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William Malone Baskervill

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William Malone Baskervill
Born1850
Died1899
OccupationAcademic

William Malone Baskervill (1850–1899) was a writer and professor of the English language and literature at Vanderbilt University.

Early life

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William Malone Baskerville was born in 1850 in Fayette County, Tennessee.[1] He graduated from Randolph–Macon College in Ashland, Virginia.[1] One of his teacher, Thomas Randoph Price, encouraged him to study in Germany.[1] As a result, he attended the University of Leipzig in 1873–1874, where he became friends with Charles Forster Smith.[1]

Career

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From 1876 to 1881, Baskervill taught at Wofford College alongside Smith and James H. Kirkland. In 1878-79 he returned to study in Leipzig, and in the summer of 1880, returned to Leipzig to finish his doctorate. Beginning in 1881, Baskervill taught at Vanderbilt University. Together with Smith, who also taught at Vanderbilt, and George Washington Cable, he ran an organization known as the Open Letter Club.[2] Essie Samuels notes this was "a loosely organized attempt to disseminate liberal propaganda concerning civil rights and education for the Negro in the South between 1887 and 1890."[3]

Personal life

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He was the son-in-law of Methodist Bishop and Vanderbilt University co-founder Holland Nimmons McTyeire.[4]

Death

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He died in 1899.

Bibliography

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  • An outline of Anglo-Saxon grammar (from the appendix of Harrison & Baskervill's Anglo-Saxon dictionary), in 1887
  • An English Grammar with J. W. Sewell, in 1896
  • Irwin Russell, in 1896
  • Charles Egbert Craddock, in 1896
  • Joel Chandler Harris, in 1896
  • Maurice Thompson, in 1896
  • Sidney Lanier, in 1896
  • Anglo-Saxon Prose Reader Reader for Beginners with J. A. Harrison, in 1898
  • The Elements of English Grammar with J. W. Sewell, in 1900
  • A School Grammar of the English language (Baskervill-Sewell English course), in 1903

References

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  1. ^ a b c d Becker, Anja (November 2008). "Southern Academic Ambitions Meet German Scholarship: The Leipzig Networks of Vanderbilt University's James H. Kirkland in the Late Nineteenth Century". The Journal of Southern History. 74 (4): 864. doi:10.2307/27650317. JSTOR 27650317.
  2. ^ Luker, Ralph E. (1998). The Social Gospel in Black and White: American Racial Reform, 1885-1912. U of North Carolina P. pp. 70–72. ISBN 9780807847206.
  3. ^ Essie (Wenar) Samuels, A History of Failure: The Open Letter Club, unpublished Masters thesis, Vanderbilt University, 1967.
  4. ^ William Sheehan, The Immortal Fire Within: The Life and Work of Edward Emerson Barnard, Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 1995, p. 67 [1]
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