Carl Russell Fish Explained

Carl Russell Fish
Birth Date:October 17, 1876
Birth Place:Central Falls, Rhode Island, U.S.
Death Place:Madison, Wisconsin, U.S.
Education:Brown University (BA) Harvard University (MA, PhD)
Occupation:Historian, Professor
Spouse:Jeanne l'Hommedieu (m. 1919)
Known For:Professor of History at University of Wisconsin–Madison
Honours:Fellow of the Royal Historical Society

Carl Russell Fish (October 17, 1876 – July 10, 1932) was a University of Wisconsin–Madison historian.

Biography

Born in Central Falls, Rhode Island, to Fredrick E. and Louisiana N. Fish on October 17, 1876. He claimed later in life that he wanted to be a professor since he was four years old. He graduated from Brown in 1897, and completed his Master's and Doctoral degree at Harvard University, finishing in 1898 and 1900, respectively. He was appointed Professor of History later that year at the University of Wisconsin–Madison. He served in a factory during World War I, then visited England in the fall of 1917 to direct the American University Club. There he met Rudyard Kipling, John Masefield, John Singer Sargent, Lady Astor, and James Bryce, all of whom he considered friends. After he returned, he married Jeanne l'Hommedieu of Cincinnati, Ohio, in 1919. They met while he was overseas.[1]

He was again a professor at University of Wisconsin–Madison upon his return to the United States. He remained at Wisconsin until his death of pneumonia after finishing teaching his summer semester classes in 1932. He had a variety of opportunities for teaching elsewhere, and sometimes did teach summers on other campuses, but for the most part he remained at Wisconsin because he found its democratic atmosphere unsurpassed.[1]

He was a fellow of the Royal Historical Society of Great Britain, and a member of Beta Theta Pi, Phi Beta Kappa, and Sigma Delta Chi fraternities, as well as the University and Madison clubs at the university. Fish was known for a bright red jacket he used to wear, especially when he spoke before school football games. He could sometimes be seen running cross country on campus, which he did for exercise. Courses he taught included American History, and "Representative Americans," about specific figures in American history. The latter course was his most popular one. It looked at United States history in terms of the country's leaders.[1] He was widely acclaimed as a professor by his students, who said he made history live, and that he always had another anecdote about a famous historical figure.

Books

He also wrote a review of Master's History of the People of the United States in 1914, in The Mississippi Valley Historical Review.

Racism

In the chapter titled "The Plantation Country," Fish describes a typical plantation where some details are not representative of real world history, For example, on page 39 in History of America, Fish wrote,

"The Slaves worked long hours, had none of these foreign luxuries, and were uneducated. They were, however a merry race, for they had no responsibilities. They had a real gift for music, and sang at their work and after it, songs which they had heard or which they had made for themselves."[2]

Personal influence

The Growth of American Nationality, by Professor Fred W. Wellborn, was dedicated to Fish.

Other sources

External links

Notes and References

  1. Kellogg . Louise Phelps . Fish, Carl Russell.
  2. Book: Fish, Carl Russell. History of America. American Book Company. 1925. 39.