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Archer Butler Hulbert

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Occupation
  
Historian, Geographer

Name
  
Archer Hulbert

Role
  
Writer


Archer Butler Hulbert httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Born
  
January 26, 1873 (
1873-01-26
)
Bennington, Vermont

Spouse(s)
  
(1) Mary Elizabeth Stacy; (2) Dorothy Printup

Died
  
December 24, 1933, Colorado Springs, Colorado, United States

Books
  
Historic highways of America, The Niagara River, The Paths of Inland Commerce, The Ohio River, Indian thoroughfares

Similar People
  
Emerson Hough, Constance Lindsay Skinner, Stewart Edward White, Herbert Eugene Bolton, David Zeisberger

Archer Butler Hulbert, FRGS (26 Jan 1873 – 24 Dec 1933), historical geographer, writer, and professor of American history, son of Rev. Calvin Butler Hulbert and Mary Elizabeth Woodward, was born in Bennington, Vermont. His father later became President of Middlebury College. Hulbert was married twice. On 10 September 1901 he married Mary Elizabeth Stacy, who died in 1920. On 16 Jun 1923 he married Dorothy Printup. He had two daughters by each wife.

Hulbert graduated from Marietta College, Marietta, Ohio, in 1895. Hulbert also received an honorary MA in 1904 and was awarded an LHD in 1930. He received a Litt.D. from Middlebury in 1929.

He was Vice-Principal of the Putnam Military Academy, Zanesville, Ohio, until 1897. Hulbert then did newspaper work in Korea in 1897 and '98: he was editor of the Korean Independent (Seoul) and edited Far East American newspapers. His brother, Homer Hulbert, had gone there in 1886. He was Professor of American History at Marietta College 1904-18. After Marietta College, Hulbert became a lecturer in American History at Clark University from 1918 to 1919. He also was a lecturer at the University of Chicago in 1904 and 1923; and he served as archivist for the Harvard Commission on Western History (1912–16). Hulbert's last position was at Colorado College, from 1920 until his death. After his death, his wife, Dorothy Printup Hulbert, continued his work.

Hulbert's interest in trails dated from fishing trips taken during his college, when he noticed Indian trails. This interest led at first to his 16 volumes of Historic Highways of America (1902–05).

The 1929 Bibliography of Archer Butler Hulbert lists 102 volumes. His work Forty Niners (1931) won a $5,000 prize from The Atlantic Monthly magazine.

Works

  • The old National Road a chapter of American expansion (1901)
  • Historic highways of America (1901)
  • Paths of the mound-building Indians and great game animals (1902)
  • Indian thoroughfares (1902)
  • Boone's wilderness Road (1903)
  • Waterways of westward expansion the Ohio River and its tributaries (1903)
  • Pioneer roads and experiences of travelers (1904)
  • The Ohio River; a course of empire (1906)
  • The Niagara River (1908)
  • The paths of inland commerce; a chronicle of trail, road, and waterway (1920)
  • Frontiers, the genius of American nationality (1929)
  • Soil : its influence on the history of the United States: with special reference to migration and the scientific study of local history (1930)
  • Forty-niners : the chronicle of the California trail (1931)
  • Where rolls the Oregon; prophet and pessimist look Northwest;edited with bibliographical resume 1825-1830 (1933)
  • Southwest on the turquoise trail; the first diaries on the road to Santa Fe (1933)
  • References

    Archer Butler Hulbert Wikipedia