David Starr Jordan (born January 19, 1851, Gainesville, New York, U.S.—died September 19, 1931, Stanford, California) was a naturalist, educator, eugenicist, and the foremost American ichthyologist of his time.
Jordan studied biology at Cornell University (M.S., 1872) and became professor of biology at Butler University, Indianapolis, Indiana, before being appointed professor of natural history at Indiana University, Bloomington, in 1879. He became president of that university in 1885. In 1891 he became the first president of the newly opened Leland Stanford Junior University (now Stanford University), in Stanford, California, and he served in this post until 1913.
Jordan was inspired to specialize in ichthyology by the Swiss-born American naturalist Louis Agassiz. From the 1870s, Jordan made extensive field trips in the United States and its coastal areas, and his efforts led to the naming of a total of 1,085 genera and more than 2,500 species of fishes, together with broader classifications of them. With B.W. Evermann he wrote the authoritative “The Fishes of North and Middle America,” and his Manual of the Vertebrates of the Northern United States went through 13 editions between its publication in 1876 and 1929. He also served on the board of directors of John Muir’s new conservation organization, the Sierra Club.
Jordan was a white supremacist and advocated the pseudoscience of eugenics, which held that human races are biologically distinct and that humanity could be bettered through reproductive control. He was an important figure in the U.S. eugenics movement and was a proponent of forced sterilization programs aimed primarily at poor Black, Indigenous, and Hispanic women and those with physical and mental disabilities. In 1928 he became a founding member of the Human Betterment Foundation, the model laws and research of which would later inspire Nazi eugenic legislation.
Jordan devoted his later career mainly to the cause of international peace, acting as chief director of the World Peace Foundation.