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List of Guggenheim Fellowships awarded in 1949

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One hundred and forty-four Guggenheim Fellowships were awarded in 1949.[1][2]

1949 U.S. and Canadian Fellows

[edit]
Category Field of Study Fellow Notes Ref
Creative Arts Choreography Doris Humphrey [3]
Drama and Performance Art John La Touche [4]
Fiction Eleanor Green Also won in 1950 [4]
Jean Paul Malaquais [4]
Mary McCarthy Also won in 1959 [4]
Wallace Stegner Also won in 1952, 1959 [4][5][6]
Eudora Alice Welty Also won in 1942 [7][8][4]
Jay Williams [9][4][10]
Film Philip Francisco Stapp [11]
Fine Arts Hyman Bloom [9][12]
Eldzier Cortor [13]
Martin Jackson Also won in 1950 [2]
Peter Lipman-Wulf (de) [14]
Arthur Osver Also won in 1951 [15]
Alexander Peter Russo Also won in 1947 [16][8]
Leonard Louis Schwartz [17]
Charles Umlauf [18]
Music Composition Samuel Barber Also won in 1945, 1947 [4]
John Cage [19][5][6]
Romeo Cascarino Also won in 1948 [20]
Alexei Haieff Also won in 1946 [21][22]
Gerald Raymond Kechley Also won in 1950 [19]
Leon Kirchner Also won in 1948 [23][24][5][25]
Peter Mennin [19]
Jerome Moross Also won in 1947 [26]
Robert E. Ward Also won in 1950, 1966 [27]
Photography Homer Gordon Page [28][25]
Poetry William Oliver Everson [4][25]
Kenneth Rexroth Also won in 1948 [4][5]
Theatre Arts John Waldhorn Gassner [4]
Humanities Biography Arna Bontemps [8][4][5]
Rackham Holt [4][5]
Jeannette Mirsky Also won in 1947 [29][4]
Victor Wolfgang von Hagen Also won in 1950 [9][4][5][10]
British History Archibald Smith Foord Also won in 1968 [9][10]
Ruth Allan McIntyre [30][31]
Dora Neill Raymond [8]
Classics Elias Joseph Bickerman Also won in 1959 [32]
Education Robert King Hall Also won in 1945, 1952 [33]
English Literature Emmett Langdon Avery [34]
Richard David Ellmann Also won in 1957, 1970 [9][12]
Virgil Barney Heltzel Also won in 1950, 1965 [35][36]
Malcolm MacKenzie Ross [36][37]
Austin Warren [38][39]
Fine Arts Research Charles de Tolnay Also won in 1948, 1953 [40]
Sydney Joseph Freedberg Also won in 1954 [9][12]
Gordon Bailey Washburn [9][12]
Harold Edwin Wethey Also won in 1971 [39]
Adja Yunkers Also won in 1954 [41]
Folklore and Popular Culture Richard Mercer Dorson Also won in 1964, 1971 [39][42]
Duncan Black Macdonald Emrich [43][42]
Albert Bates Lord [12][42]
French History Paul Harold Beik Also won in 1947 [44][2]
Carl Vincent Confer [31]
French Literature William Joseph Roach Also won in 1956 [2][42]
Jean Joseph Seznec [9][12]
Philip Adrian Wadsworth [9]
Ronald N. Walpole (de) [42][25]
General Nonfiction Robert Sharon Allen [12][4]
Sally Carrighar Also won in 1948 [4][5]
Bernard Mishkin [9][12]
Angelo M. Pellegrini [9][5]
German and East European History Robert A. Kann [45]
History of Science and Technology Francis Rarick Johnson Also won in 1942 [6]
Latin American Literature Samuel Whitehall Putnam [4]
Linguistics Isidore Dyen Also won in 1964 [10]
Murray B. Emeneau Also won in 1956 [46][25]
Literary Criticism James Craig La Drière [47]
Wylie Sypher Also won in 1958 [9][12]
James Thorpe Also won in 1965 [48]
Medieval History Robert Stuart Hoyt [38][40]
Medieval Literature Morton Wilfred Bloomfield Also won in 1964 [37]
Cora Elizabeth Lutz Also won in 1954 [2][49]
Walter J. Ong Also won in 1951 [9][12][40]
Music Research Beekman Cox Cannon (eo) [9][40][10]
Arthur Mendel [50]
Leo Franz Schrade Also won in 1951, 1956 [9][40][10]
Near Eastern Studies Kenneth Meyer Setton Also won in 1950 [40][37]
Philosophy Morton Gabriel White [9][12]
Russian History Bertram D. Wolfe Also won in 1950, 1953 [51]
Spanish and Portuguese Literature María Rosa Lida de Malkiel Also won in 1950 [52][25]
United States History Paul Wallace Gates [31][6]
Helene M. Brewer Appointed as Helene Maxwell Hooker [5][6]
Arthur Stanley Link [4]
Arthur Preston Whitaker (fr) Also won in 1929 [2]
Charles Maurice Wiltse Also won in 1950 [4]
Natural Science Chemistry Simon Harvey Bauer [31]
Leo Brewer [25]
Marvin Carmack [2][53]
Frederick Otto Koenig Also won in 1950 [6]
Melvin Spencer Newman [54]
Cyrias Ouellet (fr) [37]
Henry Taube Also won in 1955 [55][56]
David Herschel Volman [6][25]
Edgar Bright Wilson, Jr. Also won in 1970 [9][12]
László Zechmeister (hu) (de) (eo) [57]
Earth Science Howel Williams Also won in 1957 [25]
Mathematics Wilfred Kaplan [39]
Stephen Cole Kleene [58]
George Whitelaw Mackey Also won in 1961, 1970 [9][12]
Medicine and Health Sidney Raffel [6]
Molecular and Cellular Biology William C. Boyd [12][9]
Michael Doudoroff [6][25]
Irving Goodman Also won in 1950 [59]
Irwin Clyde Gunsalus Also won in 1959, 1967 [60]
Abraham Mazur [61]
Claude Alvin Villee, Jr. [49][9][12]
Hans Handforth Zinsser Also won in 1950 [2]
Neuroscience Elwood Henneman [62]
Organismic Biology and Ecology Elmer Grimshaw Butler [63]
George E. Erikson [9][12]
George Evelyn Hutchinson [10]
George Robert Lunz [8]
Frank Alois Pitelka [25]
Robert Cyril Stebbins [25]
Physics Wendell Hinkle Furry [9][12]
Emil Jan Konopinski [64]
Harald Herborg Nielsen [65]
Dorothy Walcott Weeks [2][49]
John Archibald Wheeler Also won in 1946 [66]
Plant Sciences Muriel Virginia Bradley [25]
David R. Goddard [2]
George Frederik Papenfuss [25]
Bernice Giduz Schubert [9][12]
Marta Sherman Walters [25]
Statistics John Wilder Tukey [67]
Social Sciences Anthropology and Cultural Studies Luther S. Cressman Also won in 1940 [68]
George M. Foster, Jr. [69]
Emil Walter Haury [70]
David G. Mandelbaum [25]
Economics Earl Francis Beach [37]
Raymond Adrien de Roover Also won in 1952 [31]
Daniel Marx, Jr. [9][12][71]
Tibor Scitovsky [6]
Law Philip B. Kurland Also won in 1955 [72]
Political Science M. Margaret Ball [9][12]
Robert MacGregor Dawson [37]
John Calyer Ranney [9][12]
Richard F. Wolfson [73]
Psychology Edward Norton Barnhart [25]
Hadley Cantril [71]

1949 Latin American and Caribbean Fellows

[edit]
Category Field of Study Fellow Notes Ref
Creative Arts Music Composition Roque Cordero [74]
Vicente Salas Viu [75]
Adolfo Salazar [75]
Poetry Agustí Bartra Lleonart (ca) Also won in 1948, 1960 [76][75]
Humanities Intellectual and Cultural History Juan Larrea y Celayeta (es) Also won in 1950 [77][75]
Natural Sciences Chemistry Joño Baptista Veiga Salles [75]
Earth Science Carlos de Paula Couto Also won in 1951, 1966 [78][75]
Mathematics Leopoldo Nachbin Also won in 1957, 1958 [79][75]
Medicine and Health José Pisanty Ovadía [75]
Molecular and Cellular Biology Hermann Niemeyer Fernández [75]
Roberto Luiz Pimenta de Mello Also won in 1948 [75]
Raúl Esteban Trucco Also won in 1950 [75]
Organismic Biology and Ecology Ernesto Gutiérrez Ballesteros [75]
John Lane [75]
José Oiticica Filho Also won in 1947 [75]
Abelardo Moreno Bonilla Also won in 1950 [80][75]
Arístides Herrer Alva [81][75]
Juan José Parodiz (es) [75]
Llewellyn Ivor Price [75]
Paulo Emilio Vanzolini Also won in 1955, 1958 [75]
Plant Sciences Jesús M. Idrobo Muñoz [75]
Social Sciences Anthropology and Cultural Studies Aníbal Buitrón Cháves [75]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
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  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t "Lucky Guggenheim Fellows". Chicago Tribune. Chicago, Illinois, USA. 1949-04-24. p. 186. Retrieved 2022-11-04 – via newspapers.com.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h i j "Guggeheims: 1949". The Los Angeles Times. Los Angeles, California, USA. 1949-04-11. p. 29. Retrieved 2022-11-04 – via newspapers.com.
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  9. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z "29 N.E. Guggenheim Fellows announced". The Lewiston Daily Sun. Lewiston, Maine, USA. 1949-04-11. p. 13. Retrieved 2022-11-04 – via newspapers.com.
  10. ^ a b c d e f g "Connecticut men receive fellowships". Hartford Courant. Hartford, Connecticut, USA. 1949-04-11. p. 2. Retrieved 2022-11-04 – via newspapers.com.
  11. ^ "They saw typical new films". Detroit Free Press. Detroit, Michigan, USA. 1949-07-17. p. 10. Retrieved 2022-11-04 – via newspapers.com.
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  13. ^ Harris, Elizabeth A. (2015-11-28). "Eldzier Cortor, Painter of Scenes From African-American Social Life, Dies at 99". The New York Times. Retrieved 2022-11-04.
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  18. ^ Barnes, Michael (2021-08-31). "'We're finding things everywhere': Discover seldom-seen works of sculptor Charles Umlauf". Austin American-Statesman. Retrieved 2022-11-04.
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  32. ^ "Elias Joseph Bickerman". Institute for Advanced Study. Retrieved 2022-11-04.
  33. ^ "Robert King Hall". John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation. Retrieved 2022-11-04.
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  35. ^ "Library News". Renaissance News. 2 (2): 31. 1949. Retrieved 2022-11-04 – via newspapers.com.
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  39. ^ a b c d "M.S.C. professor wins Guggenheim award". Lansing State Journal. Lansing, Michigan, USA. 1949-04-11. p. 13. Retrieved 2022-11-04 – via newspapers.com.
  40. ^ a b c d e f "Projects & European News". Renaissance News. 2 (3): 55, 60, 62. 1949.
  41. ^ "Guest teachers to give art shows". Albuquerque Journal. Albuquerque, New Mexico, USA. 1949-04-21. p. 7. Retrieved 2022-11-04 – via newspapers.com.
  42. ^ a b c d e "Folklore News". The Journal of American Folklore. 62 (244): 194. April 1949.
  43. ^ "Obituaries: Duncan Emrich (1908-1977)". The Journal of American Folklore. 91 (360): 702. April 1978.
  44. ^ "Paul H. Beik". John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation. Retrieved 2022-11-02.
  45. ^ "Dr. Robert Kann wins fellowship". The Central New Jersey Home News. New Brunswick, New Jersey, USA. 1949-04-11. p. 5. Retrieved 2022-11-04 – via newspapers.com.
  46. ^ "Murray B. Emeneau". John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation. Retrieved 2022-11-04.
  47. ^ "James Craig La Drière". John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation. Retrieved 2022-11-04.
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  49. ^ a b c "Wilson aides win coveted study awards". Public Opinion. Chambersburg, Pennsylvania, USA. 1949-04-11. p. 1. Retrieved 2022-11-04 – via newspapers.com.
  50. ^ "Arthur Mendel". John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation. Retrieved 2022-11-04.
  51. ^ "Bertram D. Wolfe". John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation. Retrieved 2022-11-04.
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  59. ^ "Irving Goodman". John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation. Retrieved 2022-11-04.
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  61. ^ "Abraham Mazur". John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation. Retrieved 2022-11-04.
  62. ^ "Elwood Henneman". John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation. Retrieved 2022-11-04.
  63. ^ "Elmer G. Butler". John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation. Retrieved 2022-11-04.
  64. ^ "Emil J. Konopinski". University of Iowa. Retrieved 2022-11-04.
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