Russell, Frank, 1868-1903
Contributed to
nt26Myths of the Jicarilla Apaches
Myths of the Jicarilla Apachesarticle 1898
- Summary
- Frank B. Russell was an American anthropologist and ethnologist. Russell was Born in Fort Dodge, Iowa, to Elizabeth Carleton and David Chandler Russell. He attended the University of Iowa, receiving the degree of Bachelor of Science in 1892 and Master of Science in 1895. He then attended Harvard University, where he received a Bachelor of Arts in 1896, Master of Arts in 1897 and Doctor of Philosophy in 1898. Previous to this collegiate course, he had spent two and a half years as an explorer alone in the far north of Canada and one year as a portrait painter. His first position as a teacher was that of assistant in zoology at the University of Iowa in 1892. At Harvard, he taught as an assistant in anthropology from 1896 to 1897, and in 1897 was made instructor in anthropology. He became associate editor of The American Naturalist in 1897 and a member of its editorial board in 1899. Wikipedia
- Gender or Sex
- Male [2][3][4][1]
- Born
- 1868-08-26 [3][1]
- Birth Place
- Fort Dodge [1]
- Fort Dodge, Iowa [3]
- Died
- 1903-11-07 [1][3]
- Death Place
- Kingman, Az. [3]
- Country
- United States [3]
- Language
- English [4]
- Occupation
- anthropologist [1]
- ethnologist [1]
- Archives at
- Stanford University Libraries Department of Special Collections and University Archives [1]
- Yale LUX
- Entity [1]
- Sources
- 1. Wikidata
- 2. VIAF
- 3. Deutsche Nationalbibliothek (Germany)
- 4. Bibliothèque nationale de France
autorenewLast updated Dec 22, 2025