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People & Organizations

Laumer, Keith

  • Person

Keith Laumer, born June 9, 1925, is a well-known and respected writer from the “Golden Age” of science fiction. His “Retief” stories were a staple of the science fiction magazines. Laumer received a Hugo Award for best novel, and was a frequent nominee for other awards. The majority of his papers are housed at Syracuse University and the University of Mississippi.

John Keith Laumer (1925-1993) was a well-known science fiction writer who was most active from 1959-1971, until a stroke slowed down his writing career considerably. .A prolific author, he was best known for his satirical stories of Jame Retief, which Laumer introduced in the pulp magazine Fantastic Science Fiction _Stories_in January 1960. Retief is a swashbuckling, rulebreaking galactic diplomat who serves in the Corps Diplomatique Terrestrienne, and whose adventures are based loosely in Laumer's own experiences as an employee of the U.S. Foreign Service in the 1950s.

Lee, Tanith

  • Person
  • 1947-2015

Tanith Lee was one of the most acclaimed, notable and prolific British authors of fantasy, science fiction, and horror. Since the beginning of her literary career in 1968, she wrote nearly 70 novels (including works of fantasy for young adults), hundreds of short stories, multiple collected works, poems, and essays. She even dabbled in television, having written two episodes of the British science-fiction cult show Blake's 7.

Lee was born in London, England, on September 19, 1947. She began writing at the age of 9, despite suffering from dyslexia that prevented her from reading well. She attended Croydon Art College for a year after high school and then worked a variety of odd jobs for a number of years while she tried to build a writing career. Her first actual sale of work came in 1968, with the publication of "Eustace", a 90-word vignette that appeared in The Ninth Pan Book Of Horror Stories. In 1971 Macmillan published her first novel, a young adult fantasy entitled The Dragon's Hoard. Lee's first work for adults was the novel The Birthgrave, published by DAW in 1975 and the first of an eventual trilogy.

Over the course of her storied career, Lee produced a dizzying variety of works, which include the famed Tales From The Flat Earth series (1978-1987, with additional short stories from 1998-2009); The Secret Books of Paradys series (1988-1993); the Unicorn Series (1991-1997); the Blood Opera Sequence (1992-1994); the historical novel The Gods Are Thirsty (1996); and The Secret Books of Venus (1998-2003). Lee's work is noted for her lush, lyrical, and sensual tones, as well as frequent themes of darkness and eroticism.

Lee also received multiple accolades for her work. She won the 1980 British Fantasy Award for Best Novel for Death's Master (the 2nd in her Tales From The Flat Earth series), becoming the first woman to win this award. She also won the 1983 World Fantasy Award for Best Short Fiction for "The Gorgon," that same award in 1984 for "Elle Est Trois, Le Mort", and the 2013 World Fantasy Award for Life Achievement. In addition, she received multiple nominations for Nebula Awards, World Fantasy Awards, Locus Poll Awards, British Fantasy Awards, and others. In 2015 she was awarded the Bram Stoker Award for Lifetime Achievement by the Horror Writers Association.

Tanith Lee married John Kaiine in 1992. She passed away from breast cancer on May 24, 2015.

Leffel, R. C.

  • Person

R. C. Leffel was from San Angelo, TX, and was part of the graduating Class of 1918 at Texas A&M College. He was a member and one of three sergeants in the TAMC Marching Band. Leffel earned his BA in Animal Husbandry at TAMC in 1918 at the age of 21. Leffel was a first lieutenant in the band ’18, President of West Texas Club, Sergeant toran West Texas Club ’17, Sergeant at Arms, West Texas Club ’16. His nickname was “Jay-Bird” and he was known as a cattle breeder in the hills of West Texas.

LeGuin, Ursula

  • Person
  • 1929-

Ursula K. Le Guin was born in Berkeley, California October 21, 1929. The daughter of anthropologists Alfred L. and Theodora Kroeber, Le Guin attended Radcliffe College, attaining a BA in Renaissance French and Italian Literature in 1951, and Master's in French and Italian literature from Columbia in 1952. Le Guin taught French and has instructed in writing at numerous workshops. In 1953 she married the historian Charles A. Le Guin, and the two have resided in Portland, Oregon since 1958.

She is highly regarded in science fiction and fantasy, receiving Hugo Awards (1970, 1973, 1974, 1975, 1988) and The Gandalf Award (1979), Nebula Awards (1969, 1974, 1974, 1990, 1995), the Janet Heidinger Kafka Prize for fiction (1986), a Pushcart Prize (1991), a National Book Award (1973) for the novel The Farthest Shore (1972), part of Le Guin's Earthsea trilogy, a Newberry Silver Medal (1972), and Harold D. Vursell Award (1991), and a World Fantasy Convention Lifetime Achievement Award (1995).

Leiber, Fritz, 1910

  • Person
  • 1910-1992

Fritz Lieber was born in Chicago, Illinois December 24, 1910. He attained a Ph. B. from the University of Chicago in 1932. He served as an Episcopal minister, a Shakspearian actor, an editor, and a writing instructor. In 1943, his work began appearing in Weird Tales and Unknown Worlds. Leiber is well-known and well regarded in the field. His novels, Conjure Wife, Gather, Darkness, A Specter is Haunting Texas, the Silver Eggheads, and his stories and novels of Lankhmar are all popular favorites with science fiction fans. Leiber received eight Hugo awards, three Nebula awards, the Gandalf Award, and three World Fantasy Awards, plus a number of awards for horror. He is a central figure in the Golden Age of Science Fiction.

Fritz Reuter Leiber, Jr. was a central figure during the so-called "Golden Age of Science Fiction". Thanks to his legendary Fafhrd and the Grey Mouser stories, of which the first, "Two Sought Adventure" was published in August 1939 in Unknown Magazine, he is also considered one of the founders of the genre of sword-and-sorcery fantasy fiction (in fact, he invented the term). Born in Chicago, Illinois on December 24, 1910, Leiber graduated from the University of Chicago in 1932 with a degree in philosophy. Before embarking on a full-time writing career he studied at the Anglican-based General Theological Seminary and worked as a lay preacher, and also toured with his parents' acting company. From 1941-1947 he was a speech and drama instructor at Los Angeles' Occidental College, and from 1947-1958 was the editor of Science Digestin Chicago. In 1958 he left that post to write full-time.

Leiber had already been writing for two decades before that, however. (His earliest stories bear dates of 1934 and 1935.) His most important works include the novels Conjure Wife (1943, which could be considered a precursor to the urban fantasy genre in that it is one of the first novels to involve witches living in the modern world); Gather, Darkness! (1950); The Big Time (1958), which won the 1958 Hugo Award for Best Novel; The Wanderer (1964), which won the 1965 Hugo Award for Best Novel; and A Specter is Haunting Texas (serialized 1968, published as a novel 1969). He wrote a legion of short stories, which were collected in a number of collections that include Night's Black Agents (1947); A Pail of Air (1964); The Book of Fritz Leiber (1974); and The Second Book of Fritz Leiber (1975).

Leiber is most famous for his stories about Fafhrd and the Grey Mouser, two wandering adventurers who live in the fictional world of Nehwon ("no-when" spelled backwards) and are general opposites. Fafhrd is a huge and highly skilled barbarian, while the Mouser is a diminutive yet deadly-with-the-sword thief. The two engage in rollocking and exciting adventures across Nehwon, particularly in and around the city of Lankhmar. Leiber wrote these stories starting in 1939, with the last one appearing in 1988. The characters were co-created by Leiber and his friend Harry Otto Fischer, in an attempt to develop fantasy characters groundedmore on realistic human nature than were Howard's Conan or Burroughs' Tarzan. Fafhrd and the Grey Mouser appeared in numerous short stories, novellas, comic book adaptations, and even games (Leiber and Fischer invented a wargame set within Nehwon in 1937, that under the name Lankhmar was reworked and released as a simplified boardgame by TSR in 1976.)

Leiber married Jonquil Stephens in 1936; the two had a son, Justin, in 1938. Jonquil died in 1969, which caused Lieber to move to San Francisco and descend temporarily into alcoholism. In 1977 he returned to the literary world with the semi-autobiographical (and heavily Jungian) novel Our Lady of Darkness, which won the World Fantasy Award for Best Novel in 1978. In 1992, Leiber met and married Margo Skinner, and he died on September 5, 1992.

Leiber was nominated for and/or won a number of awards in the course of his career. Besides the awards mentioned above, he also won the 1962 Hugo Special Award for the Use of SF in Advertisements, the 1968 Hugo and Nebula Awards for Best Novelette for Gonna Roll The Bones, the 1970 Hugo Award for Best Novella for Ship of Shadows, the 1971 Hugo and Nebula Awards for Best Novella for Ill-Met in Lankhmar, the 1975 Locus Poll Award for Best Single Author Collection for The Book of Fritz Leiber, the 1976 BFA Award for Best Short Story for The Second Book of Fritz Leiber, the 1976 Hugo and Nebula Awards for Best Short Story for "Catch That Zeppelin!", the 1976 World Fantasy Award for Best Short Fiction for "Belsen Express", the 1981 Balrog Special Award, and (posthumously) the 2011 LocusPoll Award for Best Collection for Fritz Leiber: Selected Stories.

In addition, Leiber also received the 1975 Gandalf Award for Grandmaster of Fantasy, the 1976 World Fantasy Award for Life Achievement, and in 1981 was made a Grand MAster by the SFWA.

Leicht, Stina

  • Person
  • 1972-

Stina Leicht (1972-) was born in St. Louis, MO and currently resides in Austin, TX. Leicht is the author of several well-regarded novels, including the two-book The Fey and The Fallen series (2011-2012), a dark fantasy set in war-torn 1970s Northern Ireland. The first book in the series, Of Blood and Honey, was nominated for a Locus Award for Best First Novel; the second, And Blue Skies From Pain was also a Locus nominee.

Her next novel project was the two-book series The Malorum Gates (2015-2017). The two books, Cold Ironand Blackthorne comprise a high 'flintlock fantasy' set in a world at war between the magic-using Kainen of Eledore and the magic-less humans of Acrasia. Blackthorne was a 2018 Locus nominee. In 2021, Leicht released a well-received space opera, a futuristic queer feminist riff on The Seven Samurai, entitled Persephone Station. Her latest novel Loki's Ring, a thoughtful space action-adventure set in and around a ringworld, was released in March 2023.

Leicht has also written several short stories, including "Texas Died For Somebody's Sins", published in the Rick Klaw-edited 2013 anthology Rayguns Over Texas. She received a nomination for the John W. Campbell Award for Best New Writer in 2012.

Leigh, Stephen

  • Person
  • 1951-

Stephen Leigh (who writes as Leigh and under the names S.L. Farrell and Matthew Farrell) was born in Cincinnati, OH, on February 27, 1951. With a B.A. in Fine Arts and an M.A. in Creative Writing, Leigh taught creative writing at Northern Kentucky University from 2001 until his retirement in 2020.

Leigh's literary debut was the short story "And Speak of Soft Defiance", published in Eternity SF in 1975; this was the first of some 40 pieces of short fiction Leigh has written. Some of Leigh's short fiction include his December 1976 story "Answer in Cold Stone" (Leigh's first Analog publication), "When We Come Down" (Asimov's, 1978), "Shaping Memory" (Asimov's, 1985), "Evening Shadow" (Asimov's, 1988), "The Bright Seas of Venus (Galaxy's Edge*, 2013), and "Bones of Air, Bones of Stone" (2015).

In addition, Leigh has written numerous stories as an original member of George R.R. Martin's Wild Cards mosaic universe collective of writers. Leigh is responsible for the creation of several notable Wild Cards characters, including Gregg Hartmann/Puppetman, Bloat, Oddity, Gimli, and Steam Wilbur. To date, Leigh (sometimes writing as S.L. Farrell) has written content for eighteen of the Wild Cards books.

Leigh has also enjoyed a successful career as a science fiction and fantasy novelist. His debut novel was 1981's Slow Fall To Dawn, which was nominated for the 1982 Locus Award for Best First Novel. Slow Fall was the first of Leigh's Neweden/Hoorka trilogy, followed by Dance of the Hag (1983) and A Quiet of Stone (1984). He wrote The Secret of the Lona in 1988, the first in the Dr. Bones series (a fantasy series written by various authors, including Leigh's Wild Cards colleague William Wu). Leigh has written 6 novels in AvoNova's Ray Bradbury Presents series (1992-1995): Dinosaur World, Dinosaur Planet, Dinosaur Samurai, Dinosaur Warriors, Dinosaur Empire, and Dinosaur Conquest. His 1998-1999 Mictlan duology includes the novels Dark Water's Embrace and Speaking Stories,

Leigh has also written several popular fantasy series. most of them under the name S.L. Farrell. These include the Cloudmages series (2003-2005), which include Holder of Lightning, Mage of Clouds, and Heir of Stone; the Nessantico Cycle (2008-2010), which includes the novels A Magic of Twilight, A Magic of Nightfall, and A Magic of Dawn; the paranormal fantasy series Sunpath Cycle (2017-2018), which includes A Fading Sun and A Rising Moon. Leigh's standalone SF&F novels include The Bones of God (1981), The Crystal Memory (1987), The Abraxas Marvel Circus (1990), Thunder Rift (2001, as Matthew Farrell, republished in 2010 as The Shape of Silence), and several others. His most recent published novel is 2021's science fiction work Amid the Crown of Stars.

Leinster, Murray, 1896-1975

  • Person
  • 1896-1975

Murray Leinster was born William Fitzgerald Jenkins on June 16, 1896, in Norfolk, Virginia. He was an intensely prolific writer, starting with his first story, "The Foreigner" (which appeared in the May 1916 issue of H.L. Mencken's The Smart Set), he was responsible for some 1,000 published short stories and numerous novels and essays, many under a variety of pseudonyms. Leinster's first science fiction story "The Runaway Skyscraper" appeared in the February 22, 1919 issue of Argosy, and was reprinted in the June 1926 issue of Amazing Stories.

Although his fame derived mostly from his science fiction writing, Leinster published in various popular genres, including romance, mystery, adventure, westerns, and general interest, in various magazines throughout his life. His science fiction is particularly notable during the pulp period for stories of scientists, both mad and heroic; time travel and alternate universe stories; and stories of military invasions of the United States (usually the invading country is never named) using futuristic and seemingly insurmountable weapons. Among his most famous stories are "Sidewise in Time" ( Astounding, June 1934), which is generally credited with not only introducing the concept of parallel universes to the pulps but also is considered the first alternate history story depicting a victorious Confederacy in the American Civil War; his 1945 novella "First Contact" which debuted the concept of the 'universal translator'; and "A Logic Named Joe" ( Astounding, March 1946), about a computer repairman who inadvertently helps an artificial intelligence to threaten civilization with an overload of personal information. It is the first stories in the genre to describe networked personal computers and their potential threats to security and privacy.

Leinster died on June 8, 1975. He won the 1956 Hugo Award for Best Novelette for "Exploration Team", the 1969 First Fandom Award, and a 1996 Retro Hugo for Best Novelette for "First Contact".

Lewis, George W.

  • Person

George Washington Lewis was born in 1834 in Henry, Georgia. He married Caroline Wineford Merritt Lewis before the Civil War. He fought for the Union army during the civil war and died in Claiborne Parrish, Louisiana during the Civil War from pneumonia. His wife later remarried his brother, Moses Lewis after George Washingon Lewis’ death.

Citation: Manuscript material enclosed titled Lewis Family Tree, Undated.

Liebig Extract of Meat Company

  • Corporate body
  • 1865-1924

Liebig's Extract of Meat Co. Ltd. was founded in London in 1856 by Baron Justus von Liebig and Georg Christian Giebert with a share capital of £480,000. During the next century, there were several changes of name, and in 1971 the Company was acquired by Brooke Bond's and is now known as Brooke Bond (Liebig) Ltd. Baron Justus von Liebig, a chemist, produced a meat extract that was energetically marketed in jars, tubes, and packets under a variety of names, such as Liebig, Sapis and Oxo. The extract was so popular that many rivals attempted to pass off their products as those of Liebig; several legal cases followed, and after this time the celebrated signature in blue of the founder appeared on packets and cards. The company prospered to the extent that it had branches and subsidiaries in many countries, such as Italy, Germany, France, South Africa and the United States; at one stage they claimed to own supply branches in Africa and South America totaling nearly 10,000 square miles, and containing 500,000 cattle.

At a very early stage the Company discovered the value of advertising and began to issue series of cards in 1872; these continued, with two short breaks during the World Wars, until 1974. The first series were probably handed out to customers by retailers, and were confined to France; this followed the pattern of most early French 'trade cards', which were produced en masse by printers, and then sold to shops and manufacturers who then had their own names and advertising printed on the backs and fronts - hence many of the early Liebig series of cards which may well have assisted in the continued expansion of the Company. The method of distribution also changed, and customers were able to obtain complete sets of cards in exchange for coupons which appeared in, or on, the packets. Sets were soon prepared for distribution in several countries, and many occur in six or more different languages, including English, Russian and Swedish.

In addition to the regular card issues, the Liebig company was responsible for a wide variety of other card types. Of these the best known are the Menu Cards, Table Cards and Calendars. But they also issued such varied items as playing cards, postcards, cookery books and wallets. Indeed there are so many that they could in themselves form the subject of a large reference work.

Lillian, Guy

  • Person

Guy Lillian is a long-time science-fiction fan and amateur writer. He has been active in the Southern Fandom Press Alliance for many years, serving in offices of the alliance and managing mailings the group. He wrote a history of the alliance in their 30th anniversary mailing in 1991.

Linsley, Benjamin M.

  • Person

Private Benjamin M. Linsley, a soldier from Connecticut, served (1862-1863) in Company A, 1st Battalion, 14th Infantry Regiment, Army of the Potomac. On 4 Dec. 1862, Benjamin Linsley's company left Fort Trumbull, Conn., boarding a boat called the City Of New York at New London, Conn., along with a group of deserters under arrest, who were landed in Jersey City. After landing in New York, Linsley's company took a boat the next day for Governor's Island, arriving at Fort Columbus, N.Y. By then Linsley suffered from sick stomach and severe pains in his head and neck. From Fort Columbus on 17 Dec. Linsley went by troop train to Philadelphia, Baltimore, and Washington, D.C., finally reaching Aquia Creek, Va., where he met up with his brother, who had been made a clerk in his regiment. Benjamin Linsley began his correspondence from camp near Falmouth, Va., which he reached with the sick and wounded by 20 Dec. 1862.

Linsley lamented General Henry W. Halleck's conduct during the recent Battle of Fredericksburg (12-15 Dec. 1862), a Union defeat under General Ambrose E. Burnside, and his own invalid condition which had so far prevented his from seeing any battle action. Linsley addressed all of these letters to his friend, Mrs. Lucy G. Palmer at Suffied, Conn. In Mar. 1863, Linsley recounted nursing his brother through a severe fever in the field hospital at Falmouth. His brother, who served with the U.S. Army's 10th Connecticut Volunteers under Brigadier General John Gray Foster in the Goldsborough Expedition of 1862, had earlier also been slightly wounded in North Carolina at the Battle of Kinston on 14 Dec. 1862. After he recovered, Linsley's brother rejoined his regiment for further action farther South.

Linsley himself fought in the Battle of Chancellorsville (1-3 May 1863), vividly describing the night crossing of the Rappahannock and Rapidan rivers on 27 April 1863, the confusion of the Confederate entrapment of the Union forces under General Joseph Hooker, Burnside's replacement, and Hooker's retreat back across the Rappahannock (6 May 1863). After this experience Linsley was again marooned in the hospital with neuraligia. During this time he observed camp life intently and wrote and impassioned letter deploring the lack of a statesman and military leader for the Union army, who could be as inspirational as George Washiington was for the Continental Army during the American Revolutionary War.

By 6 Aug. 1863 Linsley was moved to McKinnis Hospital in Baltimore, Md. From there he reported that it had been more than two months since they all departed the camp at Falmouth, Va. marching to Warrenton Junction. Linsley had contracted, and was recuperating from, his own bout of typhoid fever. He had fallen out of the long summer march to Warrenton, Va., and, finally, stricken seriously ill in the intense heat, was taken from Ashby's Gap, Va. by train to the military hospital at Baltimore.

Locus Science Fiction Foundation

  • Corporate body
  • 1968-

Locus: The Magazine of the Science Fiction & Fantasy Field was founded in Oakland, CA in 1968 by Charles N. Brown, Ed Meskys, and Dave Vanderwer as a science fiction one-page newszine promoting Boston as the site for the 1971 Worldcon. Intended originally to run only until the 1969 selection of the 1971 Worldcon, publisher Charles N. Brown decided to keep publishing Locus, this time as general science fiction and fantasy newszine. It became the successor to the newszine Science Fiction Times (1941-1970). Since that time, Locus has become the accepted English-language news organ and trade journal for the science fiction and fantasy genres.

The magazine is now published under the auspices of the non-profit Locus Science Fiction Foundation.

Logan, Morgan

  • Person

"Morgan Logan" is the pseudonym of a notable Starsky & Hutch fan who has created a number of pieces of S&H fanfiction (both slash and gen), S&H art, and fanvids. She has also written for several other fandoms, including Due South, Stargate Atlantis, and The Sentinel.

Long, E.B., 1919-1981

  • Person

Everette Beach Long, one of America's foremost experts on the Civil War, was born 24 October 1919, in Whitehall, Wisconsin to Cecil Everettee and Florence (Beach) Long. He attended Miami University in Oxford, Ohio from 1937 to 1939 and Northwestern University from 1939 to 1941. In 1942, E. B. Long married Barbara Conzelman.

E. B. Long began his career working for the Chicago Bureau of the Associated Press for eight years and as an associate editor of American Peoples Encyclopedia. After this time, he decided to devote himself to historical research and teaching. "I got interested in the Civil War as a hobby," he explained. "Then it became an avocation, then a way of life."Long was the director of research for Doubleday's multi-volume Centennial History of the Civil War, written by Bruce Catton from 1955 to 1965. He was a member of the advisory council of the National Civil War Centennial Commission. Long was a member of the Chicago Civil War Round Table and served as its president from 1955 to 1956. He was a member of the Friends of the Chicago Public Library and was its president in 1960.

E. B. Long's list of honors and awards includes a D. Litt. from Lincoln College in 1961 and the Harry S. Truman award for Civil War scholarship in 1964. He received the Award of Merit from the Illinois Civil War Centennial Commission in 1963 and 1965, the Award of Commendation from the Oklahoma Civil War Centennial Commission in 1965, and the Centennial Medallion from the U. S. Civil War Centennial Commission in 1966.

The writings of E. B. Long include As Luck Would Have It co-written with Otto Eisenschiml and published by Bobbs in 1948, as well as The Civil War, A Picture Chronicle, Vol. 2, co-written with Ralph Newman and published by Grosset in 1956. He was the editor, with Ralph Newman, of The Civil War Digest which was published by Grosset in 1960, and a contributor to Lincoln for the Ages which was published in 1960 by Doubleday. E. B. Long was the editor and wrote the introduction to Personal Memoirs of U. S. Grant and History of the Civil War, 1861-1865, and wrote the introduction to The Post Reader of Civil War Stories. Long wrote the abridgement and the introduction to Stonewall Jackson and the American Civil War, by George F. R. Henderson, and the introduction to Four Years in Rebel Capitals, by Thomas Cooper De Leon. He was a member of the editorial advisory board of Civil War History, and of the bibliographical committee of Lincoln Lore. In 1971, Doubleday published The Civil War Day by Day, Long's chronology of the American Civil War.

In his research for Centennial History of the Civil War, Long compiled over nine million words of notes. Much of this material was obtained from original manuscripts, diaries, and records, and was gathered during trips throughout the country. He visited over 125 libraries, universities, and archives and traveled over 60 thousand miles. In 1966, Doubleday presented his research notes to the Library of Congress. He owned more than five thousand books, most of them about the Civil War or American History.

E. B. Long died on 31 March 1981 in Chicago, Illinois, the day after the publication of his last work, The Saints and the Union: The Utah Territory in the Civil War.

Luckey, E. George

  • Person
  • 1898-1977

E. George Luckey was born in Harper, Texas on January 18, 1898. Married Marlorie Ruth. Member of the Rancheros Vasqueros. Died January 24, 1977 in San Antonio, Texas.

Elected in the 1940 election to represent California's 39th State Senatorial district as the Democratic party candidate.

MacDonald, Thomas H. (Thomas Harris), 1881-1957

  • Person

Thomas H. MacDonald was born in Leadville, Colorado on July 23, 1881. For nearly half his life he resided in Washington, DC and served as the chief highway engineer and administrator for the federal agency that developed the United States federal highway system. He has been called the "guiding genius" of American highway planning and construction, and in addition was decorated by several foreign countries for his contributions to highway development worldwide.

MacDonald began his career in Iowa, where he received his engineering degree at Iowa State College. He then served as chief highway engineer for the state of Iowa from 1913-1919, and in 1919 became head of the U.S Bureau of Public Roads. While working in Iowa MacDonald developed many of the technical and administrative ideologies that he would later implement during his administration of federal highway planning. He introduced the concept of staged construction (in which an entire highway system is planned and built in phases, and where priorities shift from completion of the entire system with macadam base construction to the maintenance and surfacing of highly used roads).

MacDonald recognized that highway development depended on public education; technical research; program planning, administraion and coordination; and financial innovation. He initiated and promoted highway programs at local, state, national and international levels through government agencies and private interest groups. He successfully coordinated and advised all levels of government and industry in the process of developing the federal highway system.

MacDonald sponsored and/or participated in a number of highway-related programs, including: Highway Education Board; Highway Research Board; Pan-American Highway Congress; U.S. Interregional Highway Committee; Joint Board of Interstate Highways; Permanent Association of International Road Congresses in Europe, Central and South America; Commission for the Alaska Highway; and the Pan-American and Inter-American Highways Programs. His activities earned him decorations from the governments of France, Norway and Czechoslovakia. He received the United Stated Medal of Merit and was recognized by private industry with the George S. Bartlett and David Beecroft Awards.

Upon MacDonald's retirement from federal highway administation in 1953, he continued his mission to advance understanding of transportation development by planning and administering the Texas Transportation Institute at Texas A&M University. MacDonald died in College Station, Texas on April 7, 1957, and two years later the Thomas H. MacDonald Chair of Transportation was established at Texas A&M as a memorial to his life's work and visions for future transportation development.

Malzberg, Barry

  • Person
  • 1939-

Barry N. Malzberg (born July 24, 1939) was born and raised in New York City, NY, and graduated with a B.A. from Syracuse University (where he also held a Schubert Foundation Playwriting Fellowship from 1964-1965) in 1960. Before embarking on his literary career he worked for the New York State Department of Mental Hygiene, the NYC Department of Welfare, and the Scott Meredith Literary Agency (the last from 1965 intermittently through the next few decades). He also worked as the managing editor of Escapade in 1968, and as an editor for both Amazing Stories and Fantastic Stories from 1968-1969. in 1969 he was editor of the Science Writers of America Bulletin.

Malzberg's first work of published science fiction was the story "The Sense of the Fire", which was published in January 1967 by Escapade. This novelette launched Malzberg's career, which grew over the subsequent decades to encompass over 30 novels and hundreds of short stories (some written under the name K. M. O'Donnell), as well as numerous edited anthologies. His most famous novel was Beyond Apollo (1972), the story of astronaut Harry Evans, the lone survivor of a failed expedition to Venus. Evans is revealed as a so-called unreliable narrator, and in fact, may actually have been driven insane by his travails. The novel won the John W. Campbell Memorial Award for Best Science Fiction Novel in 1973 and was both praised and blasted by critics upon its publication. Like much of Malzberg's work, the novel is caustic, pessimistic, and intensely conscious of the dehumanization caused by advancing technology and oppressive bureaucracies.

Malzberg could be highly critical in his approach to science fiction, ready to point out what he saw as problems with the U.S. space program, space colonization in general, and the subculture of science fiction itself. Critical reactions to his work encouraged Malzberg to announce his retirement from science fiction writing in 1976, although since then he has continued to write in the field.

Mardon, Austin A. (Austin Albert)

  • Person
  • 1962-

Austin Mardon (June 25, 1962) was a doctoral student in Geography at Texas A&M who attended a Canadian expedition to Antarctica in fall/winter of 1986-1987 lead by TAMU professor John Wormuth.

Maresca, Marshall Ryan

  • Person
  • 1973-

Marshall Ryan Maresca was born and raised in upstate New York, and attended Penn State, where he studied film production. He is a longtime resident of Austin, TX, where he has been writing science fiction and fantasy for a number of years. His first published work was the SF story "Jump the Black", which appeared in the 2013 Rick Klaw-edited anthology Rayguns Over Texas. In 2015 he published the first of his ongoing Maradaine series: The Thorn of Dentonhill, an urban fantasy of thieves and dashing rogues set in the lively city of Maradaine. Thorn was nominated for the 2016 Compton Crook Award for Best First Novel.

Since then, Maresca has continued to write a number of different series all set within the Maradaine universe: Maradaine, starring magic university student/Robin Hood-like vigilante Veranix Calbert; The Maradaine Constabulary, featuring detectives Satrine Rainey and Minox Welling, who solve crimes on Maradaine's mean streets; The Streets of Maradaine, about the Holver Alley Crew, a gang of misfit street criminals out to protect their homes and territory; and Maradaine Elite, featuring Dayne Heldrin and Jerinne Fendall, two members of an elite order of Maradaine soldiery enmeshed in crime and conspiracy. A new series, Maradaine Saga, was launched in 2022 with the release of the novella "The Mystical Murders of Yin Mara". A standalone Maradaine novel, An Unintended Voyage, was released in late 2021.

In early 2021, Maresca published a new standalone work, a 'dieselpunk' fantasy titled The Velocity of Revolution, set in the ravaged magical city of Ziaparr.

Mariposa Hacienda

  • Corporate body
  • 1890-

Hacienda de la Mariposa was situated in the state of Coahuila, District of Monclova, 27 miles north of Musquiz, 50 miles northwest of Sabinas, and 90 miles from Eagle Pass, Texas.

With capital backing from the Learmonth family, a Scottish entrepreneur in Australia, Mr. David Harkness McKellar, an emigrant from Australia and New Zealand in the late 1880s, purchased over 250,000 acres in Coahuila and founded La Hacienda de la Mariposa in 1890.

The ranch sat in an open valley formed by a fork of the Santa Rosa Mountains which marked the western and northern boundaries and protected it from the cold north winds in winter. These mountains yielded from its canyons an almost inexhaustible supply of cedar and oak timber for fencing and building purposes. The eastern boundary faced the open plains country.

The southern boundary was originally marked by the Sabinas River, a beautifully clear mountain river, ever-flowing and fringed by large cypress trees. Well stocked with fish, it was not only a place of recreation, but also provided a pleasant change of diet. In later years, after the appropriation of 10,000 acres of land by the government, the boundary was moved further north.

Pastures were traversed by creek beds, called arroyos, which provided additional watering areas for the cattle There were ten natural springs, nine being ordinary water and the other a mineral water spring. Soil on the southern half was a good red chocolate and the northern half a combination of sandy loam and a black, friable earth.

Grasses and forage plants thrived exceptionally well in this region, growing much taller than in Colorado or southern Texas. The stony soil helped preserve the moisture at the root of the plants. The nutritious Gramma grass, well known among ranchers, was abundant in the area. Bermuda, mesquite, sotol, palmetto and guajillo grew wild in the area and were much sought after by the stock. The nopal, or prickly pear cactus, grew abundantly in the canyons.

At an altitude of 1800 to 2500 feet, the ranch enjoyed a semi-tropical climate with 23 inches average annual rainfall. Thus it was a pleasant residence both winter and summer.

The ranch was sold in the early 1960s by Alden Scott McKellar, a grandson of its founder, David Harkness McKellar.

Marley, Louise

  • Person
  • 1952-

Louise Marley was born in Ross, California, in 1952, and grew up in both the Bay Area and in Montana. She currently resides and writes in the Pacific Northwest.

Marley's first book was Sing The Light (1995), which became the first of her Singers of Nevya trilogy ( Sing The Light, Sing The Warmth [1996], and Receive The Gift [1997]). A follow-up novel, Singer In The Snow, was released in 2005. The series tells the story of an ice planet where warmth and light necessary to survival are supplied by telepaths called Singers. The Singers use music to focus their powers and speed the path of warmth and light to the planet. The series is notable for its use as music as a major theme, something that runs through much of Marley (a professional music teacher as well as an experienced mezzo-soprano)'s work.

In 1999 Marley published The Terrorists of Irustan, the tale of a struggle for liberation by a group of women on a planet with a culture much like that of a patriarchal Middle Eastern Muslim society. The book was critically acclaimed and was nominated for the 2000 Endeavor Award, as well as a preliminary nomination for the 2001 Nebula for Best Novel. Marley followed up the novel with The Glass Harmonicain 2000. Glass Harmonica is a science fiction novel with aspects of historical fiction, with the title object (a real-life musical instrument invented by Benjamin Franklin) serving as a crosstime link between two female musicians, one of the 18th century and one of the 21st. The novel received the 2001 Endeavor Award.

Over the next few years, Marley wrote several additional science fiction novels, like her earlier ones using music and/or strong independent women as major components. The Maquisarde (2002) concerns a widow who strikes back against the oppression and lies of her society on a future Earth, while The Child Goddess (2004, winner of the 2005 Endeavor Award) tells the story of a female priest who struggles to protect a seemingly immortal child from a greedy corporation. Marley has also written three novels that combine fantastical elements with musical history: Mozart's Blood (2010), The Brahms Deception (2011), and The Glass Butterfly (2012).

Marley is a writer of short fiction as well, and has published a collection of short pieces, Absalom's Mother & Other Stories in 2007.  She has also written several novels under pseudonyms: As Toby Bishop she has written a series of novels under the rubric The Horsemistress Saga, about a group of winged horses and the psychically bonded women who learn to fly them (Airs Beneath The Moon [2007], Airs and Graces [2008], and Airs of Night and Sea[2009]). Under the name Cate Campbell, Marley is currently engaged on the Benedict Hall series, works of historical fiction about a rich 1920s Seattle family. Most notably, perhaps, as Louisa Morgan, Marley is writing a series about witches and their lives from historical through modern times. The first book in the series, A Secret History of Witches was published in 2017 and nominated for the 2018 Endeavour Award for Distinguished Novel/Collection. The second, The Witch's Kind came out in 2019 and the third, The Age of Witches, in 2020. The latest book in the series, The Great Witch of Brittany was released in 2022. Marley-as-Morgan will be releasing a ghost story novel, The Ghosts of Beatrice Bird*, in late 2023.

Martin, George R.R.

  • Person

George R.R. Martin was born in 1948 in Bayonne, New Jersey. From an early age he was interested in science fiction, fantasy and comic books, and as a child began writing stories. In 1970 Martin graduated from Northwestern University with a B.S. in journalism, and received an M.S. in journalism in 1971. Martin objected to the Vietnam War, and rather then beng drafted applied for and received conscientious-objector status. For his alternative service, he worked for two years (1972–1974) as a  VISTA volunteer, attached to the Cook County Legal Assistance Foundation. From 1976 -1978 he was an English and journalism instructor at Clarke College in Dubuque, Iowa, where he also served as Writer-in-Residence from 1978-1979. In 1979 he moved to Santa Fe, where he has resided ever since.

Martin has won multiple Hugos, Nebulas, and other awards for his fiction. Martin's novels include Dying of the Light(1977), Windhaven(with Lisa Tuttle, 1981), the vampire novel Fevre Dream(1982), and The Armaggedon Rag(1983). He has authored a number of acclaimed short story collections, including A Song for Lya and Other Stories(1976), Sandkings(1981), and Tuf Voyaging(1986), among others. In addition, Martin has also edited a number of anthologies.

Martin is the chief creator, a primary contributor, and the main editor for the ongoing "mosaic universe" _Wild Cards_series of novels. The series, which began in 1987 and is still running, is written by Martin and a number of collaborators who write individual stories and novels all set within the same universe. The _Wild Cards_stories are set on an Earth where an alien virus released in 1946 caused a number of humans to be infected, turning some into "aces" (those with superpowers) and others into "jokers" (those with horrible deformities or crippling physical conditions). The series tells individual stories of aces' comic book-like adventures while also describing the social and political conditions of a planet affected by the presence of superheroes and villains.

In addition, he has written and produced for television, including the critically acclaimed Beauty and the Beast(1987-1990). as well as episodes of The Twilight Zone(1985-1989). He created and wrote a pilot __for a science fiction series in 1993, Doorways, which was not picked up.

His most notable and popular works are the books in the fantasy novel cycle A Song of Ice and Fire(1996 - ongoing), which include A Game of Thrones (1996), A Clash of Kings(1999), A Storm of Swords(2000), A Feast for Crows(2005), and A Dance with Dragons(2011). Included as part of this cycle are several short stories and novellas (the "Dunk and  Egg"  stories) that take place in the centuries before the novels.

_A Song of Ice and Fire_is one of the most popular series in the history of American fantasy. Inspired in part by the real-life English Wars of the Roses, the series details the military struggles, political machinations, and personal sufferings resulting from a prolonged civil war and bloody battle for kingship that roil the fictional continent of Westeros. The series has been translated into dozens of languages and has been made into a successful, critically acclaimed television series for HBO, Game of Thrones.

Martinez, Mercurio, 1876-1965

  • Person

Mercurio Martinez, school teacher, rancher, legal researcher, public spirited citizen, and authority on the history and genealogy of Zapata County, Tex., was born in San Ygnacio, Zapata County, Tex. on October 27, 1876, and died in 1965. He descended from Spanish-Mexican pioneers who had settled on the banks of the Rio Grande Riverin the mid-eighteenth century.

Don Mercurio's great-great grandfather, Bartome Martinez was one of the original settlers of Revilla, Tamaulipas, Mexico in 1750. He served as Alcalde of this frontier ranching settlement for 30 years. Revilla, the town of origin for many Zapata County families, was renamed Guerrero in honor of General Vicente Guerrero after Mexico achieved independence from Spain in 1821.

Luis Uribe, another of Don Mercurio's great-great grandfathers, was one of the founding settlers of Laredo, Tex., but moved from there to Revilla about 1755. A third ancestor, Juan Jose Gutierrez, was the owner of San Jose Ranch, an extensive holding on the banks of the Rio Grande near Revilla. Don Juan Jose had three daughters, each of whom either married or mothered a successful south Texas pioneer. Mercurio Martinez was descended from the families established by all three of Don Juan Jose's daughters.

Viviana Gutierrez married Jesus Trevino, an ambitious young man who had migrated to Guerrero from Marin, Nuevo Leon. Between 1830 and 1832, Don Jesus Trevino purchased lands on the north bank of the Rio Grande from the heirs of Jose Vasquez Borrego. The Borrego Grant was made in 1750, but the area had remained sparsely settled partly because of Indian raids and the fact that Borrego and his heirs also had enormous holdings in Coahuila where they spent most of their time. Jesus Trevino became acquainted with Jose Maria Marfil Vidaurri, the grandson of Jose Vasquez Borrego, when Don Jose Maria came to Guerrero in 1828 in order to clear the title to the Borrego lands located in what was to become Zapata County, Texas. The titles to these lands had been lost or destroyed during the Mexican War for Independence, but the claim of the Borrego heirs was declared valid by the Guerrero city council, of which Trevino's father-in-law, Juan Jose Gutierrez, was a member.

Jesus Trevino moved his family to Texas and established the settlement of San Ygnacio in 1830. His holdings of approximately 125,000 acres included the entire San Ygnacio sub-division of the Borrego Grant.

Another of the Gutierrez daughters, Ignacia, married Jose Dionicio Uribe, the son of Luis Uribe. She was widowed early and moved across the river with her young sons. One of these sons, Blas Maria Uribe, married Juliana Trevino who was his third cousin and the daughter of Jesus Trevino and Viviana. Don Blas Maria eventually acquired more than half of his father-in-law's holdings and became a highly successful rancher and merchant. His daughter, Maria de Jesus Uribe, was Don Mercurio's mother.

The third daughter of Juan Jose Gutierrez married Antonio Martinez, son of Don Bartome, the original Alcade of Revilla. Their son, Cosme Martinez was born in Revilla in 1811. He married Magdalena Gonzales in 1829 and the couple remained in Tamaulipas while their children were growing up. However, in 1859, Don Cosme purchased one quarter of the Dolores subdivision of the Borrego Grant and, together with his children and their families, established the small settlement of Dolores. Rancho Dolores was located near the river a short distance from the ruins of the hacienda de Dolores which had been established by Jose Vasquez Borrego in 1750, but abandoned by 1814.

One of Cosme's seven children, Proceso Martinez, had moved to Nuevo Laredo as a young man. Proceso helped his father establish the settlement of Dolores in 1859, but moved to Laredo during the American Civil war. There he prospered while running a store and operating a ferry boat. In 1869, however, he married his distant cousin Maria de Jesus Uribe, and settled in San Ygnacio. He was a storekeeper there and was also active in long-distance trade along the border. Among his contributions were the introduction of the first steel plow, kerosene lanterns, corn planting machines and cotton cultivation to the San Ygnacio community. He was also active in local politics.

Mercurio Martinez was one of six children born to Don Proceso and Maria de Jesus. He grew up in San Ygnacio were he attended the local school, helped his father in the mercantile business, and assisted in tending the family crops and herds. His mother died when he was ten years old, and his father did not remarry.

At the age of twelve, Mercurio began to study guitar and violin. Within three years, he was frequently employed as a musician at dances, weddings, and other local fiestas. Music remained an avocation throughout his long life, and he wrote numerous "corridos" or ballads which were based on historically significant events in the Zapata County area.

In July, 1894, young Mercurio left home to work as the assistant foreman of a group of three hundred cotton pickers employed in the fields near Hearne, Texas. He returned home in December and assisted in his father's various enterprises until August, 1895. He then enrolled at St. Edward's College in Austin, Texas where he studied business and telegraphy. In addition, he continued his study of music during his college years (1895-1898). While in college, Mercurio received some financial aid from A. M. Bruni, an Italian immigrant who had achieved wealth and power in Laredo.

Mercurio graduated from St. Edwards in June, 1898, with a degree of Master of Accounts which is equivalent to a B. S. degree in Business Administration. At the age of 22, he returned to Zapata County where he passed the examination for a teaching certificate. Between 1898 and 1907, Mercurio taught school in the Dolores settlement where many of his paternal kinsmen lived. According to autobiographical accounts, he moved to the county seat of Zapata in 1908 in response to a written petition from local parents that he come there as a teacher.

Before this move, however, tragedy entered his life. Although not mentioned in any of Mercurio's accounts of his own life, some of the genealogical records he compiled show that his first wife, Maria Christina Uribe, died about 1907 and that an infant daughter soon followed her mother to the grave. Nearly 30 years were to pass before Mercurio Martinez was blessed with the two children who brought joy to his old age.

Upon moving to the town of Zapata in 1908, Martinez was appointed principal of the local schools by County Judge A. P. Spohn. He served as principal and teacher from 1908 until 1911 when he resigned to become Zapata County treasurer and the administrator of the County School Depository. Martinez held this position through 1916. By this time he had married his second wife, Guadalupe Uribe, a sister of his first wife, she was nearly 15 years his senior. No children were born of this marriage.

In 1917, Martinez was appointed Sanitary Inspector of Zapata County by the State Health Department. During his two years term, he actively attempted to reduce conditions which led to the spread of contagious diseases. From 1919 until 1921, he devoted his time to farming and ranching. Although he continued to supervise his lands and rental properties throughout his life, Martinez accepted a position with the Laredo law firm of Hicks, Hicks, Dickson and Bobbitt in 1921, and moved to Laredo.

This firm changed names several times during Martinez's tenure as the active partners changed. Martinez's duties included work as bookkeeper, cashier, auditor, translator, interpreter, abstracter, and investigator. His knowledge of kinship networks and histories of land ownership in Zapata County was an especially valuable asset to the firm. He also served as a Notary Public and remained active in politics, primarily as a supporter for various candidates among the Zapata County electorate.

The second Mrs. Martinez died in 1935. Two years later, Mercurio married Cristina Trevino, originally of Guerrero, Tamulipas. His only son, Mercurio Martinez, Jr., was born to this marriage in 1937. A daughter, Rosa, was born a few years later.

Mercurio Martinez retired from the Laredo law firm in 1942 at the age of 66 but continued to work with local lawyers on occasional cases having to do with land ownership. Interests in the history of the region his forebearers had pioneered led him to cooperate with Virgil Lott of Roma, Texas, in writing a county history, The Kingdom of Zapata, which was published in 1953. Active participation in the work of the Laredo Historical Society and the Texas State Historical Association occupied some of his time.

One of the great achievements of Mercurio's long and vigorous life was his role in the salvation of the community of San Ygnacio. The decision to build the great Falcon Dam in 1949 marked the doom of the ancient towns along the river south of Laredo. Guerrero in Mexico and Zapata, Lopeno, Falcon and other communities in Zapata County, Texas, were to be lost forever under the waters of a reservoir which would bring life to dry soils farther down the valley. The lands, the old stone homes, the churches, the places familiar to six generations of men and women, and even the cemetaries where the ancestors lay buried were to be inundated by the waters of the river which had beckoned the first pioneers. Men fought this fate and were accused of blocking progress. In the long-run "progress" won, and the dam was built. What this meant to the people of the region is clear in their words which describe the filling of the reservoir. Among them it is known as the Great Flood.

San Ygnacio, then a community of about one thousand, was far enough upstream from the dam to be spared submersion in a watery grave; however, the town-site had been condemned as part of the federally administered area around the new lake. Bull-dozers rather than water were destined to destroy the last remnants of an ancient heritage. The community united, and in April, 1951, the 75-year-old Don Mercurio Martinez was appointed chairman of the "Committee for the Preservation of San Ygnacio." He communicated the passion of his people to the lawyers who worked with him and the other committee members. A petition was drafted in eloquent language befitting the circumstances and signed by the people of San Ygnacio. Through the good will of men like Congressmen Lloyd Bentsen and Senators Tom Connally and Lyndon B. Johnson, the order to destroy San Ygnacio was rescended.

With this victory behind him, Don Mercurio turned to the task of helping the stricken people of the towns whose doom remained sealed. He worked as a key agent of the International Boundary and Water Commission in contacting the many citizens of Zapata County who were resettled on higher ground. His notes reveal that he attempted to convey their requests to the authorities.

When this work was completed, Don Mercurio retired again to the maintenance of his scattered farms and ranches and the administration of his numerous rental properties in Laredo, San Ygnacio, and New Zapata. He corresponded frequently with those of his tenenats who worked part of the year as crop-pickers in the north, as well as, with his children who went away to college. He located Zapata County landmarks for his associates in historical societies and wrote accounts of family history so that these things would not be lost to time. Assisting friends and relatives in the preparation of wills and other legal documents and taking people on tours of San Ygnacio occupied many hours. During the tours he pointed with pride to the stone houses with ancient beams which had been floated down the Rio Grande from New Mexico so very long before when his grandparents were young.

At last he was in his late eighties and must not have had much energy left for his papers. Very few are dated past 1963, when he was 87 years old. Yet, even in 1965, the year of his death, he was still planning and dreaming. His last papers are the plans for the construction of a small dam on one of his ranches in Zapata County. They are dated 1965.

Mercurio Martinez, 1876-1965, as revealed in his papers, was a complex and fascinating man. His autobiographical accounts, written in stilted legal English, reveal only parts of the framework of his life. Since his prose in Spanish flows with great freedom it is regretable that he did not leave the story of his life in his mother tongue. He was a man of two worlds. That which is revealed about him in the papers written in English conveys primarily the legal mind, the businessman with expertise in accounting, the efficient face presented to the larger society in which he lived. In the relatively few documents preserved in Spanish, he is a different man. His "corridas" are songs of the heart as it wonders about man's destiny. It is hard to believe that the beautiful Spanish ballad of the doomed Zapata was written by the same man who wrote the official notes in English on the property holdings and expectations of Zapata residents for the International Boundary and Water Commission. With very few exceptions, it was only in the Spanish language that Mercurio Martinez revealed himself as the emotional, human person that he was.

As a man of two worlds, Mercurio Martinez has left scholars of the future a rich heritage for the understanding of a time and a place. There is a loss because he did not come to terms completely with his bilingual heritage. He tried to leave his written heritage primarily in English, but, in spite of his technical mastery of the language, he apparently did not accept it as a language for expressing the feelings and emotions which make history truely comprehensible. He left us too little in Spanish, possibly because he thought that he had to leave his record in English for it to count in his native land. His papers reflect this, and that is also an historical lesson.

Mayhar, Ardeth

  • Person

Ardath Mayhar was born February 20, 1930 in Timpson Texas. Mayhar has been a bookstore owner, proofreader, and chicken farmer before turning to full-time writing in 1980. She writes across many genres, but most of her work is in the science fiction and fantasy genre. Her work is well-regarded by both scholars and readers.

Mayo, Thomas F., 1893-1954

  • Person

Thomas Franklin Mayo (1893-1954), librarian, educator, author, and Rhodes Scholoar, was born in Columbia, Mississippi 27 March 1893. He was the son of Col. John P. Mayo. He recieved his early education at the elementary school and at Franklin Academy in Columbia.

Following graduation from Franklin Academy, he enrolled at the University of Mississippi from which he received a B.A. in English in 1913. During the 1913-1914 school year, Mayo taught English and coached athletics at the high school in Oxford, Mississippi. The award of a Rhodes Scholarship enabled the young scholar to enroll at Oxford University in London in 1914. He was awarded a B.A. in English Literature in 1916.

While serving as an ambulance driver in France during 1916, Mayo was induced to accept a teaching position in the English Department at Texas A & M University, then known as the Agricultural and Mechanical College of Texas. One source reports that a fellow ambulance driver who was the son of the head of the English Department convinced Mayo that Texas A & M was the best school in the world. After two years of teaching in College Station, Mayo enlisted in the navy as an intelligence officer in naval aviation. He served about eighteen months and then returned to Oxford University to continue his education.

In three years at Oxford University, Mayo earned two additional degrees, a B.A. in Modern History in 1921 and a M.A. in English in 1922. At the conclusion of this period, he returned to Texas A & M and resumed his teaching career. He was appointed Associate Professor of English and Librarian. Mayo spent the remainder of his career at Texas A & M except for one year of graduate study at Columbia University, 1927-1928. He received his Ph.D. from Columbia in 1934.

Mayo continued in the dual role of Librarian and Associate Professor of English until 1944, at which time he was named Head of the English Department. In 1935 he had been promoted to the rank of Professor. After serving eight years as Head of the English Department, Dr. Mayo asked to be relieved of the administratie duties on 1 September 1952 so that he could devote full time to teaching and writing. He died 26 June 1954 while visiting friends in Houston, and was buried beside his parents in Arlington National Cemetry.

For a number of years, Mayo had engaged on research on the cycles between romanticism and rationalism in literature and art. He intended to write a book to be entitled The Great Pendulum in order "to establish the fact of the alteration and to show why this happens."Mayo felt that "culture of an age is always romantic when the ruling forces are new forces, and always rationalistic when the ruling forces are old forces." He taught much of this theory to his students in a course on great books.

As an educator, Mayo's chief concern was with what he called "humanistic" education. He explained that he wanted "to broaden and deepen and enlighten the personal quality and the personal attitudes of our students."Mayo felt that such an approach was necessary to counterbalance the great emphasis on "technical" education--teaching the students the necessary skills to obtain and retain a good job--in other departments.

Mayo's goal as a librarian was similar to that in teaching. He strove to emphasize acquistion of books in the fields of art, literature, and history, and to make them readily available to the students. Considering his extremely limited resources and the constant pressures from faculty members for technical books, Mayo faced a terrific struggle to accomplish his goal.

The high esteem in which Thomas F. Mayo was held his colleagues and the students is demonstrated in a special issue of the student newspaper, Battalion, devoted to his memory. Three successive issues contained numerous landatory tributes to him as a teacher and scholar.

Mays, William Harrison

  • Person
  • 1845-1909

William Harrison Mays was born a slave on March 22, 1845. His mother, Susan May, was owned by Josiah S. Doakes of Nueces County, TX, and died when W. H. Mays was fourteen years old. After the Civil War, Mays moved to Corpus Christi, TX and on August 4, 1869, married Alice Sinclair (1854-1934), who belonged to a prominent family in the local African American community (her mother, Clara Sinclair, was one of only two black women in Corpus Christi listed as property owners in the 1870 census; her brother, Moses Sinclair, was the second pastor of St. Matthew Baptist Church, the first black Baptist church in Corpus Christi).

Though a brick mason by trade, Mays was a cowboy for much of his life. In 1870 he worked on the King Ranch and later was in charge of cattle shipments for Mifflin Kenedy (for whom he would later name his youngest son, James Mifflin Mays). When Mays died in 1909, his obituary stated that he was "one of the oldest Negroes living in Corpus Christi…[he] was well-liked by both white and black and had many friends who regret to learn of his death. He was an upright, honest, and hard-working citizen."

Mays' granddaughter, Alclair Mays Pleasant, was born on May 6, 1906. The daughter of James Mifflin Mays (1880-1925) and his first wife, Annie Garcia Bohman (1887-1982), Mrs. Pleasant spent much of her life as an active member of the African American community in Corpus Christi. A teacher, historian, and community advocate, Mrs. Pleasant served her community and family until she passed away in 2011 at the age of 105.

McCaffery, Simon, 1963-

  • Person
  • 1963-

Simon McCaffery, a resident of Tulsa, OK, was born in San Francisco, CA in 1963. He is a former magazine editor and telecommunications director, who has been a professional writer since 1990, when he published his first story, "Night of the Living Dead Bingo Women". Since then he has published over twenty works of short fiction, in the science fiction and horror genres.

McCaffrey, Anne

  • Person
  • 1926-2011

Anne McCaffrey was one of the most popular and revered science fiction writers of the 20th century. Born on April 1, 1926, in Cambridge, MA, she graduated in 1947 from Radcliffe College with a B.A. in Slavonic languages and literature. Before becoming an author, she worked as a copywriter, studied theater and voice, and even directed several operas and operettas.

McCaffrey embarked on her long literary career, which grew to encompass hundreds of novels (many co-written) and short stories with the publication of her story "Freedom of The Race" in the October 1953 issue of Science-Fiction Plus. Her first major literary achievement was the 1961 story "The Ship Who Sang", published in The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction and which was the first work in her heralded "Brain & Brawn Ship" series of novels, novellas, and stories. The series takes place in McCaffrey's Federated Sentient Planets Universe and concerns a society in which physically (but not mentally) disabled people can be encapsulated in shells and their brains made to operate spaceships, computers, and even entire cities. (The main character of The Ship Who Sang, her collection of the first stories in the series, is Helva, whose brain is connected to a starship. Helva can be considered one of the earliest cyborgs in science fiction literature.) McCaffrey wrote the series between 1961 and 1994. The longest story in the series, "Dramatic Mission" was nominated for both the Hugo Award and the Nebula Award for Best Novella in 1970.

McCaffrey is most famous, however, for her Dragonriders of Pern series. Pern, a distant planet settled long ago by humans from Earth, is inhabited by flying creatures termed 'dragons' by the inhabitants. Humans learn to communicate telepathically with the dragons and ride them, protecting the surface of Pern from the Thread, a species of destructive spore that periodically falls to Pern from a neighboring planet. The first book in the series, Dragonflight, was published in 1968: the first story in the book, "Weyr Search" had been published the year before and had won the 1968 Hugo Award for Best Novella. (It was the first win by a woman of a Hugo.) The second story, "Dragonrider", won the 1969 Nebula for Best Novella, marking the first win by a woman for a Nebula as well.

The Pern series eventually grew to include over 20 novels and several additional short stories (from 2003, the books were co-written by McCaffrey's son Todd). The original trilogy also includes Dragonquest (1971) and The White Dragon (1978). Some of the later books include the Harper Hall trilogy (1976-1979), Moreta: Dragonlady of Pern (1983), Dragonsdawn (1988), and The Dolphins of Pern (1994). The series has enjoyed an intense following since its inception.

Other series by McCaffrey include the Crystal Universe trilogy (1982-1992), the Talents Universe series (1959-2000), the Doona series (1969-1994), and the Acorna Universe series (1997-2007). McCaffrey has won a great many awards during the length of her career. Besides the ones mentioned above, these include the 1976 Skylark Award, the 1979 Ditmar Award for Best International Long Fiction and the 1979 Gandalf Award for Book-Length Fantasy for The White Dragon, the 1980 Balrog Award for Best Novel for Dragondrums, the 1986 SFBC Book of The Year Award for Killashandra, the 1989 SFBC Book of the Year Award for Dragonsdawn, the 1990 SFBC Book of the Year Award for The Renegades of Pern, the 1991 HOMer Award for Best SF Novel and the 1992 SFBC Book of the Year Award for All The Weyrs of Pern, the 1993 SFBC Book of the Year Award for Damia's Children, the 1994 SFBC Book of the Year Award for The Dolphins of Pern, the 2000 BFA Karl Edward Wagner Award, and the 2007 Robert A. Heinlein Award. In 2005 she was made a Grand Master by the SFWA (only the third woman to be so honored, after Andre Norton and Ursula K. Le Guin).

McCaffrey married H. Wright Johnson in 1950, with whom she had three children (Alec, Todd, and Georgeanne). The two were divorced in 1970. She moved from the United States to Ireland in 1970 and resided there until her death on November 21, 2011.

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