George Davidson

George Davidson (May 9, 1825 – December 1, 1911) was a geodesist, astronomer, geographer, surveyor, and engineer in the United States.

Upon his graduation from college in 1845, he began his career as clerk to Alexander Bache who was superindentent of the United States Coast Survey.

In 1850, he went to California under the auspices of the Coast Survey, and was for several years engaged in the determination of the latitude and longitude of prominent capes, bays, etc., and of the magnetic elements of the Pacific Coast, reporting also upon the proper locations for lighthouses. His work included a survey of Washington and Puget sounds, and he had charge of the main triangulation of the coast in the region of San Francisco.

He retired from the Coast Survey in 1895, after 50 years of service. He then became the first professor of geography at the University of California, Berkeley, and chaired that department from 1898 until his retirement in 1905, and remained an emeritus professor until his death.

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