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Frederick
William Nunenmacher was born on March 28, 1870, in Oakland, California. As
a young boy he helped his father in his garden and nursery business, a
profession he enjoyed and continued until his death. Although he had
little schooling, Nunenmacher developed an interest in collecting natural
history specimens at an early age. He was encouraged by entomologist
Albert Koebele to concentrate on a small group of insects that interested
him the most. At once, he limited his collecting to Coleoptera,
specializing on the Coccinellidae (a genus of small beetles such as
ladybugs).
His first
trip out of California was in 1906 to Arizona, where he spent three months
collecting with Koebele. In 1911 he made one of his most difficult
collecting trips by starting 50 miles south of Eureka, California, and
finishing in Grant's Pass, Oregon. The distance walked by Nunenmacher in
this trip totaled 275 miles. For three months in 1913, he traveled through
Shasta County, California, as far as Lakeview, Oregon and returned by way
of Lassen County and Lake Tahoe. For two months in 1914, Nunenmacher
traveled through the Yosemite Valley region and as the automobile became
widespread and stronger, he conducted several short trips in California,
Oregon and Arizona.
Nunenmacher
was said to be a good carpenter, brick mason, plumber, plasterer, painter
and homebuilder. At one point in his life, Nunenmacher was a volunteer
fireman, a delegate to political conventions, a Deputy Sheriff and a City
Gardener of Piedmont. He was also a member of the Pacific Coast
Entomological Society.
Frederick
William Nunenmacher died on April 29, 1946, in his Piedmont home. Part of
his Coccinellidae collection, consisting of 2,100 species and 15,000
specimens, was purchased and presented to the Entomology Department of the
California Academy of Sciences in 1947.
Sources
Consulted:
Pan
Pacific Entomologist, Vol. 24, No. 1, January 1948
San
Francisco Chronicle, February 19, 1940
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