Morton John Elrod

Elrod was born in Monongahela, Pennsylvania, the son of John Morton Elrod. He went to Simpson College from where he received a BA (1887) after which he taught at a high school in Corydon, Iowa. He continued studies and joined the Illinois Wesleyan University and received an MA (1890) and MS (1898) while also teaching there. In 1896 he took up a position in the University of Montana at Missoula. He taught subjects in biology as well as photography, in which he took a keen interest himself. He also set up a natural history museum. He encouraged his students to learn first-hand from observation and emphasized education in the field. He founded the Flathead Lake Biological Station with a view to using it for research and education, especially due to its convenient location for Montana students. He also examined the area for its potential to support a bison reserve. He published numerous scientific papers as well as wrote poetry and on matters of history and philosophy. He did not receive much support from the University and especially found himself at loggerheads with the administration by its president Oscar John Craig. One of the students who admired Elrod was physical chemist Harold C. Urey who later won a Nobel Prize.
Elrod married Emma Hartshorn in 1888. A stroke in 1934 ended his career and after the death of his wife in 1938, he was taken care of by his daughter. A couple of land molluscs ''Oreohelix elrodi'', ''Stagnicola elrodi'', and an annelid ''Rhynchelmis elrodi'' are among the species named in his honor. Provided by Wikipedia