Irving W. Bailey
1884 - 1967
Irving Widmer Bailey was born on August 15, 1884, in Tilton, N.H. to Solon Irving and Ruth Pouter Bailey. His father, a professor of astronomy at Harvard University, was in 1889 selected to head a Harvard Observatory expedition to Peru. As a result of this expedition and Solon Bailey's subsequent supervision of the construction of the observatory in Peru, I. W. Bailey spent most of his childhood in South America. Upon returning to Cambridge, Mass. at the age of 14, Bailey attended Cambridge Latin High School.
Bailey received his A.B. degree from Harvard College in 1907 and his M.F. in Forestry from Harvard's Graduate School of Applied Sciences in 1909. He was immediately appointed Instructor of Forestry at the school. Bailey would teach forestry under a variety of titles as the organization of the biology programs changed. He was associated for many years with the Bussey Institution, which later became part of the Graduate School of Applied Biology. Later in his career, Bailey kept offices at the Arnold Arboretum and then at the Gray Herbarium in the new building housing the Harvard University Herbaria. Bailey was instrumental in the construction of this new building.
At the request of the Dean of the Faculty of Arts and Sciences, Bailey produced what would beome the controversial "Bailey Plan," presented to the Harvard Corporation in 1945. This report recommended the unification of botanical activities at Harvard, and resulted in the construction of what is now the Harvard University Herbaria and the separation of horticultural and systematic studies between the Jamaica Plain and Cambridge facilities.
During WWI, Bailey was in charge of the wood section of the materials engineering department of the Bureau of Aircraft Production at Wright Field, Dayton, Ohio. Bailey's knowledge of the structure and physical properties of wood proved a valuable contribution to the war effort, aiding in the selection of the best woods for airplane manufacture. During WWII, Bailey was part of a Harvard Group in Biology that worked on a voluntary Camouflage Project for the Camouflage Training Section of the Engineers' School at Fort Belvoir, Virginia.
Although he started in forestry, Bailey came to be known for his work in plant anatomy. While he authored only two books, he published extensively during his career, authoring upwards of 140 papers during his 58 year career.
Bailey married Helen Diman Harwood in 1911. He died on May 16, 1967.
Ralph H. Wetmore, "Irving Widmer Bailey, August 15, 1884-May 16, 1967," <i>Biographical Memoirs of the National Academy of Sciences</i>, 45 (1974): 22-59.
Finding aid for the Bailey papers can be found at: http://www.huh.harvard.edu/libraries/archives/BAILEY.html
Obituaries of Bailey can be found in:
Adriance S. Foster, "Irving Widmer Bailey (1884-1967)," <i>Plant Science Bulletin</i> 13 no. 4 (1967): 7.
Richard A. Howard, "Irving Widmer Bailey 1884-1967," <i>Journal of the Arnold Arboretum</i> 49 no. 1 (1968): 1-15.
Ralph H. Wetmore, "Irving Widmer Bailey, 1884-1967," <i> Bulletin of the Torrey Botanical Club</i> 95 no. 3 (1968): 299-311.
Ralph H. Wetmore, "Irving Widmer Bailey (1884-1967)," <i> Phytomorphology</i> 18 no. 2 (1968): 294-298.