Background
Gillespie, Angus Kress was born on April 25, 1942 in Bryn Mawr, Pennsylvania, United States. Son of Harold Edwin and Mary Miller (Kress) Gillespie.
(The pioneer collector of the songs and stories of the coa...)
The pioneer collector of the songs and stories of the coal miners, George Korson (1899-1967) was also a leader- many say the leader- in correcting the onetime rural and Anglo-American bias in U.S. folklore studies. Korson won the highest honors in the scholarly world, despite his humble origin as a poor Jewish immigrant boy from the Ukraine, his self-training as a folklorist while working as a newspaperman, and his quiet challenge to the folklore establishment. Among the first biographies of American folklorists, this book recounts a colorful life story, a heroic personal achievement, and a significant contribution to the recognition of industrial folklore. During 43 years of full-time journalistic employment, Korson wrote five definitive books on coal mining folklore-as well as many articles; started the Library of Congress archive of miners' songs and ballads- with his wife, a musicologist; founded and directed the Pennsylvania Folk Festival; and helped launch the National Folk Festival. He was awarded a University of Pennsylvania Citation in 1949, a Guggenheim Fellowship in 1957, a University of Chicago Folklore Prize in 1961, and an Israeli Service Ribbon in American Folklore Society in 1960.The story begins with Korson's three years as a reporter on the Wilkes-Barre Record after his graduation from high school in that city, his two years with the Jewish Legion in Palestine and Egypt during World War I,and his single year at Columbia University. Then come his studies of mining folklore - both in the eastern Pennsylvania antracite fields and in the bituminous fields of the South and Midwest- while he worked as a reporter in Pottsville and Allentown, Pa., in New Jersey, and as chief editor of Red Cross publications. Korson's intellectual outlook is shown as two-sided: on one hand, an understanding that folklore is best presented in the holistic context of a community's way of life; on the other, a conviction that reform is more congruent with American social ideals than revolution.Folklorist of the Coal Fields is a treasury of information for the folklorist and the Pennsylvania history fan, as well as a source of inspiration for younger readers. It is illustrated with 40 photographs of George Korson's life and the coal fields environment, plus two maps.
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Gillespie, Angus Kress was born on April 25, 1942 in Bryn Mawr, Pennsylvania, United States. Son of Harold Edwin and Mary Miller (Kress) Gillespie.
Bachelor, Yale University, 1964; Master of Arts, University of Pennsylvania, 1968; Doctor of Philosophy, University of Pennsylvania, 1975.
Master, Episcopal Academy, Merion Station, Pennsylvania, 1966-1973;
instructor, Rutgers University, New Brunswick, Pennsylvania, 1973-1975;
assistant professor, Rutgers University, New Brunswick, Pennsylvania, 1975-1981;
associate professor, Rutgers University, New Brunswick, Pennsylvania, since 1981. Director New Jersey Folk Festival, New Brunswick, since 1975. Publication New Jersey Folklife, New Brunswick, 1976-1991.
Treasurer New Netherland Museum, Jersey City, New Jersey,1992-.
(The pioneer collector of the songs and stories of the coa...)
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President Millstone Valley Fire Department, East Millstone, New Jersey, 1987, Douglass Estates South, New Brunswick, 1991-1993. Committeeman County of Middlesex, 1994-1995. Member American Folklore Society, American Studies Association, American Association University Professor, Pennsylvania Folklore Society (acting president 1979-1980), New Jersey Folklore Society (executive commission 1980-1985), Middle Atlantic Folklore Society (president 1984-1985).
Married Sherry Jacqueline Victor, June 11, 1966 (divorced March 1978). Children: Neil Craig, Tristan Wade. Married Rowena Homillano Cosico, March 30, 1986.