Birth Date: | 9 December 1901 |
Discipline: | Economic history |
Awards: | Rome Prize (1922) |
Birth Place: | Bloomington, Indiana |
Death Place: | St. Johnsbury, Vermont |
Birth Name: | Shepard Bancroft Clough |
Shepard Bancroft Clough (December 6, 1901 – June 7, 1990) was an American economic historian. He was a professor of European history at Columbia University.[1]
Clough was born on December 6, 1901, in Bloomington, Indiana, and moved to Lebanon, New Hampshire, in 1903.[2] He graduated from Colby Academy in 1919 and received his bachelor's degree from Colgate University in 1923. He then did his postgraduate work at the Sorbonne and Heidelberg. He received his doctorate from Columbia University, where he began teaching in 1928.
During World War II, Clough was in the economics division of the United States Department of State and lectured at the U.S. Army School of Military Government at the University of Virginia. He became a Knight in the Order of Merit of the Italian Republic and a chevalier of the Legion of Honour after the war.
Clough was the author of a number of books on European economic history and civilizational cycles.[3] He was also a visiting professor at Sciences Po and the University of Grenoble.[4]
Clough retired in 1970 from teaching. He died on June 7, 1990, in St. Johnsbury, Vermont.