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AGU staff members spent an afternoon sifting through documents from the past 100 years stored at the American Institute of Physics in College Park, Md. Left to right: Erin Garcia de Jesus, Brandon Bobisink, Jordana Schmierer and Sara Edwards. Credit: AGU

During AGU’s lifetime, our members have explored it all, from making novel observations that allow us to probe Earth’s core to launching spacecraft that let us gaze far out into remote solar systems. During our Centennial year, we wanted to take a look through some of this history, so a few AGU staff members took an afternoon to dig through boxes of documents chronicling our past.

As we delved into the archives, we found countless treasures:

  • A letter from 1929 recounted the first conversations that led to AGU’s creation in 1919.
  • A dinner menu from AGU’s 1923 Annual Meeting in Washington, D.C., listed curious dishes such as “poisson, pas poison” and “ignis fatuus,” as well as the more traditional “risotto alla Milanese.”
  • Documents noted that the drafting of AGU members in World War II was making it, as for so many organizations and businesses at the time, tough to pay the bills; the society relied on donations to stay afloat.

We’ve compiled a selection of a few of our favorite finds from our trip to the past.

The William Bowie Medal

1960s award program depicting the William Bowie Medal (left). William Bowie’s obituary in Engineering News-Record, 12 September 1940 (right).
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AGU celebrates the accomplishments of Earth and space scientists every year with the organization’s highest honor, the William Bowie Medal, shown in a program from a 1960s award ceremony (above, left). The award’s namesake and AGU’s first president was William Bowie of the U.S. Coast and Geodetic Survey, who received the inaugural medal in 1939. Recognized for his contributions to fundamental understanding of geology and geodesy, Bowie also exemplified AGU’s motto from the 1950s—”unselfish cooperation in research”—through extensive volunteer work in his field.

We unearthed a copy of Bowie’s obituary (above, right) in the 12 September 1940 edition of the Engineering News-Record, which reads “He was widely recognized in this country and abroad for the many contributions in surveying and geodesy that sprang from his keen understanding and wide knowledge.”

AGU’s Inspiring Scientists

Inge Lehmann awarded the 1971 William Bowie medal.
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We found many records of the 80 scientists who have received the William Bowie Medal to date.

Above is the award program for the medal’s 33rd recipient—and first woman awardee—Inge Lehmann, a seismologist from Denmark who received the prize in 1971 for her ground-breaking discovery, 35 years earlier, of Earth’s inner core. AGU went on to name another award in her honor, the Inge Lehmann Medal, which is given to scientists in recognition of “outstanding contributions to the understanding of the structure, composition, and dynamics of the Earth’s mantle and core.”

Letters from Before the Internet

March 1974 letter (misdated 1954) from George Everhart to AGU requesting information about the Bermuda Triangle (left). March 1974 letter from AGU to George Everhart responding to questions about the Bermuda Triangle (right).
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Before people could search Google for answers to their burning questions, they wrote letters. We found this intriguing request received by AGU in March 1974 (above, left; the mail may have been slower in the 20th century, but the letter writer’s date of 1954 is surely a typo) from someone wanting to know why people and objects tend to disappear in the Bermuda Triangle. “Or ‘how they are disposed of’ once they are ‘taken-inside’ the time analogies of the world,” the author wrote. In a response (above, right), AGU staff associate Leonard Levin pointed to ocean currents as a potential reason for what he called “easily explainable” oceanographic phenomena.

December 1973 letter from Jerry Winter to AGU challenging the idea that melting polar ice caps would cause flooding around the globe (left). April 1974 letter from AGU to Jerry Winter providing contact information for a scientist (right).
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In 1973, another curious citizen sent a letter to AGU (above, left) asking for more information about a new report theorizing future melting of the polar ice caps. “In addition to my reservations concerning Mr. Wilcox’s report,” he wrote, “I believe further that the flooding estimated as a result of the possible melting of the polar ice caps is a myth that has little basis when thoroughly examined.” Levin was again the one to respond, taking the time to research the letter writer’s questions and point him to the scientist (with his home address!) and more information.

A chart showing AGU membership numbers growing from 65 in 1921 to nearly 5,000 in 1952.
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AGU’s Growth

Tucked away in several boxes were materials documenting AGU’s formation and development over the years, including a 1954 issue of Transactions, American Geophysical Union featuring this chart of membership numbers from 1921 to 1952. In the first few years, AGU capped its membership at just 65 people. This limit later expanded to 75 in 1922 and 100 in 1928, before the cap was removed entirely in 1930. By the end of 1952, the last data point on this chart, AGU boasted nearly 5,000 members across the world. A hundred years after AGU’s founding, our members are 62,000 strong and represent 144 countries—an incredible journey from the organization’s modest beginnings.

The cover of the 8 May 1979 issue of Eos, featuring an illustration of AGU’s new headquarters (left). The front page of a 1994 issue of Eos, celebrating AGU’s 75th anniversary (right).

The Changing Face of Eos
The front page of Eos has changed many times since its first publication under the name in 1969. Although the publication was launched in 1920 as Transactions, a compendium of AGU’s activity, its meetings, and research, it has evolved into a digital science news and perspectives website with a monthly print magazine for AGU members.

The cover dated 8 May 1979 (above, left) announced AGU’s new headquarters at 2000 Florida Ave NW in Washington, D.C., where our offices remain today, newly renovated into our award-winning net-zero energy home base. Another cover from 1994 (above, right), from the era when Eos was produced as a weekly newspaper, covered AGU’s 75th anniversary. In the front-page story, Thomas Graedel, the chairman of the anniversary committee, wrote, “AGU, like other diamond anniversarians, can be proud of a wealth of achievements over three-quarters of a century. Even more, however, it can look forward to future accomplishments that will build on today’s strong base of scientific competence and organizational efficiency. AGU’s future has great promise.”

—Erin I. Garcia de Jesus (egarciadejesus@agu.org) and Sara Edwards, Science Writing Interns, AGU

Citation:

Garcia de Jesus, E. I.,Edwards, S. (2019), Digging into 100 years of AGU treasures, Eos, 100, https://doi.org/10.1029/2019EO137343. Published on 04 December 2019.

Text © 2019. AGU. CC BY-NC-ND 3.0
Except where otherwise noted, images are subject to copyright. Any reuse without express permission from the copyright owner is prohibited.

Text © 2019. AGU. CC BY-NC-ND 3.0
Except where otherwise noted, images are subject to copyright. Any reuse without express permission from the copyright owner is prohibited.