Richard Urquhart Goode


Richard Urquhart Goode was an American geographer and topographer with the United States Geological Survey Northern Transcontinental Railroad Survey, and the Panama Canal Company. Goode was in charge of the Western Division of the USGS. which included all lands west of the Mississippi River, and worked on the boundary between the United States and Canada.
Goode was one of the first employees of the newly created USGS in 1879. As a USGS topographer, he conducted geographic surveys of unmapped areas of the United States, resulting in what are now called USGS Topographic Maps. Goode is credited with the triangulation for more than 100 topographic maps; the data that he collected is still in use on current USGS maps. In 1894, Goode was placed in charge of the USGS Pacific Section and became head of the Western Division in June 1903.
Goode temporarily left the USGS to work on two nationally important projects. From 1882 to 1884, he was a topographer for the Northern Transcontinental Railroad Survey in Montana and Washington. In 1888, Goode was an engineer and astronomer for the Panama Canal Company, conducting topographic surveys that addressed property rights on the Isthmus of Darian.
Goode was a member of the National Geographic Society and wrote several articles for National Geographic. He is the namesake of Mount Goode in Alaska, Goode Glacier in Washington, Mount Goode in Kings Canyon National Park of California, and Goode Mountain in North Cascades National Park.

Early life

Goode was born in Bedford, Virginia, on December 8, 1858. He was the son of Sarah "Sallie" and John Goode Jr., a Virginia lawyer, politician and Solicitor General of the United States under President Grover Cleveland. His mother was the daughter of a wealthy planter, Dr. Richard Alexander Urquhart of Strawberry Plains plantation in Isle of Wight County, Virginia. Goode's siblings were Mary Urquhart Goode, John Breckinridge Goode, Annie Walton Goode, and James Urquhart Goode. According to the 1860 United States census, his father enslaved seven individuals.
Goode attended the Hanover Academy in Norfolk, Virginia, and the Norfolk Military Academy also in Norfolk, with his cousin Frank Urquhart. Later, he attended the University of Virginia for several terms where he studied geography. He graduated from the university in 1878.

Career

Goode served as an assistant in the Army's Engineer Corps from 1877 to 1878. In 1879, Goode received an appointment from the U.S. Secretary of the Interior to be a topographer with the newly created United States Geological Survey. He was assigned to conduct geographic surveys in Arizona and Utah, resulting in what are now called the USGS Topographic Maps. In 1880, he was promoted to supervisor, charged with a survey of the Colorado Plateau. In 1881, he was assigned to oversee the primary triangulation of the area near Fort Wingate in New Mexico.
On May 1, 1882, Goode temporarily resigned from the USGS to be a topographer for the Northern Transcontinental Railroad Survey, working in Montana and Washington from 1882 to 1884. On July 23, 1884, Goode rejoined the USGS and supervised surveys in Kansas and Missouri. In 1886, he supervised surveys in Texas, working alongside another team supervised by his cousin Charles Fox Urquhart. In May and June 1888, Goode and Urquhart did the triangulation for Rhode Island, for a collaborative mapping project between the state and the USGS.
Later in 1888, Goode took another leave of absence from the USGS—this time as an engineer and astronomer to conduct important topographic surveys addressing property rights on the Isthmus of Darian for the Panama Canal Company.
In 1889, Goode rejoined the USGS and was promoted to the position of geographer in charge of the Southern Central Division of Topography. In September 1890, the USGS restructured its Topographic Branch into two divisions—Eastern and Western—and Goode was placed in charge of the Kansas-Texas section of Western Division. In August 1894, Goode was placed in charge of the more important Pacific Section, including California, Oregon, Arizona, Colorado, Nevada, Washington and Alaska.
Goode worked on the boundary between the United States and Canada in 1898. In 1898, he spoke about "The Bitterroot Forest Preserve," now the Bitterroot National Forest, at a meeting of the National Geographic Society at the Columbian University. In 1900, Goode presented a lecture, "The Topographic Work of the United States Geological Survey," at the California Academy of Sciences.
In June 1903, Goode was placed in charge of the Western Division of the USGS which included all lands west of the Mississippi River. His offices were in Washington, D.C., requiring Goode to return to the East Coast when it was not the summer mapping season. Goode oversaw the Western Division until he died in 1903.

Professional affiliations

Goode was a member of the Washington Academy of Sciences, the NGS, and the Cosmos Club, where he was also an officer. From 1901 to 1903, he was the chairman of the Committee on Technical Meetings at the NGS.

Honors

Several geographical features were named in his honor:

Personal

On January 2, 1889, Goode married Sophie Jackson Parks of Norfolk, Virginia, in Saint Paul's Episcopal Church. Parks was the daughter of Marshall Ott Parks—Commodore in the Confederate Navy, member of the Virginia legislature, a hotelier, railroad man, president of the Dismal Swamp Canal Company, and Supervising Inspector of Steamboats under President Grover Cleveland.
In 1894, the couple hired architect Victor Mindeleff to design a three-story stone and brick Colonial Revival style house in the Washington, D.C., neighborhood of Lanier Heights. They had three children: Sophie Parks Goode, Sallie Urquhart Goode, and Richard Alexander Goode. In 1898, Goode was elected to the vestry of St. Margaret's Episcopal Church in Washington, D.C.
At the age of 44 years, Goode died unexpectedly of pneumonia at the Woodlawn Hotel in Rockville, Maryland, on June 9, 1903. His funeral was held at St. Margaret's and he was buried in Rock Creek Cemetery. His pallbearers included Charles D. Walcott, head of the USGS.

Selected publications

Books

. With Daniel Webster Hoyt. Providence: State of Rhode Island / E.L. Freeman & Son, 1893.The Goode Diary: A Personal Journal of the Northern Transcontinental Survey, 1883. W. S. Dawson, 1990.

Monographs

  • "Magnetic Declination." West Virginia Geological and Economic Survey, vol. 1, 1899. Analyses of Rocks from the Laboratory of the United States Geological Survey 1880–1899. With Frank Wigglesworth Clarke, Henry Gannett, and Fred Boughton Weeks. United States Geological Survey, 1900.
  • "Boundaries of the United States and of the Several States and Territories, with an Outline of the History of All Important Changes of Territory," with Henry Gannett. United States Geological Survey Issues, no. 170–172, 1900."Survey of the Boundary Line between Idaho and Montana, from the International Boundary to the Crest of the Bitterroot Mountains," Bulletin of the United States Geological Survey, no. 170, 1900.
  • "." with Herbert Michael Wilson, John Henry Renshawe, and E. M. Douglas. Annual Report of the United States Geological Survey to the Secretary of the Interior, 1900.
  • "Results of Spirit-Leveling, Fiscal Year 1900-1901", Bulletin of the United States Geological Survey, no. 185, 1901.
  • "Results of Primary Triangulation and Primary Traverse, Fiscal Year 1901-2" with H. M. Wilson, J. H. Renshaw, and E. M. Douglas. Bulletin of the United States Geological Survey, no. 201, 1902.
  • "The Geography and Geology of Alaska: A Summary of Existing Knowledge," with Alfred Hulse Brooks and Cleveland Abbe. United States Geological Survey Professional Paper, no. 45, 1906.

Journal articles

Maps

General maps

  • , USGS, 1894

USGS topographic maps

The following is an incomplete listing of maps by Goode. The following topographic maps were issued by the United States Geological Survey and were documented in WorldCat and the Internet Archive. Note that Goode is credited for his original triangulation or work on all future editions of maps that rely on that data.