Washington State University Press
Seattle's Historian and Promoter: The Life of Edmond Stephen Meany
Seattle's Historian and Promoter: The Life of Edmond Stephen Meany
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Many of the buildings from that fair later became incorporated into Meany's beloved second home, the campus of the University of Washington, where he taught history for nearly four decades. Meany became an "institution" on the Seattle campus, often being voted the University's most popular faculty member and the keeper of many campus traditions. Two buildings on the UW campus have been named for him.
In addition to his teaching, Meany wrote the first scholarly work on Washington's past, a volume that served students and the public for half a century. More important for future scholarship, Meany edited and published the Washington Historical Quarterly from 1906 to 1935, providing a forum for regional historians to circulate ideas and themes. In his role as teacher, editor, author, and collector of pioneer reminiscences, Meany became the state's most important early historian, one whose influence is still felt.
This book culminates more than four decades of research into this fascinating character by biographer George Frykman.
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