Jump to content

Henry A. Bamman

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Nat965 (talk | contribs) at 11:11, 14 August 2020 (Personal life: Apply Gen fix(es), typo(s) fixed: in June 12, 1948 → on June 12, 1948). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Henry A. Bamman
Born(1918-06-13)June 13, 1918[1]
Macon, Missouri, U.S.
DiedFebruary 14, 2000(2000-02-14) (aged 81)[2]
Rocklin, California, U.S.
OccupationAuthor, Professor, Teacher
GenreAdventure, Science fiction
PartnerRuth G. Wiren (1948-2000, his death)
Children1 son, 1 daughter

Henry A. Bamman (June 13, 1918[1]-February 14, 2000[2]) was an American author, professor and teacher. His titles focuses were adventure and science fiction. He had co-authored many books with Helen Huus and Robert J Whitehead.

Early life and career

Henry A. Bamman was born in Macon, Missouri.[1] He had interest in writing adventure and science fiction books. His first occupation was a teacher in Macon County, Missouri public school district. Then he became a professor at University of Colorado Denver as an instructor in English. He also became an assistant professor in English at Eastern Washington College of Education. Bamman was assistant director of counseling center at Stanford University. Bamman later became a professor of education in Sacramento State College located in Sacramento, California.[3] He left education professor because he was serving as a project planning director for Field Educational Publications, Inc.. In 1978, he was invited to speak at Truman State University as a Baldwin Lecturer. He spoke on "Crisis and change".[4]

Bibliography

1982

  • Amazing
  • Daredevils and dreamers
  • Extraordinary episodes
  • Fantastic flights
  • Challenges

Top Flight Readers (1977)

  • Bush Pilot
  • Chopper
  • Test Pilot
  • Hang Glider
  • Barnstormers
  • Balloon
  • The top flight readers : teacher's manual

Space Science Fiction Series (1970)

  • Milky Way
  • Bone people (ISBN 0817525033)
  • Ice men of Rime
  • Planet of the Whistlers
  • Inviso man
  • Space pirate

Mystery Adventure Series (1969)

  • Mystery adventure of the jeweled bell
  • Mystery adventure at Longcliff Inn
  • Mystery adventure of the Indian burial ground
  • Mystery adventure of the smuggled treasures
  • Mystery adventure of the talking statues
  • Mystery Adventure at Cave Four

The Checkered flag series

  • Wheels (1967)
  • Riddler (1967)
  • Bearcat (1967)
  • Smashup (1967)
  • Scramble (1969)
  • Flea (1969)
  • Grand Prix (1969)
  • Five Hundred (500) (1968)
  • A teacher's manual for the checkered flag series (1968, 1972)

World of Adventure Series

  • The Lost Uranium Mine (1964)
  • Flight to the South Pole (1965)
  • Hunting Grizzly Bears (1963)
  • Fire on the Mountain (1963)
  • City Beneath the Sea (1964)
  • The Search for Piranha (1964)
  • Sacred Well of Sacrifice (1964)
  • Viking Treasure (1965)
  • Teacher's Guide: World of Adventure Series (1965)

Personal life

Bamman married Ruth G. Wiren on June 12, 1948,[1] just one day before his birthday. He has two children, a son whose name is Richard and a daughter whose name is Elin Kristina.

Death

He died on February 14, 2000 in Rocklin, California at the age of 81.[2] He is survived by his wife Ruth G. Wiren and his son and daughter.

References

  1. ^ a b c d Reginald, R. (2010-09-01). Contemporary Science Fiction Authors II. ISBN 9780941028776.
  2. ^ a b c "BAMMAN: CHARLES, JOHN, BARBARA - people search, genealogy, find deceased relatives and locate ancestors".
  3. ^ Bamman, Henry A.; Herber, Harold (1969). "JSTOR: Journal of Reading, Volume 12, Number 6 (March 1969), pp. 483-486". Journal of Reading. 12 (6): 483–486. JSTOR 40012912.
  4. ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2008-08-20. Retrieved 2007-04-24.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)