Johann Ludwig Tiarks (10 May 1789 – 1 May 1837) was a German mathematician and astronomer who was involved in determining the boundary between the United States and British North America.[1]

Early life

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He was born in Waddewarden, Wangerland, Friesland, Lower Saxony on 10 May 1789.[1] His father was Reverend Johann Gerhard Tiarks and his mother was Christine Dorothea Ehrentraut.[1]

Education

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He received a doctorate in mathematics from the University of Göttingen in 1808.[1] He took a position as a private tutor.[1]

Flight to England

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He fled to England in 1810 to avoid conscription by Napoleon.[1] He became assistant librarian and factotum to Joseph Banks at the Royal Society.[1]

First visit to North America

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In 1817, on Banks’ recommendation, he was appointed an astronomer to one of the commissions established under the Treaty of Ghent.[1] He acted for Joseph Bouchette who fell ill that year.[1] He remained with the commission after Bouchette was replaced with William Franklin Odell.[1]

In September 1817 he arrived in Akwesasne to make astronomical observations.[1]

He befriended many of the local Mohawk people and their priest, Father Joseph Marcoux.[1]

At the end of July 1818 Tiarks and his group left Akwesasne and with the American surveying team headed to Lake Champlain.[1] Ferdinand Rudolph Hassler headed the American team.[1]

At the lake both teams independently discovered that John Collins and others had incorrectly located the 45th parallel north, placing the fort at Rouses Point, New York in British territory.[1] The American members of the boundary commission refused to accept the findings.[1] Hassler had been replaced as astronomer by Andrew Ellicott, who was far less cooperative.[1] Ellicott was reported as saying to Tiarks "we should not do our work so exactingly and forget about completing most of it".[1] Tiarks refused to go along with the suggestion, as he felt it put his reputation on the line.[1] He was strongly supported in this by British Commissioner Thomas Henry Barclay.[1]

In 1819 he was working in the upper Connecticut River basin where part of the boundary was to run.[1] During summer 1820 he was working in what became northwestern New Brunswick and nearby areas of Quebec, returning to the upper Connecticut that fall.[1]

Disputes between British and American commissioners brought his work to a halt and he returned to Europe in 1821.[1]

Personal life

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In 1822 he married Auguste Antoinette Sophie Toel of Jever.[1] They had several children, but only one daughter survived to adulthood.[1]

Second visit to North America

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He returned to North America in 1825 to determine the most northwesterly point of the Lake of the Woods, from which the boundary was supposed to run due west to the Mississippi River.[1]

From 1826 to 1830 he worked on matters of concern to the boundary commission.[1] He was called to The Hague to explain certain points to William II of the Netherlands, who had been asked to arbitrate the boundary question.[1] Tiarks returned to Jeven.[1]

Final years and death

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He long wished to be a professor in a German university, but no position every became available. In March 1837 he suffered from a stroke from which he never recovered.[1]

The Webster–Ashburton Treaty, which settled the boundary disputes in question, was signed in 1842.[1]

References

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  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae "TIARKS, JOHANN LUDWIG". Dictionary of Canadian Biography. Retrieved 2020-09-11.