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Herbert Eugene Bolton (July 20, 1870 – January
30, 1953) was an American historian and one of the most prominent
authorities on Spanish American history. He
originated what became known as the Bolton Theory[1] of the
history of the Americas and
wrote or co-authored 94 works. A student of Frederick Jackson Turner,
Bolton disagreed with his mentor and argued that the history of the
Americas is best understood by taking a holistic view. The height
of his career was spent at the University of
California, Berkeley where he served as chair of the history department for 22 years
and is credited with making the renowned Bancroft
Library the dominant research center it is today.
Early
life and education
Bolton was born on a farm between Wilton and Tomah, Wisconsin in 1870 to Edwin Latham and
Rosaline (Cady) Bolton. He attended the University of
Wisconsin–Madison, where he was a brother of Theta Delta
Chi, and graduated with a bachelor's degree in 1895. That same
year he married Gertrude Janes, with whom he eventually had seven
children.
Bolton studied under Frederick Jackson Turner from 1896 to 1897.
Starting in 1897, Bolton was a Harrison Fellow at the University of Pennsylvania
and studied American history under John Bach
McMaster. In 1899, received his Ph.D. from University of Pennsylvania and
then taught at Milwaukee
State Normal School until 1900.
Career
From 1901 to 1909, Bolton was a history professor at the University of Texas,
where he taught medieval and European history. He became interested in
the Spanish colonization
of the Americas and in summer 1902 began traveling to Mexico in search of historical
documents.
The Carnegie Institution asked Bolton to write
a report of information found about United States history in Mexican archives,
and the report was published in 1913. Soon afterward, Bolton became
an associate editor of the Quarterly of the Texas State
Historical Association (now the Southwestern Historical
Quarterly).
In 1904, Bolton and Eugene C. Barker published With
the Makers of Texas: A Source Reader in Texas History, a Texas history
textbook. In 1906, Bolton
began studying Native American
history in Texas for the Bureau of Ethnology,
writing more than 100 articles for the Handbook of American
Indians North of Mexico.
In 1911, Bolton became a professor at the University of
California, Berkeley. There he served as the chair of the history
department for 22 years and became the first director of the
renowned Bancroft Library. He taught the "History of the Americas"
course, which attracted up to a thousand students a week. At
Berkeley he supervised more than 300 Masters Thesis and
104 doctoral dissertations. In 1914, Bolton
published Athanase de Mézières and the Louisiana-Texas
Frontier, 1768-1780. A year later, Bolton published Texas
in the Middle Eighteenth Century: Studies in Spanish Colonial
History and Administration and declined the presidency of the
University of Texas.
Over the next 29 years, Bolton published many works, including
Texas in the Middle Eighteenth Century (1921), The
Spanish Borderlands (1921), Outpost of Empire (1931),
Rim of Christendom (1936) and Coronado (1949),
for which he received a Bancroft Prize from Columbia
University.
In 1932, Bolton served as president of the American Historical
Association, and in 1944 retired as a professor. He taught
briefly at San Francisco State College (now University) in
retirement. He died of a stroke in Berkeley in 1953.
Legacy
Bolton is best known for his exploration of Spanish colonial
trials and translation of the important journals of Spanish
soldiers and priests, which vastly expanded the written record of
that period. His 94 written works are still influential today,
especially through the concepts of the Spanish Borderlands and the
Bolton Theory. The Bolton Prize honors works in Latin
American literature to commemorate his contributions to this
field.
Bolton's biggest mistake was his February 1937 authentication of
Drake's Plate of Brass, which
was a forgery of a mythical
brass plaque purportedly placed by Sir Francis Drake upon his arrival in Northern
California in 1579.
List
of works (Partial)
(1908). The Native
Tribes about the East Texas Missions. Texas State Historical
Association.
- Fages, Pedro. Expedition to San
Francisco Bay in 1770 (translated and annotated by Herbert Eugene
Bolton for publication in 1911). Berkeley: University of
California University Press. http://books.google.com/books?id=K5ULAAAAYAAJ. Retrieved
2009-05-22.
(1913). Guide to Materials for the
History of the United States in the Principal Archives of
Mexico. Carnegie Institution of Washington. http://books.google.com/books?id=wAWLybEm1hkC. Retrieved
2009-05-22.
(1913). New light
on Manuel Lisa and the Spanish Fur Trade.
- de Mézières, Athanase. Athanase de Mézières and
the Louisiana-Texas Frontier, 1768-1780, Volume I (translated and
annotated by Herbert Eugene Bolton for publication in
1914). Cleveland: Arthur H. Clark Company. http://books.google.com/books?id=YFElAAAAMAAJ. Retrieved
2009-05-22.
- de Mézières, Athanase. Athanase de Mézières and
the Louisiana-Texas Frontier, 1768-1780, Volume II (translated and
annotated by Herbert Eugene Bolton for publication in
1914). Cleveland: Arthur H. Clark Company. http://books.google.com/books?id=2lElAAAAMAAJ. Retrieved
2009-05-22.
(1915). Texas in the Middle
Eighteenth Century: Studies in Spanish Colonial History and
Administration. University of California University
Press. http://books.google.com/books?id=UZZ-AAAAIAAJ. Retrieved
2009-05-22.
(1916). Spanish Exploration in the
Southwest, 1542-1706. New York: C. Scribner's Sons. http://books.google.com/books?id=tBUbAAAAYAAJ. Retrieved
2009-05-22.
edited by
Bolton
(1916). The
Beginnings Of Mission Nuestra Senora Del Refugio. Kessinger
Publishing. ISBN
978-0548861547.
republished
2008.
(1917). French
Intrusions Into New Mexico 1749-1752. MacMillan.
- Kino, Eusebio Francisco. Spain
in the West: Kino's Historical Memoir of Pimería Alta, A
Contemporary Account of the Beginnings of California, Sonora and
Arizona, 1682-1711, Volume I (translated and annotated by Herbert
Eugene Bolton for publication in 1919). Cleveland url=http://books.google.com/books?id=DuA7AAAAIAAJ:
Arthur H. Clark Company.
- Kino, Eusebio Francisco. Spain in the West: Kino's
Historical Memoir of Pimería Alta, A Contemporary Account of the
Beginnings of California, Sonora and Arizona, 1682-1711, Volume II
(translated and annotated by Herbert Eugene Bolton for publication
in 1919). Cleveland: Arthur H. Clark Company. http://books.google.com/books?id=CU0UAAAAYAAJ. Retrieved
2009-05-22.
- Kino, Eusebio Francisco. Spain in the West: Kino's
Historical Memoir of Pimería Alta, A Contemporary Account of the
Beginnings of California, Sonora and Arizona, 1682-1711, Volume II
(translated and annotated by Herbert Eugene Bolton for publication
in 1919). Cleveland: Arthur H. Clark Company. http://books.google.com/books?id=uXMpAAAAYAAJ. Retrieved
2009-05-22.
(1920). The
Colonization of North America 1492-1783.
Macmillan.
(1921). The Spanish Borderlands: A
Chronicle of Old Florida and the Southwest. New Haven:
Yale University Press. http://books.google.com/books?id=9gEOAAAAIAAJ. Retrieved
2009-05-22.
(1925). Spanish
resistance to the Carolina Traders in Western
Georgia.
; Ephraim Douglass
Adams (1926). California's Story. Kessinger Publishing
LLC.
(1926). Palou and
His Writings. University of California Press.
(1927). Fray Juan
Crespi: Missionary Explorer of the Pacific Coast, 1769-1774.
University of California Press.
(1927). Rim of
Chistendom: A Biography of Eusebio Francisco Kino, A Pacific Coast
Pioneer. University of California Press.
(1931). Outpost Of
Empire: The Story of the Founding of San Francisco. New York:
Alfred A. Knopf.
(1932). New Spain
and the Anglo-American West.
(1935). The Black
Robes of New Spain.
(reprinted 1949).
Coronado, Knight of Pueblos and Plains. Whittlesey
House.
(reprinted 1963).
The Padre on Horseback. a Sketch of Eusebio Francisco Kino S.
J. Apostle to the Pimas. Loyola Press (Reprint
Edition).
(reprinted 1968).
The Debatable Land: A Sketch of the Anglo-Spanish Contest for
the Georgia Country. Russell & Russell
Publishing.
Notes
References
External
links