![]() TheĮxperience was valuable, for it was there that Steward had aĬhance to examine the effectiveness of a fairly well-financed Tion in the organization and functioning of the BIA, is usu-Īlly referred to as a New Deal for American Indians. John Collier, and assisted in the creation of programs for The Bureau of Indian Affairs at the request of its director, The Smithsonian Institution, remaining there until ~ 946.ĭuring one year of his tenure at the BAE, he was loaned to ![]() Inġ935 he left university teaching to take a position as associ-Īte anthropologist in the Bureau of American Ethnology of ~ ~ 934) conducting research in Owens Valley, Death Valley,Īnd northward through Nevada to Idaho and Oregon. His wife, the former Jane Cannon, he spent the next year Research in Puebloid cultures until 1933. Where he taught and conducted considerable archeological In 1930 he went to the University of Utah, Michigan, where he gave the first course in anthropologyĮver given there. In 1928 Steward joined the faculty at the University of To return to Berkeley and its reigning triumvirate for his Temporarily sidetracked by circumstances and urged him Nurtured Steward's continuing interest in anthropology. Then president of Cornell and himself an anthropologist, Graduate training in zoology and geology. Sence of an anthropology faculty, he completed his under. Theįollowing year he transferred to Cornell where, in the ab. He discovered academic anthropology in a course given jointlyīy Alfred Kroeber, Robert Lowie, and Edward Gifford. Indians, an experience that lay partly dormant until hisįreshman year at the University of California, Berkeley, where Not know what to do about it." His time at Deep SpringsĮxposed him to the lifeways of the local Palute and Shoshoni Somewhat laconically, "I took this purpose seriously but did Tional Biography to be published by Oxford University Press. This memoir was originally prepared for inclusion in the multivolume American Na. ![]() Promotion "of the highest well-being." At this time, he sail! Springs College), a school located near Death Valley andĬlevotec! to the clevelopment of practical skills en c! to the When he was sixteen, Steward was admitted to the newlyĮstablisher! Deep Springs Preparatory School (now Deep Sons of some distinction" who apparently did contribute toĪ cleveloping interest in intellectual matters. Involves! him in close association with the chilciren of writ-Įrs, senators, representatives, cloctors, en c! "generally per. ![]() School en c! neighborhood! in the suburbs of Washington In an autobiographical sketch preparer! for the NationalĪcademy of Sciences, Stewart! remarkoc! that nothing in hisįamily background! or in his early education accountec! for Whose brother, Edward! Garriott, was chief forecaster of the Ington, D.C., the son of Thomas G., chief of the Bo arc! ofĮxaminers of the U.S. JULIAN HAYNES STEWARD, ANTHROPOLOGIST, was born in Wash. Because it is UNCORRECTED material, please consider the following text as a useful but insufficient proxy for the authoritative book pages. Below is the uncorrected machine-read text of this chapter, intended to provide our own search engines and external engines with highly rich, chapter-representative searchable text of each book.
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