Nevin M. Fenneman
Nevin Melancthon Fenneman was an American professor of geology, with a long career at the University of Cincinnati. His contributions were primarily in the large scale geographical understanding of American geology and based on his wide ranging studies, he produced Physiographic regions of [the United States|a classification of US physiographic regions] using a three-tiered system of 8 major divisions, 25 provinces and 78 sections that remains in use today.
Family and early life
Fenneman's grandfather was a German from Westphalia, Johann Heinrich Vennemann, who moved to Baltimore in 1840. His son and Fenneman's father studied Calvinistic theology at the Heidelberg College in Tiffin, Ohio, and became a minister in the Reformed Church, altering his name to William Henry Fenneman. Nevin was born when W.H. Fenneman worked in Lima, Ohio, and named after the American theologian John Williamson Nevin with the middle name after the Lutheran reformer Philipp Melanchthon. His mother Rebecca Oldfather, was of German and Irish descent and came from the Shenandoah Valley.Fenneman was also trained, following the family tradition, at Heidelberg College, receiving an AB in 1883 after which he taught at schools. Moving to Greensburg, he became a headmaster in 1886 and taught math and chemistry. He became a professor at the Colorado State Normal School in 1892. Here he married colleague Sarah Alice Glisan and began to take a keen interest in geography and landforms of the United States. A summer training course at Harvard in 1895 reoriented him and he was impressed by the teaching of William Morris Davis.