Early life Harris was born on October 2, 1864, near
Jamestown, New York. Harris entered
Cornell University in 1883 and graduated with a Bachelor of Philosophy degree in 1886. Post-graduation, he worked for state
geological surveys in Texas and Arkansas and the
U.S. Geological Survey in Washington, D.C., and in 1894, traveled to Europe to study
Tertiary deposits of
southern England and northern
France. which remains the oldest continuously published paleontological journal in the Western Hemisphere. In 1916, he founded a second publication,
Palaeontographica Americana, which was printed in a larger format to allow for more-detailed images.
Paleontological Research Institution In 1932, frustrated by the university administration's lack of respect for his accomplishments and rejection of his demand for a fire-proof building to house his collections, library, and printing enterprise, Gilbert Harris looked to creating an independent institution, separate from Cornell, that would serve as a haven for himself and others who shared his interest in paleontology. This institution, dubbed the
Paleontological Research Institution, was chartered as a membership organization in New York State. Harris constructed a simple two-story building on a plot of land adjacent to his home near
Cornell's North Campus that served as headquarters for the institution. His printing enterprise and journals were relocated to PRI following the split from Cornell, and Harris continued to print them himself on his rotary press until two years before his death.
Death Harris died on December 4, 1952, as a result of a long illness that had rendered him bedridden for over nine months. ==References==