Frederic L. Paxson | |
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Academic background | |
Alma mater | University of Pennsylvania |
Thesis | Independence of the South American Republics: A Study in Recognition and Foreign Policy (1903) |
Doctoral advisor | Albert Bushnell Hart John Bach McMaster |
Academic work | |
Doctoral students | Earl S. Pomeroy Alvin Harvey Hansen |
Frederic Logan Paxson (February 23, 1877 in Philadelphia – October 24, 1948 in Berkeley, California) was an American historian. He also served as President of the Mississippi Valley Historical Association. He had undergraduate and PhD degrees from the University of Pennsylvania, as well as a master's from Harvard University. He taught at Wisconsin (1910 to 1932) as successor to Frederick Jackson Turner and the University of California-Berkeley from 1932 to 1947.
As a historian he was an authority on the American frontier. His 1925 Pulitzer Prize was for History of the American Frontier, 1763–1893.[1]