Honorific Prefix: | Samuel Williston Professor of English |
Birth Place: | Warren Township, Trumbull, Ohio |
Birth Date: | 29 February 1901 |
Birth Name: | Theodore W. Baird |
Death Place: | Northampton, Hampshire, Massachusetts |
Occupation: | College faculty member |
Known For: | Creating Amherst's freshman composition course |
Education: | Ph.D., 1929 |
Alma Mater: | Harvard |
Thesis Title: | The Life and Worlds of George Colman the Elder |
Discipline: | English literature |
Titles: | Samuel Williston Professor of English |
Honorific Suffix: | Emeritus |
Theodore Baird (February 28, 1901 – December 29, 1996) was an American academic and Samuel Williston Professor of English, emeritus, at Amherst College. From 1927 to 1969 he taught students a wide range of literature, and was the creator of the English 1-2, the college's highly regarded freshman composition course.
Baird and his wife commissioned Frank Lloyd Wright to design their home, the Theodore Baird Residence.
Theodor Baird, son of Silas and Emma (née Lane) Baird, was born in Warren Township, Trumbull, Ohio, on February 28, 1901.[1] He completed his baccalaureate degree at Hobart College.[2] In 1928 he married Frances Halliburton Titchenor, who was on the faculty of Smith College.[3] Baird he earned a master's degree and a 1929 Ph.D. from Harvard University with his dissertation, The Life and Worlds of George Colman the Elder.[4] [5]
Before joining the Amherst faculty as an instructor, Baird taught briefly at Western Reserve University, Union College and Harvard. He joined the Amherst faculty in 1927 and retired in 1969.
Baird "...was the creator of the college's highly regarded freshman composition course", the subject of Robin Varnum's history of Baird's innovative techniques, Fencing with Words.[6] Central techniques included the use of assignment sequences, the use of student writing as class texts, the insistence that students write from experience, the determination to have students recognize themselves as makers of meaning and then to assume responsibility for their work—all elements of writing classes that became important in the 1970s and have endured. Baird wrote very little about the course. His influence survives in the teaching and writing of colleagues and of colleagues' students. Citing a list given her by William Pritchard, Varnum names "William E. Coles, Jr., Roger Sale, Walker Gibson, Benjamin DeMott, William R. Taylor, Jonathan Bishop, John Butler, Richard Poirier, and Armour Craig," along with Pritchard himself as the teachers and Amherst alumni most influenced by Baird. She adds the name of Reuben Brower. She cites David Bartholomae as part of the second generation influenced by Baird. Bartholomae wrote his graduate dissertation in literature under the direction of Richard Poirier and went on to work with William Coles at the University of Pittsburgh.
Baird and his wife were interested in the architecture of Frank Lloyd Wright, and their Amherst "Usonian house", designed in 1939, was built in 1940 at a cost of $8000. It is the only Frank Lloyd Wright building in Massachusetts.[7]