John Brodie McDiarmid
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John Brodie McDiarmid (June 6, 1913 – April 15, 2002) was a Canadian-born academic who played an important role in Canadian Naval Intelligence during World War II. He was chairman of the Classics Department at the University of Washington, was the university's first Professor of Humanities, and was co-founder of the Seattle Chapter of the
Archaeological Institute of America The Archaeological Institute of America (AIA) is North America's oldest society and largest organization devoted to the world of archaeology. AIA professionals have carried out archaeological fieldwork around the world and AIA has established re ...
.


Life and career


Early life and education

McDiarmid was born in Toronto, Ontario, the only child of Scottish immigrants. He graduated from Upper Canada College high school with the highest grades in his class, earning scholarships to the University of Toronto. McDiarmid took his B.A. in Greek and Latin at Victoria College, University of Toronto, in 1936, and graduated with honors, recipient of the Kerr's Cup. He paid his way through school teaching immigrants working on the Frontier Railroad how to speak and read English, and worked as a deckhand on a lake steamer. In 1940, he was awarded a Ph.D. in Greek, with additional two years studies in Sanskrit and Ancient Languages, from Johns Hopkins University, Phi Beta Kappa. While at Johns Hopkins he met and later married sculptor Mary Kahn, a graduate of Goucher College and Arts Students League.


Wartime experience

In 1942, during World War II, McDiarmid, joined the Royal Canadian Navy (RCN). After training in Halifax, Nova Scotia, he was appointed to Naval Services Headquarters in Ottawa and was assigned to the Operational Intelligence Center (OIC). He headed the RCN U-boat tracking team, charged with defending the North American Atlantic Coast against submarine attacks, and helped develop a system for interpreting and breaking German communication codes. He served under Lieutenant Commander Jean Maurice Barbe Pougnet (Jock) De Marbois, OBE, RD. In 1943, he served aboard , then, in London he became a member of the
British Admiralty The Admiralty was a department of the Government of the United Kingdom responsible for the command of the Royal Navy until 1964, historically under its titular head, the Lord High Admiral – one of the Great Officers of State. For much of it ...
Tracking Room team for decryption procedures—part of the force working to break the code of Hitler's cipher device, the ENIGMA machine. As a result of his work in the Admiralty's OIC, RCN researchers contacted him after the close of the war to gain information about the project. In 1982, in a letter to Vice Admiral Sir Peter Gretton, McDiarmid described the procedures of the until then top secret Admiralty Tracking room. "In the tracking room all signals containing or referring to Special Intelligence were decoded or encoded. No special intelligence ever left the room except to be burned and flushed down the head by an officer of the room; and no chart outside of the room showed more Special Intelligence than was revealed by our daily Secret and Top Secret signals. Admission to the room was severely restricted to those who had a need to know …" McDiarmid retired at the end World War II with the rank of Commander, RCVN.


University of Washington

McDiarmid returned to Johns Hopkins to a teaching position in the Classics Department, where he served from 1945–1949. In 1949, he accepted the position as the first chairman in the Classics Department at the University of Washington, in Seattle. He remained chairman of the Department until 1973. He was instrumental in the rapid growth of the department and in reorganizing its curriculum. He played a key role in the formation of the Classics Department graduate program. He was the first University of Washington Professor of Humanities in 1977–1978. He and provost Solomon Katz founded the Seattle chapter of the
Archaeological Institute of America The Archaeological Institute of America (AIA) is North America's oldest society and largest organization devoted to the world of archaeology. AIA professionals have carried out archaeological fieldwork around the world and AIA has established re ...
.


Achievements and awards

McDiarmid's other honors and achievements include membership in the Institute for Advanced Study,
Princeton, NJ Princeton is a municipality with a borough form of government in Mercer County, in the U.S. state of New Jersey. It was established on January 1, 2013, through the consolidation of the Borough of Princeton and Princeton Township, both of whic ...
, 1952–1953 (at same time as Albert Einstein) and 1957–1958, under the directorship of atomic-bomb physicist J. Robert Oppenheimer; and Guggenheim Fellow, 1957–1958. He was a founding member of the Intercollegiate Center for Classical Studies in Rome. As a scholar and an authority on ancient Greece, he wrote and published many articles on its literature and philosophers and was a popular lecturer on these subjects. The University of Washington's Classics Department lecture series, in which graduate students select the speakers, is called the John and Mary McDiarmid Lectureship. His wife, Mary Kahn McDiarmid, former president of Northwest Sculptors and president of Northwest Bonsai Society, died in 1988. His study on Theophrastus was reviewed and improved by two renowned scholars
Harold F. Cherniss Harold Fredrik Cherniss (11 March 1904 – 18 June 1987) was an American classicist and historian of ancient philosophy. While at the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton, he was said to be "the country's foremost expert on Plato and Aristot ...
and
Eric A. Havelock Eric Alfred Havelock (; 3 June 1903 – 4 April 1988) was a British classicist who spent most of his life in Canada and the United States. He was a professor at the University of Toronto and was active in the Canadian socialist movement du ...
(p. 133). Cherniss makes the strong suggestion that "further investigation must be made of the relationship of Theophrastus to Aristotle (p.87)". Several translations of Theophrastus by Fortenbaugh and others have appeared since McDiarmid's article. Havelock would go on to challenge the traditional views of Platonism which Cherniss maintained. Havelock wrote in his later works on Greek philosophy that he found Aristotle more reliable than Cherniss let on ''and'' the successive accounts by doxographers that McDiarmid states "each doxographer raises individual problems in addition to those that are due to the common dependence on Theophrastus' work" (ibid). It remains a valuable mid-century source and textual apparatus for present day scholarship in the field of Ancient philosophy, reprinted in 1970, and was cited as a source for understanding PreSocratic philosophers recently on the subject of rewriting the history of Ancient Greek philosophy. His study is also noted as raising the sceptical view regarding Theophrastus and Aristotle as reliable sources for the
PreSocratics Pre-Socratic philosophy, also known as early Greek philosophy, is ancient Greek philosophy before Socrates. Pre-Socratic philosophers were mostly interested in cosmology, the beginning and the substance of the universe, but the inquiries of the ...
.


Works

McDiarmid's published works include: * "Theophrastus on the Eternity of the World". ''Transactions and Proceedings of the American Philological Association'' 71 (1940): 239–47. * "Note on Heraclitus Fragment 124". ''American Journal of Philology'' 62 (October 1941): 492–94. * "Euripides’ Ion 1561". ''American Journal of Philology'' 68 (January 1947): 86–87. * "Theophrastus on the Presocratic Causes." ''Harvard Studies in Classical Philology'' 61 (1953): 85–156. * "Biographical Tradition of the Presocratics". In mimeograph to the membership of the Society for Ancient Greek Philosophy for their 1955 annual meeting, at which the paper was presented and discussed. * "Phantom Words in Democritean Terminology". ''Hermes'' 86 (November 1958): 291–98. * "Theophrastus, ''De Sensibus'' 66, Democritus' Explanation of Salimity". ''American Journal of Philology'' 80 (January 1959): 56-66.. * "Plato and Theophrastus’ De Sensibus". ''Phronesis'' 4 (1959): 59–70. * "Theophrastus De Sensibus 61–62: Democratus' Theory of Weight." ''Classical Philology'' 55 (January 1960): 28–30. * "The Manuscript Tradition of Theophrastus' ''De Sensibus''". ''Archiv für Geschichte der Philosophie'' 44, no. 1 (1962): 1–32. * "Theophrastus on the Presocratic Causes". In ''Studies in Presocratic Philosophy'', vol 1: ''The Beginnings of Philosophy'', pp. 178–238. International Library of Philosophy and Scientific Method. London: Routledge & Kegan Paul. New York, The Humanities Press, 1970.


Notes


References

* Bliquez, Lawrence J. 2002. "John Brodie McDiarmid: June 6, 1913 – April 15, 2002".
Classical News from Denny Hall
' 37:1–2. Reprinted anonymously as "The Passing of One of Our Members".
Newsletter of the American Association for Neo-Latin Studies
'. (March 2003): 5 (archive from March 3, 2013). * Boutilier, James A. 1982.
The RCN in Retrospect, 1910–1968
'. Vancouver: The University of British Columbia Press. . * Fortenbaugh, William W. 1992. ''Theophrastus of Eresus: Sources for His Life, Writings, Thought and Influence'', 2 vols. Leiden and Boston: Brill. * Hinds, Stephen E. 2001. "From the Chair".
Classical News from Denny Hall
' 36:1–2. * Hinds, Stephen E. 2002. "In Memoriam: John Brodie McDiarmid (1913–2002)"
''American Philological Association Newsletter'' 25, no. 2
(April): 10. * Kim, Gina. 2002.
John McDiarmid Shared Pleasures of Knowledge
(obituary). ''Seattle Times'' (April 22). * Kohnen, David. 1999.
Commanders Winn and Knowles: Winning the U-Boat War with Intelligence
'. Kraków: Enigma Press. . * McKirahan, Richard D. Jr. 1994. ''Philosophy Before Socrates''. Indianapolis: Hackett. . * Puleo, Stephen. 2012.
Due to Enemy Action: The True World War II Story of the USS Eagle 56: Based Largely on Research by Attorney and Naval Historian Paul M. Lawton
'. .l. Untreed Reads. . * Rohwer, Jürgen. 2001. untitled review o
David Kohnen, ''Commanders Winn and Knowles: Winning the U-Boat War with Intelligence, 1939-1943'' (Krakow: The Enigma Press, 1999), and Patrick Beesly, ''Very Special Intelligence. The Admiralty’s Operational Intelligence Centre, 1939-1945'', with a new introduction by W. J. R. Gardner and a new afterword by Ralph Erskine (London: Greenhill Books/Pennsylvania, PA: Stackpole Books, 2000)
''Journal of Intelligence History'' 1, no. 1 (Summer). * Skaarup, Harold Aage. 2005.
Out of Darkness—Light: A History of Canadian Military Intelligence
', 2 vols. Lincoln, Nebraska: iUniverse. . * Syrett, David. 1994.
The Defeat of the German U-boats: The Battle of the Atlantic
'. Studies in Maritime History. Columbia: University of South Carolina Press. . * Tejera, Victorino. 1997. ''Rewriting the History of Ancient Greek Philosophy''. Westport, CT: Greenwood Press. . * John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation
Fellows: John Brodie McDiarmid
(archive from September 23, 2012). * '' American Journal of Philology''


External links


John B. and Mary K. McDiarmid Lectureship
{{DEFAULTSORT:McDiarmid, John B. 1913 births 2002 deaths Johns Hopkins University alumni Academics from Toronto Royal Canadian Navy officers University of Washington faculty Canadian expatriates in the United States