William Parker FOULKE
May 31, 1816-June 18, 1865
Father: Richard Parker FOULKE (April 5, 1789-August 22, 1860)
Mother: Anna Catherine STROHN (May 17, 1792-January 30, 1856)
Wife:
Julia De Veaux POWEL (?-April 30, 1884)
- FACTS: William Parker Foulke (1816-1865) discovered the first full dinosaur skeleton in North America (Hadrosaurus foulkii, which means "Foulke's big lizard") in Haddonfield, New Jersey in 1858.
A descendant of Welsh Quakers who had emigrated in 1698, William Parker Foulke was an abolitionist, prison reformer, pamphleteer, philanthropist, lawyer, historian and geologist, the last of which directly led to the discovery, which was partially named for him by Joseph Leidy and for which he is now best-known.
Foulke was admitted to the Pennsylvania bar in 1841, though the law could hardly be said to be his life's work. Four years later he began an association with the two reforms that would occupy so much time and energy in his short life. Sensitized to the problems of incarceration through his legal training, Foulke joined the Philadelphia Society for Alleviating the Miseries in Public Prisons in July 1845.
Foulke spent several years comparing alternative disciplinary models and writing on correctional issues in the Journal on Prison Discipline and Philanthropy. Following a tour of mid-Atlantic correctional institutions in 1847 and 1848, Foulke was instrumental in erecting the new Lancaster County Prison, and contributed materially to later penitentiaries in several other counties in Pennsylvania. He was associated with the American Association for Improvement of Prison Discipline and the Convention of State Prison Wardens.
Foulke also supported the Pennsylvania Colonization Society, an antislavery organization that resettled as many as 1,000 freed slaves per year in West Africa (Liberia). Despite mounting opposition from different sides, Foulke never wavered in his support for resettlement until his own death in 1865, by which time he was Vice-President of the Society.
Foulke financially supported the American Academy of Music, and was a member of the Academy of Natural Sciences (Philadelphia), the Historical Society of Pennsylvania, and, like his grandfather John Foulke (1757-1796), the American Philosophical Society.
He was an avid natural historian and geologist, supportive of the first arctic explorations.
Foulke, William Parker
William Parker Foulke was a US scientist and dinosaur artist who found the first American dinosaur skeleton, Hadrosaurus, a duck-billed dinosaur. The fossilized bones were found by workmen in a Cretaceous marl (a crumbly type of soil) pit on the John E. Hopkins farm in Haddonfield, New Jersey beginning in 1838. Foulke heard of the discovery and recognized its importance in 1858. The dinosaur was excavated and named by US anatomist Joseph Leidy who named it Hadrosaurus foulkii (meaning "Foulke's big lizard").
Children:
Julia Catherine FOULKE (January 22, 1856-?)
Richard Parker FOULKE (August 30, 1858-January 7, 1885)
William De Veaux FOULKE (June 9, 1857-?)
Lisa De Veaux FOULKE (March 8, 1860-?)
John Francis FOULKE (November 26, 1861-?) *member of the Philadelphia bar
Sara Gwendolyn FOULKE (June 26, 1863-?)
George Rhyfedd FOULKE (August 16, 1865-?)
Pedigree:
"Doctor" John FOULKE
|Richard Parker FOULKE |
| |Eleanor PARKER
|
|--William Parker FOULKE
|
| _________________________
|Anna Catherine STROHN |
|_________________________
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