Description
The Louise Kellogg Papers collection includes field notes, correspondence, and 35 mm slides. Kellogg was an early participant
in the MVZ and the longtime companion of the museum’s founder Annie Alexander. Her vertebrate collecting trips took place
between 1908 and 1941, mostly in the Western U.S. She was one of the first published female mammalogists.
Background
Louise Kellogg was born in Oakland, California on August 27, 1879 to Anita Kellogg and Charles Winslow Kellogg. She attended
the University of California (in Berkeley) and graduated in 1901 as a classics major. In 1908, she was invited by her friend
Annie Alexander, the founder of the
Museum
of
Vertebrate
Zoology at the University of California, to be her companion on a scientific expedition to Alaska. The two women entered into a relationship
that lasted until Annie’s death in 1950. Together, they went on many collecting trips, acquiring over 34,000 specimens for
the
Museum
of
Vertebrate
Zoology, the University of California Museum of Paleontology, and the University Herbarium. Kellogg’s first paper, entitled
Rodent fauna of the late Tertiary beds at Virgin Valley and Thousand Creek, Nevada, was published in 1910, and represented only the second paper in mammalogy to be published by a woman. Over the course of
the next five years she published five more papers. In 1911, Kellogg and Alexander purchased a ranch on Grizzly Island in
Solano County, California, where they raised livestock and crops, in addition to collecting specimens in the still relatively
undeveloped area. They also continued to go on collecting trips out of the Bay Area. After Joseph Grinnell, the first director
of the
Museum
of
Vertebrate
Zoology, died in 1939, Kellogg and Alexander began to focus less on collecting animal specimens and more on collecting plants. Kellogg
continued this work after Alexander’s death in 1950. Her last collecting trip took place in Baja California in 1960. She died
in 1967, leaving an endowment to the University Herbarium.
Restrictions
Copyright restrictions may apply. All requests to publish, quote, or reproduce must be submitted to the Museum of Vertebrate
Zoology Archives in writing for approval. Please contact the Museum Archivist for further information.