George Brown Goode
American ichthyologist (1851-1896)
George Brown Goode (13 February 1851 – 6 September 1896) was an American ichthyologist with the United States Fish Commission, as well as a curator and administrator at the National Museum of Natural History.
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Quotes
edit- With the Renaissance came a period of new life for collectors. The churches of southern Europe became art galleries, and monarchs and noblemen and ecclesiastical dignitaries collected books, manuscripts, sculptures, pottery, and gems, forming the beginning of collections which have since grown into public museums. Some of these collections doubtless had their first beginnings in the midst of the dark ages, within the walls of feudal castles, or the larger monasteries, but their number was small, and they must have consisted chiefly of those objects so nearly akin to literature as especially to command the attention of bookish men.
- The exposition or exhibition and fair are primarily for the promotion of industry and commerce; the museum for the development of learning.
Quotes about George Brown Goode
edit- It was my greatest good fortune to serve under Doctor George Brown Goode whose influence on the museums of America may be compared to that of Flower on the museums of England. Like Flower, he early recognized the educational possibilities of museums and the importance of making them interesting and attractive to the general public. One of his favorite maxims was to keep ever in mind the human interest in any exhibit, to show just where and how it touched man directly. And under his direction, the U. S. National Museum, and the various exhibitions in which it took part, exerted a great influence on the museums of the country and particularly on those that came into existence after 1880.
- Frederic Augustus Lucas: Fifty years of museum work. Autobiography, unpublished papers, and bibliography of Frederic A. Lucas, Sc.D.. American Museum of Natural History. 1933. p. 16.