Author talk:Frederick Lewis Odenbach

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Sources[edit]

Name: Frederick Louis Odenbach
Birth Year: 1857
Death Year: 1933
Source:

  • American Biographies. By Wheeler Preston. New York: Harper & Brothers Publishers, 1940. (AmBi)
  • Dictionary of American Biography. Supplement 1. New York: Charles Scribner's Sons, 1944. (DcAmB S1)
  • Who Was Who in America. A component volume of Who's Who in American History. Volume 1, 1897-1942. Chicago: A.N. Marquis Co., 1943. (WhAm 1)

Passport[edit]

  • U.S. Passport Applications, 1795-1925

Name: Frederick L Odenbach
Age: 23
Birth Date: 21 Oct 1857
Birth Place: Rochester, NY
Passport Issue Date: 27 Aug 1881

Burial[edit]

  • Find a grave

Frederick L. Odenbach
Birth Oct 1857
Death Mar 1933 (aged 75)
Burial
Saints Peter and Paul Ukranian Catholic Cemetery
Parma, Cuyahoga County, Ohio, USA
Memorial ID 169028910

ODENBACH, FREDERICK L., SJ (21 Oct. 1857-15 Mar. 1933), priest, meteorologist, and professor at JOHN CARROLL UNIVERSITY for 40 years, was born in Rochester, N.Y., the son of John and Elizabeth Minges Odenbach. He received his bachelor's degree from Canisius College in Buffalo in 1881, joined the Society of Jesus in Sept. 1881, and was sent to the Netherlands for training. Although he taught at Canisius for two years (1885-87), he spent much of the decade studying in Europe. He was ordained into the Catholic priesthood in England in 1891.

Odenbach returned to the U.S. in 1892 to become professor of physics and chemistry at St. Ignatius College (later John Carroll University) in Cleveland, where he remained until his death. In 1902 he became professor of astronomy and meteorology at the college. In 1895 Odenbach, with the assistance of Geo. E. Rueppel, established a meteorological observatory, on 6 Dec. 1901 becoming the sixth person to observe the rare Helvetian Halo. He was skilled in mechanics as well as science; in 1898 he took only 3 days to reassemble the 1,001-piece Secchi meteorograph offered to him by the Smithsonian Institution. He made many of his own scientific instruments. In 1899 he invented the ceraunograph, an instrument recording the occurrence of thunder and lightning. He also developed an electrical seismograph after he established a seismological observatory in 1900. In 1909 he proposed a plan for a cooperative seismological program involving Jesuit schools throughout the U.S. and Canada, and later became director of the Jesuit Seismological Service.

  • The Encyclopedia of Cleveland History-1997

death[edit]

Rev. Frederick L. Odenbach

Dayton Journal Herald

March 16, 1933 pg. 1, col. 6

died March 15, 1933