. Anna C. Ames of
North Easton. At the age of fifteen, Oakes collected his first
orchids while studying the flora of Easton. After graduating
from Harvard College in 1898, he established the Ames Botanical
Laboratory, which became a world-renowned center for orchid
and economic plant research. He joined the Harvard faculty,
eventually becoming Research Professor and Director of the
Botanical Museum.
While a student at Harvard, Oakes became
friends with classmate Butler Ames of Lowell. While visiting
the Lowell Ameses, he met Butler’s sister Blanche whom
he married in 1900.
Oakes introduced Blanche to the study of orchids and the couple
began a lifelong collaboration. Thanks to Oakes’ research
and Blanche’s scientifically accurate illustrations, Orchidaceae
has been more thoroughly documented then any other plant species.
Oakes published numerous books, articles, and a seven-volume
treatise on orchids, illustrated by his wife. His Economic Annuals
and Human Culture (1939) was one of the first works to argue
that agriculture was a female discovery, and that culture, as
we define it, derived from the leisure time created by the development
of agriculture. Another book used botanical evidence on the lineage
of the corn plant to show that human habitation of this hemisphere
went back thousands of years earlier than most scholars then
believed.
Throughout his adult life, Oakes kept a meticulous record of
the events and thoughts that filled each day. After his death,
his daughter Pauline Ames Plimpton compiled and edited his
diaries and letters; Oakes Ames: Jottings of a Harvard Botanist
was published in 1979 by the Harvard University Press. |
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Sobrelia Panamensis: illustration of orchid by Blanche
Ames …

Oakes Ames' grandfather took over the building of the transcontinental
railroad in the 1860s. more…
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