John Wirth | |
Relatives: | Tim Wirth (brother) |
Birth Date: | 1936 |
Children: | 3, including Peter |
Birth Place: | Dawson, New Mexico, U.S. |
Birth Name: | John Davis Wirth |
Death Date: | June 20, 2002 (aged 66) |
Death Place: | Toronto, Ontario, Canada |
Thesis Title: | Brazilian Economic Nationalism: Trade and Steel Under Vargas |
Education: | Harvard University (BA) Stanford University (PhD) |
Discipline: | History |
Sub Discipline: | Latin American studies Urbanization New Mexico history |
John Davis Wirth (1936 – June 20, 2002) was an American historian and academic who was the Gildred Professor of Latin American Studies at Stanford University. A specialist in economic history, he studied developmentalism, international trade, and the creation of the steel and petroleum industries. A deepening interest in environmentalism led to his appointment in 1994 by President Bill Clinton as one of the five members of the Joint Public Advisory Committee of the North American Commission for Environmental Cooperation.
Wirth was born in Dawson, New Mexico. He attended high school in Denver before graduating from The Putney School in Vermont. He earned a bachelor's degree from Harvard College in 1958 and a doctorate in Latin American history in 1967 from Stanford University.[1] His dissertation was titled "Brazilian Economic Nationalism: Trade and Steel Under Vargas." His first book, The Politics of Brazilian Development, 1930–1954, won the Bolton Prize in 1971 and his second, Minas Gerais in the Brazilian Federation, 1889–1937, won an honorable mention in 1978.[2]
Wirth's included examinations of Inca and Aztec states, urban growth in Manchester and São Paulo, and Pan-American environmental politics.[3] Wirth, who had retired from Stanford prior to his death, had most recently turned his attention to the complex relationships between Canada, the United States and Mexico. He co-founded the North American Institute in Santa Fe and served as its president.
His last book, published by the University of New Mexico Press, tells the story of the Los Alamos Ranch School, which was displaced during World War II during the development of the Manhattan Project.
Wirth was married to Nancy Meem Wirth, daughter of John Gaw Meem. Together they had three sons: Peter, Nicholas and Timothy. Peter was elected to the New Mexico Legislature in 2004. Wirth's brother, Tim, is a former congressman and senator.
He died on June 20, 2002, in Toronto, Ontario, Canada, from a heart aneurysm while delivering a lecture to the Friends of Fort Polk, a Canadian historical society.[4] [5] [6] Upon his death, Wirth's complete papers were donated to the Stanford University Archives.[7]