In addition to being a medical doctor and minister, Spillman was also a pioneering scientist, contributing to the fields of botany, conchology (the study of shells), geology, paleontology and speleology (the study of caves). One of the few Mississippians belonging to the Academy of Natural Sciences at the time, Spillman was honored with the naming of many fresh water shells and according to his obituary exhibited a “great whale-like monster” (the Zeuglodon Cetorides) at the World’s Industrial and Cotton Centennial Exposition in New Orleans in 1884. Spillman’s geological work and extensive fossil collection influenced early geological surveys of Mississippi and Alabama, and because specialists in geology and paleontology did not regularly come to Mississippi in the 19th century, almost all that was discovered about Mississippi Cretaceous fossils between 1854 and 1873 was due to Dr. Spillman’s efforts. He was apparently a friend and colleague of B.L.C. Wailes and at least acknowledged by geologist Eugene W. Hilgard as an gifted “amateur.” The image above is an example of some of the fossils collected by Dr. Spillman. These are from a class of fish known as Chimaeroids, which were closely related to sharks.Following his fall down the stairs, Spillman died at Mathersville, Mississippi, on December 11, 1886. In his obituary published in the Mississippi Conference Journal, the writer stated that “He had a strong, unvarying faith in God; he saw nothing amid the rocks that tended to controvert the teachings of God’s Holy Word. He had that purity of heart that enabled him to see God everywhere; he traced his handwriting on the pebbly shore or shining strand; he saw the touch of his finger amid granite bowlders, as well as on the beauteous flowers that decked the rugged mountainsides.” Dr. Spillman is buried in Friendship Cemetery in Columbus beside his wife, who preceded him in death. Although his grave stone is missing, his house ("Beckram," below) still stands and his legacy lives on in the publications of the Smithsonian Institution, the U.S. Geological Survey, the Academy of Natural Science of Philadelphia and the Geological Surveys of Mississippi and Alabama. Truly, if any such person ever lived, Dr. William Spillman is the model of a “renaissance man.”
* Tract agents were often known as a “colporteurs,” not to be confused with the great songwriter Cole Porter.
Photo credits: (1) Fossils: http://www.oceansofkansas.com/chimaeroid.html
(2) Barton's Bluff: http://lowndeslibarchives.wordpress.com/2011/07/
(3) Sharks teeth: Image from "Dr. William Spillman (1806-1886), Pioneer Paleontologist of Mississippi," by Earl M. Manning, Department of Geology, Tulane University, in Mississippi Geology, Vol. 15, Number 4.
(4) Cave: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Mammoth_cave_01_-_1887.jpg
(5) Chaplains: http://history.pcusa.org/resources/exhibits/civil_war/section_003_011.cfm
(6) "Beckram": http://www.neighborcity.com/property/803-6th-Ave-N-Columbus-MS-39701-10-1619-8176769/
(3) Sharks teeth: Image from "Dr. William Spillman (1806-1886), Pioneer Paleontologist of Mississippi," by Earl M. Manning, Department of Geology, Tulane University, in Mississippi Geology, Vol. 15, Number 4.
(4) Cave: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Mammoth_cave_01_-_1887.jpg
(5) Chaplains: http://history.pcusa.org/resources/exhibits/civil_war/section_003_011.cfm
(6) "Beckram": http://www.neighborcity.com/property/803-6th-Ave-N-Columbus-MS-39701-10-1619-8176769/

Wonderful article about an incredible man.
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