Main content

Edward Drinker Cope papers

Notifications

Held at: Academy of Natural Sciences, Philadelphia [Contact Us]1900 Benjamin Franklin Parkway, Philadelphia, PA, 19103

This is a finding aid. It is a description of archival material held at the Academy of Natural Sciences, Philadelphia. Unless otherwise noted, the materials described below are physically available in their reading room, and not digitally available through the web.

Overview and metadata sections

Edward Drinker Cope was born on July 28, 1840 to Alfred and Hannah Edge Cope, who were wealthy Philadelphia Quakers. His father hoped Edward would become a farmer and much of his education was obtained by private tutors. He also attended Westtown School and in 1860, he attended Dr. Joseph Leidy’s class on comparative anatomy at the University of Pennsylvania. Cope’s interest in the natural sciences began at an early age and in 1858, he began volunteering at the Academy of Natural Sciences, where he catalogued the reptilian collection. He also studied in Washington, D.C. with Professor Spencer F. Baird, concentrating his attentions on the herpetological collections at the Smithsonian Institute. By the time that he entered the University of Pennsylvania at the age of 20, he had already been published thirty times. In 1863, his father sent him to Europe in order that he be spared participating in the Civil War and his interest in the natural sciences increased as he visited natural history museums in Berlin, Leyden, Munich, Vienna, Paris and London.

In 1864, Cope returned to Philadelphia and was hired to teach comparative zoology and botany at Haverford College. He remained a professor there until 1867 when he resigned in order to pursue scientific exploration and writing. In 1884, he served as curator of the National Museum in Washington, D.C. and in 1891, he was professor of geology at the University of Pennsylvania. He also served as the president of the American Association for the Advancement of Science in 1896. During his career, Cope led and/or participated in geological surveys, both state and federal (the United States Geological Survey), of the western states of the United States. Through his exploration and work with surveys, Cope made known "more than 600 speciesand many genera of extinct vertebrates new to sciences, many of which he had personally discovered in the Cretaceous strata of Kansas or the Tertiary of Wyoming and Colorado," (Osborn, page 129).

At the Academy of Natural Sciences, Philadelphia, Cope served as curator from 1865 to 1873, as corresponding secretary from 1863 to 1876, and as a member of the Council in 1879. He resigned from the Academy, after a conflict regarding the fundamental organization of the organization, in 1883.

Cope was a “founder of the Neo-Lamarckian school of evolutionary thought, [which] believed that changes in developmental (embryonic) timing, not natural selection, was the driving force of evolution,” (UCMP). At the time of his death on April 12, 1897, Cope had discovered and described over 600 new species and contributed over 1300 papers to scientific literature.

Bibliography:

Haverford College Quaker and Special Collections. Edward Drinker Cope papers, 1848-1940 (bulk 1855-1896), Ms. Coll. 956.

Osborn, Henry Fairfield. "Biographical Memoir of Edward Drinker Cope, 1840-1897," National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America Biographical Memoirs, Volume III, 1929.

University of California Museum of Paleontology. “Edward Drinker Cope (1840-1897),” http://www.ucmp.berkeley.edu/history/cope.html (accessed November 29, 2011).

This collection contains certificates and honors, medals, manuscripts of scientific papers, drawings, scientific photographs, biographical material, news clippings, account books, and miscellaneous notes.

Gift of Haverford College Library, April 21, 1960 or archived from Academy's files.

The creation of the electronic guide for this collection was made possible through generous funding from The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation, administered through the Council on Library and Information Resources’ “Cataloging Hidden Special Collections and Archives” Project. Finding aid entered into the Archivists' Toolkit by Garrett Boos.

Publisher
Academy of Natural Sciences, Philadelphia
Finding Aid Date
2011.01.11
Sponsor
The creation of the electronic guide for this collection was made possible through generous funding from The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation, administered through the Council on Library and Information Resources’ “Cataloging Hidden Special Collections and Archives” Project. Finding aid entered into the Archivists' Toolkit by Garrett Boos.
Access Restrictions

This collection is open for research use.

Use Restrictions

Copyright restrictions may apply. Please contact the Academy of Natural Sciences, Philadelphia with requests for copying and for authorization to publish, quote or reproduce the material.

Collection Inventory

General Physical Description note

Oversized material in flat files, Coll. 328

Academia Literarum et Scientiarum regia Boica, 1886.
Oversize 2 Item 1
Academie royale des Sciences, des Lettres et des Beaux-Artes de Belgique, 1896.
Oversize 2 Item 2
Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia (member), 1861.
Oversize 2 Item 3
Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia, Conchological Section (member), 1867.
Oversize 2 Item 4
Article regarding the Cope-Marsh conflict in the New York Herald, pages 10-11, 1890 January 12.
Oversize 1 Item 28
Biological Society of Washington (correspondent), 1882.
Oversize 2 Item 5
K. Bohmische Gesellschaft der Wissenschaften, 1888.
Oversize 2 Item 5a
Boston Society of Natural History (correspondent), 1862.
Oversize 2 Item 6
Davenport Academy of Natural Sciences (correspondent), 1877.
Oversize 2 Item 7
Entomological Society of Philadelphia (resident member), 1865.
Oversize 2 Item 8
Entomological Society of Philadelphia (contributing member), 1866.
Oversize 2 Item 8a
Geological Society of London (foreign correspondent), 1881.
Oversize 2 Item 9
Haverford College, 1864.
Oversize 2 Item 10
Haverford College, Societas Everettica (member), 1865.
Oversize 3 Item 11
Heidelberg, Universitat (correspondent), 1886.
Oversize 3 Item 12
Historical Society of Pennsylvania, certificate and letter (member), 1875.
Oversize 3 Item 13
International Congress of Zoology, Paris (of the Exposition Universelle), 1889.
Oversize 3 Item 14
National Academy of the Sciences of the United States of America (member), 1872.
Oversize 3 Item 15
New York Academy of Sciences (correspondent), 1876.
Oversize 3 Item 16
Paris, Exposition Universelle, gold medal, 1889.
Oversize 3 Item 17
Philadelphia Bi-centennial Association of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, 1882.
Oversize 3 Item 18
Philadelphia Zoological Society (life member), 1886.
Oversize 3 Item 19
Senckenbergische Naturforschende Gesellschaft zu Frankfurt am Main (correspondent), 1893.
Oversize 3 Item 20
Sociedade da Geographia de Lisboa, certificate and letter (correspondent), 1893.
Oversize 4 Item 21
Societas Caesarea nat. cur. Mosquensis (correspondent), 1886.
Oversize 4 Item 22
Societas regia Scientiarum Hauniensis, 1889.
Oversize 4 Item 23
Société Belge de Geologie, de Paleontologie at d'Hydrologie (founding member), 1887.
Oversize 4 Item 24
Société Geologique de France (member), 1878.
Oversize 4 Item 25
University Association, University of Pennsylvania (member), 1891.
Oversize 4 Item 26
Zoological Society of London (correspondent), 1863.
Oversize 4 Item 27

Pages 1-49.
Box 1 Folder 1
Pages 50-99.
Box 1 Folder 2
Pages 100-149.
Box 1 Folder 3
Pages 150-170.
Box 1 Folder 4
C. Cetacean types in the Museum of the Academy of Natural Sciences, Philadelphia - prepared and presented by United States National Museum (includes photographs), 1907. 20 Photographs.
Box 3
Physical Description

20.0 Photographs

Manuscript for "The Theory of Evolution," pages 1-46 (end of document), undated.
Box 1 Folder 5
Manuscript for a companion of the Brenh across taxa, 1862 November.
Box 1 Folder 6
Illustrations, letter and notes on fishes, organs and farm (7 items), undated.
Box 1 Folder 7
Manuscript of "...characters of the divisions of the vertebrata above families...," pages 1-39, 1897.
Box 1 Folder 8
Manuscript of "...characters of the divisions of the vertebrata above families...," pages 40-84 (end of document), 1897.
Box 1 Folder 9

1. Paris Exposition Universelle, 1889.
Box 1 Folder 10
2. ANSP Haydeu Medal, 1891.
Box 1 Folder 10
3. Geological Society of London, 1879.
Box 1 Folder 10
4. [Arabic script on coin with pin back], undated.
Box 1 Folder 10

Correspondence, circa 1890-1900.
Box 1 Folder 11
Correspondence and estate information, 1897-1953.
Box 1 Folder 12
Academy Cope collection data, circa 1929.
Box 2 Folder 1

Correspondence and documents, undated.
Box 2 Folder 3
Book reviews and newspaper clippings, undated.
Box 2 Folder 2
American Naturalist, (1897) and American Geologist, (1900), 1897 May, 1900 August.
Box 2 Folder 4
Quaker tracts, memorials and other documents, undated.
Box 2 Folder 5
"Ledger", 1876-1886.
Box 2 Folder 6
"Pearls from the Poets" (handwritten book of collected poetry), 1859.
Box 2 Folder 7

T.H. Turner and Daniel Turner, circa 1870.
Box 2 Folder 8
Letters found in Paleontology Department (1987), 1878, 1883.
Box 2 Folder 9
Gift of T. Morris Evans, undated.
Box 2 Folder 10

Print, Suggest