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Journal cover
The Journal of San Diego History
Summer 1981, Volume 27, Number 3
Contents of This Issue

How Scripps Institution Came To San Diego
By ELIZABETH N. SHOR
Scripps Institution of Oceanography Senior Writer

Back to the article

Ellen Browning Scripps  
Cover: Ellen Browning Scripps, one of San Diego's most understanding benefactors, is photographed here in the arcade of her La Jolla home. Miss Scripps many contributions to a fledgling seaside laboratory which would later become world famous as the Scripps Institution of Oceanography are related in the article starting on page 161. Courtesy of The La Jolla Historical Society.


Fred Baker  
Page 162. Fred Baker, the doctor who collected shells, and found supporters for San Diego's marine institution.


William E. Ritter  
Page 163. William E. Ritter, the Berkeley professor who brought the dream of a seaside laboratory to San Diego.


Edward Willis Scripps  
Page 164. Edward Willis Scripps, the man of business who did not trust scientists with money, but was anxious to see the project done.


boat house of the Hotel del Coronado  
Page 164. The boat house of the Hotel del Coronado was the location for William Ritter's summer class in 1903.


marine laboratory occupied this building  
Page 167. For five years (1905-1910) the marine laboratory occupied this building alongside La Jolla Cove on city park land.


site of Scripps Institution of 
Oceanography  
Page 167. The site of Scripps Institution of Oceanography as it appeared in 1908.


George H. Scripps Marine Laboratory  
Page 168. The George H. Scripps Marine Laboratory in its isolated La Jolla location in 1910. Miss Scripps paid for all: Scripps Building, the Library-Museum, the cottages, the director's house, the pier (c. 1916).


George H. Scripps Marine Laboratory  
Page 168-169. [The George H. Scripps Marine Laboratory in 1910.]


Alexander Agassiz  
Page 171. Ellen Scripps also provided Funds for the marine institution's first ship, Alexander Agassiz.


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