Alice Marriott (historian)

Alice Lee Marriott
Born (1910-01-08)8 January 1910
Wilmette, Illinois
Died 1992
Nationality American
Alma mater Oklahoma City University (B.A.)
University of Oklahoma (B.A.)
Occupation Historian

Alice Lee Marriott, née Goulding (b. 8 January 1910), was an American historian of the American Southwest and Native Americans. She is a member of the Oklahoma Hall of Fame.

Life and work

Marriott was born in Wilmette, Illinois, on 8 January 1910. She was awarded a B.A. degree in English and French by Oklahoma City University in 1930 and a B.A. in anthropology by the University of Oklahoma five years later. Marriott was the first woman to earn an anthropology degree from the University of Oklahoma. She spent the summers of 1935 and 1936 conducting fieldwork among the Kiowa. Marriott was a field representative with the U.S. Department of Interior Indian Arts and Craft Board in 1938– 42 and then she worked for the American Red Cross in the Southwest until 1945. That year she began writing The Ten Grandmothers with her frequent collaborator, Carol K. Rachlin, for the University of Oklahoma Press. Eight more solo books on Native American and Southwestern topics followed by 1953 and she was awarded the University of Oklahoma Achievement Award in 1952. Marriott published a biography, Sequoyah: Leader of the Cherokees, in 1956 and then followed it with Black Stone Knife the following year. She was inducted into the Oklahoma Hall of Fame in 1958. She became a consultant to the Oklahoma Indian Council in 1961 and was appointed associate professor of anthropology at the University of Oklahoma from 1964 to 1966. Two years later, Marriott became artist-in-residence at Central State University in Edmond, Oklahoma, and won the Oklahoma City University Achievement Award. She continued to write, producing four more books with Rachlin by 1975. Nothing further is known of her life.[1] She died in 1992.[2]

Notes

  1. Scanlon & Cosner, p. 151
  2. "Kiowa Belief and Ritual". Concomitantly, Alice Marriott—the first woman to receive an anthropology degree from the University of Oklahoma—conducted ethnographic fieldwork with the Kiowas in the summers of 1935 and 1936 and maintained contact with her Kiowa friends until her death in 1992.

References

  • Scanlon, Jennifer & Cosner, Shaaron (1996). American Women Historians, 1700s–1990s: A Biographical Dictionary. Westport, Connecticut: Greenwood Press. ISBN 0-313-29664-2.
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