F. R. G. S., F. R. S., the eminent, and
distinguished geologist, was born in Montreal on the 20th of April, 1798.
His grandfather, James Logan, and his grandmother, Margaret Edmund, were
natives of the parish of Stirling, Scotland. James Logan was a burgess,
and carried on the business of baker. Between the years 1756 and 1772 this
worthy couple had a family of six sons and three daughters born to them;
but death made sad inroads in the household, and took away one after
another of this family until but two sons and two daughters remained.
James Logan, like many of his countrymen, thought of bettering his
fortunes in the New World, and taking his wife and two sons with him,
William, the eldest, born in 1759 (the father of Sir William), and Hart,
the youngest, born in 1784, and found his way to Montreal. Here he
established a large bakery, and with wise forethought, purchased
considerable landed property in the neighbourhood of the city, where we
find him in the last decade of the century comfortably settled on his
farm, William carrying on the bakery, and Hart engaged in a prosperous
importing trade. In the spring of 1794, Miss Janet E. Edmond, of
Conniehill, near Stirling, niece of Mrs. James Logan, left her Scottish
home and came to Montreal, and married her cousin, William Logan. The
time-honoured sequence was thus, and as time rolled on they became the
parents of nine children, five sons and four daughters; and the subject of
this sketch was the third child of this union. The father, appreciating
the value of education, sent William and his brother to an excellent
school kept by Alexander Skakel, afterwards headmaster of the Royal
Grammer School, in little St. James Street. Skakel was a determined
Scotchman, and like many a schoolmaster of his day and generation, was
thoroughly acquainted with the art of flogging; but he was a good
classical scholar, and trained his scholars well. Under him young Logan
seems to have progressed satisfactorily, and to have acquired, among other
things, a capacity for thrashing bigger boys than himself. Whether he had
learned all that his Montreal master had to teach him we are unable to
say, but at any rate, in 1814, his father determined to send him the the
High School at Edinburgh, which was then in the zenith of its reputation.
Here he made good progress, and became a student in the University, and
during the session of 1816-17 attended the classes in logic, chemistry,
and mathematics. During this one session at college he studied with great
diligence, and obtained the first prize in mathematics, with "the
goodwill of all the competitors", and here young Logan's university
career came to an end. In 1818 he entered the mercantile office of his
uncle, Mr. Hart Logan, of London, and after a time became a partner in the
firm. After returning to Canada for a short time, where his attention was
drawn to the geological characteristics of this county, he again crossed
the Atlantic in 1829, and took up his residence in South Wales, Swansea,
as manager of copper smelting and coal mining operations, in which his
uncle was interested; but he left this situation soon after the death of
the latter in 1838. During his seven years' residence in South Wales, Mr.
Logan devoted himself to the study of the coal fields of that region; and
his minute and accurate maps and sections were adopted by the ordnance
geological survey, and published by the Government, under Sir Henry de la
Bèche's superintendence. He was the first to demonstrate that the stratum
of under clay, as it is called, which always underlies coal beds, was the
soil on which the coal vegetation grew. In 1841 Sir William visited the
coal fields of Pennsylvania and Nova Scotia, and communicated several
valuable memoirs on the subject to the Geological Society of London. At
this time he began an examination of the older palaeozoic rocks of Canada;
and the celebrated geological survey of Canada having been commenced, he
was appointed its head, a trust which sufficiently indicated the high
opinion entertained of his abilities and attainments by the government.
This preference was however, nothing more than he was entitled to,
considering the immense sacrifice which he made to remain in, and confine
his studies to, a country endeared to him by all the ties of birth and
station. It is a well known fact that he refused several offers from other
governments for his services, including India, where a princely fortune
was to be made by the geologist. In the course of his investigations upon
the rocks of the Eastern Townships, which are the continuation of those of
New England, Sir William showed that, so far from being, as had been
supposed, primitive azoic rocks, they were altered and crystalized
palaeozoic strata; a fact which, although suspected, had not hitherto been
demonstrated, and which was they key to the geology of North-Eastern
America. He found the rocks, which form the Laurentide and Adirondack
mountains, previously regarded as unstratified, to be disturbed and
altered sedimentary deposits of vast thickness, equal perhaps to all the
hitherto known stratified rocks of the earth's crust. In 1851 Sir William
represented Canada in the Great Exhibition in London; and had charge of
the Canadian geological collection which had been made by himself or under
his immediate direction. It was exhibited with great skill and judgement,
displaying to the best advantage the mineral resources of Canada. The
labour of arranging the specimens was very great, and so enthusiastic was
he that frequently he sallied out at eight or ten in the morning, and
would work for twelve hours without waiting to take refreshment. He had
the satisfaction of knowing that his countrymen appreciated his services,
and medals in profusion were allotted to Canada. He was also a
commissioner from Canada at the Industrial Exhibition at Paris in 1855,
when he received from the imperial commission the grand gold medal of
honour, and was created a Knight of the Legion of Honour. He received the
honour of a knighthood from the Queen's hands, in 1856; and in the same
year was awarded by the Geological Society, of which he had long been a
member, the Wollaston Palladium medal, for his pre-eminent services to
geology. Sir William Logan was not only a Fellow of the Royal Society of
London (1851), the Royal Society of Edinburgh (1861), and the Geological
Societies of London (1837) and Edinburgh (1867), but also a member of the
Geological Societies of France (1842) and Belgium (1847), of the Imperial
Leopoldo-Carolinian Academy of Germany (1857), the Philadelphia Academy of
Natural Sciences (1846), the Maine Historical society (1847), the Academy
of Sciences of St. Louis (1857), the American Academy of Arts and
Sciences, Boston (1859), the State Historical Societies of Wisconsin and
Iowa (1859), the American Philosophical Society (1860), the Buffalo
Society of Natural Sciences (1863), etc. etc. He received the honorary
degree of Doctor of Civil Law from the University of Lennoxville, in 1855,
and that of Doctor of Laws from McGill University in 1856. He died on the
22nd of June, 1875, in Wales, England, and his body lies in the quiet
churchyard of Cilgerran which is the next village to Llechryd. He never married. |