,
Bisbee, Arizona. Dr Douglas saved many of the best mineral specimens from the Copper Queen for his personal collection. His family later donated many of them to the
Smithsonian. •
Andrew Ketcham Barnett (1852–1914), principal,
Penzance School of Mines •
Albert Chapman (1912–1996) after death collection moved to
Australian Museum. •
Dr. James S. Douglas (1837–1918), mining engineer. His collection of classic
Bisbee minerals was donated to the Smithsonian's
National Museum of Natural History. •
Walter Frederick Ferrier (1865–1950), Canadian geologist and
mining engineer •
Jack Halpern (collector) (born 1920), collection reviewed in Mineralogical Record •
William W. Jefferis (1820–1906), banker whose vast mineral collection was acquired by the
Carnegie Museum of Natural History in 1905 •
George Frederick Kunz (1856–1932),
gentleman scientist, VP of
Tiffany & Co., "special agent" for the
US Geological Survey (1883–1909) •
William F. Larson (born 1945), Founder of Pala International, board of San Diego Natural History Museum, owner Sinkankas Library •
Gene Meieran (born 1937), 2nd Sr Intel Fellow (after the inventor of the microprocessor), 2003 Carnegie Mineralogical Award winner. Collection also at
A. E. Seaman Mineral Museum. •
J. P. Morgan (1837–1913), famous international banker.
Morganite was named after him by G.F. Kunz. •
E. Pohl-Ströher (1919-2016), German business executive and heiress, collected for more than 60 years. She permanently loaned her collection to
TU Bergakademie Freiberg, Germany. •
Perkins D. Sams (1927–2010), West Texas
oilman. After death collection moved to
Houston Museum of Natural Science. •
Stephen Smale (born 1930), Professor in mathematics, UC Berkeley. World's best Chinese mineral collection published in book. Appraised Houston Museum of Natural Science collection. •
Abraham Gottlob Werner (1749–1817), pioneering German
geologist •
Henrietta Clive, Countess of Powis (1758–1830), one of the first female mineral collectors in the United Kingdom, whose well-organised collection is now part of
National Museum Wales. •
Hank Schrader (fictional character), brother-in-law of
Walter White, from the critically-acclaimed television show
Breaking Bad. The website of
Mineralogical Record magazine includes a Biographical Archive containing biographical sketches of approximately 1,800 (as of 2016) mineral collectors and specimen dealers, most of whom were or are active between the late 19th century and the present day. ==See also==