Donald W. Meinig Explained

Donald W. Meinig
Birth Date:1 November 1924
Birth Place:Palouse, Washington, U.S.
Death Place:Syracuse, New York, U.S.
Citizenship:American
Fields:Geography
Workplaces:Syracuse University
Education:Georgetown University
University of Washington
Thesis1 Title:Environment and Settlement in the Palouse, 1868-1910
Thesis1 Url:http://hdl.handle.net/1773/23936
Thesis1 Year:1950
Doctoral Advisor:Howard H. Martin,
Thesis2 Title:Walla Walla Country: 1805-1910. A Century of Man and the Land
Thesis2 Url:https://www.proquest.com/docview/301976827
Thesis2 Year:1953
Academic Advisors:Graham H. Lawton
Doctoral Students:Evelyn Stokes
Awards:Charles P. Daly Medal (1986)
Fellow of the National Endowment for the Humanities
Fellow of American Academy of Arts and Sciences (2010)
Fulbright Scholar (1958)
Guggenheim Fellow
Spouse:Lee Meinig
Children:3

Donald William Meinig (November 1, 1924 – June 13, 2020) was an American geographer. He was Maxwell Research Professor Emeritus of Geography at the Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs, Syracuse University.

Career

Meinig studied foreign service at Georgetown University, and then earned graduate degrees in geography from the University of Washington in 1950 and 1953, under the supervision of Howard H. Martin; he was also strongly influenced by historian Carroll Quigley and Australian geographer Graham H. Lawton.[1]

Starting in 1950, Meinig held a faculty position at the University of Utah. However, in 1958 he left Utah for a visiting position at the University of Adelaide in Australia, under a Fulbright scholarship,[2] and in 1960 he joined the Syracuse faculty. Between 1968 and 1973, he served as chair of the Geography Department and helped to shape the university's Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs, becoming a Maxwell Research Professor of Geography in 1990. He retired in 2004 after 46 years on the Maxwell faculty.

At Syracuse, Meinig was the doctoral advisor of more than 20 graduate students, including New Zealand geographer Evelyn Stokes.[3] [4] [5]

Research

Meinig's work focuses on historical geography, regional geography, cultural geography, social geography, and landscape interpretation.[6] [7] [8] [9] Even after relocating to Upstate New York, his historical geography work reflected western American interests, with pioneering regional studies on the Mormon culture area (1965),[10] Texas (1969), and the Southwest (1971), as well as three chapters on New York State's historical geography in a volume edited by John Thompson (1966).[3]

His most ambitious and well known work is the four volume series "The Shaping of America" (published 1986, 1993, 1998, and 2004), published by the Yale University Press.[11] Meinig dedicated 25 years of his academic career to this research, which offers a detailed overview of the country's geographic development from Columbus' arrival to the year 2000.[12] He also concentrated on literary spaces and geography, stating, "Literature is a valuable storehouse of vivid depictions of the landscapes and lives of modern day society."

Thanks to a collaboration with his former doctoral student John Garver, some of Meinig's thematic regional maps named "The Making of America" were published by the National Geographic Society in 1908s, reaching more than 10 million National Geographic subscribers.[3] [11]

Awards and honors

Meinig was a Fulbright Scholar, a Guggenheim Fellow, and a Fellow of the National Endowment for the Humanities.[13] He was the first American geographer to be elected as a corresponding Fellow of the British Academy, in 1991. In 1965 the Association of American Geographers awarded him a citation "For Meritorious Contribution to the Field of Geography," and the American Geographical Society gave him their Charles P. Daly Medal in 1986.[14] Meinig received an honorary doctorate (D.H.L.) from the Maxwell School at Syracuse University in 1994.[15] In 2004, he received the John Brinckerhoff Jackson Prize for the best book interpreting the geography of America.[16] The Geographical Review devoted a special issue to him in July 2009.[17] In 2010, he was elected as a member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences.[18]

Personal life

Meinig was born on November 1, 1924, in Palouse, Washington, and was raised on a farm. He self-identified as Anglo-Saxon of German and British ancestry.[19] Meinig enlisted in the Army in May 1943 and served in the Corps of Engineers. In August 1944, he was promoted to 2nd Lieutenant and honorably discharged from active duty in February 1946.

Meinig died at Syracuse, New York, on June 13, 2020, at the age of 95.[20]

Books

His principal publications include:

External links

Notes and References

  1. Bigelow . Bruce . Early Intellectual Influences on D. W. Meinig: a Former Student's Fond Memories* . . 1 July 2009 . 99 . 3 . 303–322 . 10.1111/j.1931-0846.2009.tb00435.x . 6 May 2021 . . 143038663 . 0016-7428.
  2. News: Meinig Receives Fulbright Grant . 4 May 2021 . . March 15, 1958 . Palouse, WA . 3 .
  3. Wyckoff . William . Colten . Craig E. . A Tribute to Donald Meinig . Geographical Review . 1 July 2009 . 99 . 3 . iii–x . 10.1111/j.1931-0846.2009.tb00432.x . . 155012661 . 6 May 2021 . 0016-7428.
  4. Western . John . Miller . Cynthia . Don Meinig as a Teacher . . 1 July 2009 . 99 . 3 . 297–302 . 10.1111/j.1931-0846.2009.tb00434.x . 159648215 . 6 May 2021 . 0016-7428.
  5. . Reprinted in Datum: Newsletter of the New Zealand Map Society, no. 23, November 2005.
  6. Flad . Harvey K. . The Parlor in the Wilderness: Domesticating an Iconic American Landscape* . . 1 July 2009 . 99 . 3 . 356–376 . 10.1111/j.1931-0846.2009.tb00437.x . 144279748 . 7 May 2021 . 0016-7428.
  7. Schein . Richard H. . A Methodological Framework for Interpreting Ordinary Landscapes: Lexington, Kentucky's Courthouse Square* . . 1 July 2009 . 99 . 3 . 377–402 . 10.1111/j.1931-0846.2009.tb00438.x . 144887241 . 7 May 2021 . 0016-7428.
  8. Agnew . John . Making the Strange Familiar: Geographical Analogy in Global Geopolitics* . Geographical Review . 1 July 2009 . 99 . 3 . 426–443 . 10.1111/j.1931-0846.2009.tb00440.x . 4775757 . 7 May 2021 . 0016-7428.
  9. Hugill . Peter J. . The American Challenge to British Hegemony, 1861–1947* . Geographical Review . 1 July 2009 . 99 . 3 . 403–425 . 10.1111/j.1931-0846.2009.tb00439.x . 159569531 . 7 May 2021 . 0016-7428.
  10. Starrs . Paul F. . Meetinghouses in the Mormon Mind: Ideology, Architecture, and Turbulent Streams of an Expanding Church* . . 1 July 2009 . 99 . 3 . 323–355 . 10.1111/j.1931-0846.2009.tb00436.x . 145800203 . 7 May 2021 . 0016-7428.
  11. Rodgers . Jeffrey Pepper . National Geographer . Maxwell Perspective Magazine . Spring 2005 . 6 May 2021 . The Maxwell School of Syracuse University . en . 27 September 2021 . https://web.archive.org/web/20210927185702/https://www.maxwell.syr.edu/news.aspx?id=224 . dead .
  12. News: Perreault . Thomas . Maxwell School remembers renowned geographer Donald Meinig . 5 May 2021 . . 13 July 2020 . en.
  13. http://www.maxwell.syr.edu/faculty.aspx?id=733 Maxwell faculty awards and honors
  14. https://publications.acls.org/OP/Haskins_1992_DonaldWMeinig.pdf Haskin prize lecturer: Donald W. Meinig
  15. http://archives.syr.edu/awards/honorary_1.html Recipient of Honorary Degrees
  16. Web site: JB Jackson Prize AAG . www.aag.org . 4 May 2021.
  17. Geographical Review: Vol 99, No 3 . . July 2009 . 99 . 3 . 10.1111/gere.2009.99.issue-3 . 4 May 2021 . en . 0016-7428.
  18. News: SU's Meinig elected member of American Academy of Arts and Sciences . 29 April 2021 . SU News . April 19, 2010.
  19. Zelinsky . Wilbur . Thanking Donald Meinig . . 1 July 2009 . 99 . 3 . 293–296 . 10.1111/j.1931-0846.2009.tb00433.x . 6 May 2021 . . 159549155 . 0016-7428.
  20. Web site: Donald Meinig Obituary (2020) - Syracuse, NY - Syracuse Post Standard. obits.syracuse.com.