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Edward Gaylord Bourne, Ph. D. (June 24, 1860 – February 24, 1908) was an American historian. He was born in
Strykersville, New York Strykersville is a Hamlet (New York), hamlet (and census-designated place) located within the town of Sheldon, New York, Sheldon, with a small southern portion in the Town of Java, New York, Java, in the western part of Wyoming County, New York, W ...
, and educated at
Yale Yale University is a private research university in New Haven, Connecticut. Established in 1701 as the Collegiate School, it is the third-oldest institution of higher education in the United States and among the most prestigious in the wor ...
graduating in 1883 with high honors. He taught at Adelbert College, Cleveland from 1888 to 1895 when he became a professor of history at Yale. Bourne is considered one of the founders of
Latin American history The term ''Latin America'' primarily refers to the Spanish- and Portuguese-speaking countries in the New World. Before the arrival of Europeans in the late 15th and early 16th centuries, the region was home to many indigenous peoples, a number of ...
as a field in the United States. The publication of his ''Spain in America'' (1904), was "a major landmark in the development of the field," which "gave a lucid synthesis of the institutional life of Spanish America, ranging also through economic, social, and cultural developments...." In an assessment of Bourne's work,
Charles Gibson Charles deWolf Gibson (born March 9, 1943) is an American broadcast television anchor, journalist and podcaster. Gibson was a host of ''Good Morning America'' from 1987 to 1998 and again from 1999 to 2006, and the anchor of ''World News with Char ...
and Benjamin Keen state that "He may justifiably be termed the first scientific historian of the United States to view the Spanish colonial process dispassionately and thereby to escape the conventional Anglo-Protestant attitudes of outraged or tolerant disparagement."


Publications

Bourne published many critical papers on historical subjects. One of them, " The Legend of Marcus Whitman," is considered to have settled the Whitman question, determining that there was no basis in fact for the widespread notion that Whitman "saved" Oregon to the United States. His four-volume ''Spain in America'' is credited with "an unequivocally scholarly presentation, in laying a positive assessment of early Hispanic colonization before the .S.American public." The work was reissued in 1962, indicating its enduring importance to the field. Bourne published: * ''The History of the Surplus Revenue of 1837'' (1885) * ''Historical Introduction to the Philippine Islands'' (1903) * ''Spain in America, 1450-1580'' (1904) 4 vols. Reissued 1962. * ''Life of J. L. Motley'' (1905) * ''Discovery, Conquest, and History of the Philippine Islands'' (1907) Bourne edited: * ''Rocher's Spanish Colonial System'' (1904), and translated ''The Narrative of De Soto'' (1904) and ''The Voyage of Champlain'' (1905).


Honors

Bourne was elected a member of the American Antiquarian Society in 1893.American Antiquarian Society Members Directory
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Further reading

*Benjamin Keen, "Edward Gaylor Bourne's ''Spain in America'', in ''Latin American History: Essays on Its Study and Teaching, 1898-1965''. Austin: University of Texas Press 1967, vol. 1, pp. 56–58. * wikisource:en:Oregon Historical Quarterly/Volume 9/Notes and news (Number 1)


References


External links

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''Spain in America''
at Thayer's American History site American essayists Historians of Latin America Latin Americanists American male essayists Yale University alumni 1860 births 1908 deaths Burials at Grove Street Cemetery Yale University faculty Historians from New York (state) People from Sheldon, New York Members of the American Antiquarian Society {{US-historian-stub