Theodore Clarke Smith

Theodore Clarke Smith (1870–1960)[1] was professor of American history at Williams College from 1903 to 1938. Smith was an educationalist and curriculum reformer who served on the Committee on Curriculum of 1911-1927 and the Advisory Committee of 1911-1935.

He wrote the often-cited The Wars Between England and America (1914) and produced a two volume life and letters of U.S. President James Abram Garfield (1925).[2]

Smith contributed to the debate about the future of American historiography that took place in the American Historical Association and elsewhere. He was critical of the approach taken by James Harvey Robinson who, Smith argued, did not "consider it necessary to be impartial or even fair."[3]

An archive of his correspondence with Harry A. Garfield is held at Williams College.[1]

Selected publications

gollark: I think you could probably make it work okay either by, as they suggested, segmenting anime-looking stuff, or creating synthetic screen-y images which either contain anime things somewhere or don't.
gollark: The issue isn't competing standards, really.
gollark: All we can do is watch as our ridiculously fast computers and networks grow ever slower with stacked layers of ridiculous hacks, as dependencies accrete and bizarre increasingly convoluted security problems come with them.
gollark: It could have been controlled, once. But now it's impossible to replace the decades upon decades of legacy design decisions.
gollark: Also networking.

References

  1. Series Descriptions. Williams College. Retrieved 6 October 2015.
  2. Review: The Life and Letters of James Abram Garfield by Theodore Clarke Smith, The American Historical Review, Vol. 31, No. 3 (April 1926), pp. 550-554.
  3. "That Noble Dream", Charles A. Beard, The American Historical Review, Vol. 41, No. 1. (October 1935), pp. 74-87.


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.