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Stewart Holbrook

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Name
  
Stewart Holbrook


Role
  
Writer

Stewart Holbrook wwwochcomorgholbrookindexfilesholbrookyoungjpg

Died
  
1964, Oregon, United States

Books
  
Wildmen - Wobblies & Whistle P, The Age of the Moguls, The Story of American, The Swamp Fox of the, Lost Men of American History

Similar People
  
Lynd Ward, Hodding Carter, Walter Havighurst, Frank Waters, Edgar Lee Masters

Stewart Hall Holbrook (1893 – 1964) was an American logger, writer, and popular historian. His writings focused on what he called the "Far Corner": Washington, Oregon, and Idaho. A self-proclaimed "low-brow" historian, his topics included Ethan Allen, the railroads, the timber industry, the Wobblies, and eccentrics of the Pacific Northwest. An early proponent of conservation, Holbrook believed that Oregon's growing population would have a negative impact on the state's environment.

Contents

Career

Holbrook was a logger before he moved to Portland, Oregon in 1923, when he was a 30 years old and He became a very accomplished writer. He wrote for The Oregonian for over thirty years, was featured in The New Yorker, and authored over three dozen of books. He also produced a number of satirical paintings under the pseudonym of "Mr. Otis," in a style he called "primitive modern." These paintings are still shown occasionally at the Portland Museum of Modern Art or can be found at the University of Washington Libraries, Special Collections. In the early 1960s, Holbrook was the founder and leading spokesperson of an early fictitious conservation movement called the James G. Blaine Society writing on subjects from sustained yield forestry to his concerns about unplanned population growth.

Awards and honors

The Stewart H. Holbrook Literary Legacy Award is named after Holbrook and is presented every year "to a person or organization in recognition of significant contributions that have enriched Oregon’s literary community."

References

Stewart Holbrook Wikipedia