Meredith Burrill
Meredith Burill was an American geographer and cartographer who served as the executive secretary of the United States Board on Geographic Names form 1943 to 1973.[1] Dubbed "the world's foremost authority" on toponymy, he pushed the United Nations to standardize the naming of international bodies of water, most notably Lake Geneva.[1]
Early life and education
Born and raised in Houlton, Maine, the son of a school superintendent, he attended Bates College in Lewiston majoring in geography.[1] He went on to attend Clark University where he received his masters and doctorate in the same field.[1]
Personal life
Born with a traditionally feminine name, "Meredith", Burill casually went by Pete (derived from the French word "petit") as a nickname.[1]
gollark: ```osmarks@fenrir /t/home> makegcc -Wall -g -c src/host/posix.c -o src/host/posixgcc -o .ogcc: fatal error: no input filescompilation terminated.make: *** [<builtin>: .o] Error 1```
gollark: `
gollark: Now it goes `fatal error: no input files1.
gollark: ```osmarks@fenrir /t/home> make -E 'print-%:; @echo $($*)' print-CFLAGS-Wall -g```
gollark: If I had dale, I could use dale to compile dale, but I would need dale, and I don't have dale.
See also
References
- Thomas Jr., Robert (October 10, 1997). "Meredith F. Burrill, 94, Expert On World Geographic Names". The New York Times. Retrieved November 15, 2018.
Further reading
- Thomas, Robert. October 10, 1997. Meredith F. Burrill, 94, Expert On World Geographic Names. The New York Times.
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