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3 The New York Years (1931–1953)

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7<br />

<strong>The</strong> Harvard <strong>Years</strong> (1953–2005)<br />

In the fall of 1952, while in Seattle as a visiting professor at the University of<br />

Washington, “I received a telephone call one day from Alfred Romer, then director<br />

of the Museum of Comparative Zoology, when he asked me whether I was interested<br />

in being appointed an Alexander Agassiz Professor at Harvard University. To say<br />

that I would be interested would be the understatement of the week! I had long<br />

wanted to have a teaching position, but there were really only three institutions<br />

in the whole United States that would be suitable for my particular classification:<br />

Harvard, Michigan, and Berkeley. In early 1953, Romer passed through <strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong><br />

and we met at Grand Central Station where he told me the conditions under which<br />

I would be working at Harvard. I agreed with everything and I soon received the<br />

notice that I had been appointed.”<br />

Upon my enquiry, Ernst Mayr answered (5 January 1994):<br />

“No, my shift from <strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong> to Harvard was not a flight. I was in a way quite<br />

happy at the American Museum, but the position at Harvard was so infinitely better<br />

in every possible way that I could not have rejected it. To begin with, I wanted to<br />

live in a small town. <strong>The</strong> daily commuting from <strong>New</strong> Jersey to <strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong> (one hour<br />

each way) was a great sacrifice which I made so that my children could be raised in<br />

a small country town. Also, I had no opportunity to have PhD students staying at<br />

the AMNH. 1 Finally, the total intellectual environment was bound to be far more<br />

stimulating at Harvard than at the AMNH, and this certainly proved to be true.<br />

Actually, there were no ill feelings whatsoever over my leaving, because everybody<br />

understood that this was an offer I could not possibly decline. <strong>The</strong> director,<br />

Dr. Parr, tried very hard to make me stay, and offered all possible incentives, but<br />

he simply couldn’t match what Harvard offered. However, the AMNH insisted that<br />

I stay connected to the bird department as an honorary curator. Later on I was even<br />

elected a trustee of the AMNH and I served as such for two full terms. However,<br />

as I got older, traveling down to <strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong> for these more or less social meetings<br />

of trustees was getting to be too much and I therefore finally resigned. <strong>The</strong> bird<br />

department still considers me to be part of them and requests that I annually send<br />

my list of publications which they include in their annual report as the publications<br />

of a member of their department. All this shows how warm our relations<br />

have remained.”<br />

1 Most of the zoology professors at Columbia University did not take evolution, systematics<br />

and natural history very seriously and would not permit Mayr to have PhD students.<br />

When word reached Columbia University about the Harvard offer, he received a telephone<br />

call giving him permission to have students, etc. as of that day, but then it was too late.

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