Fred Wendorf

Denver Fred Wendorf (July 31, 1924 – July 15, 2015) was Henderson-Morrison Professor emeritus of Anthropology at Southern Methodist University. He received his Ph.D. in 1953 from Harvard University, and founded the anthropology department at SMU along with founding the Fort Burgwin Research Center in Taos, New Mexico.[1][2]

Wendorf was a member of the United States National Academy of Sciences.[1]

Denver Fred Wendorfs work was widely known across two continents, Africa and the American Southwest. Wendorf had an interest in the field of archaeology ever since his childhood when at the age of 8 Wendorf began to find and collect arrowheads. Wendorf started studying archaeology collegiately in 1942 at the University of Arizona. However, it was cut short due to serving in World War II. Wedorf resumed his studies one year later after suffering a battle wound to his arm. This injury and the experience behind it earned Wedorf a Purple Heart and a Bronze Star. Wendorf continued his college education at colleges close to whatever military hospital he was reporting to. This included the University of Michigan. Wendorf received his bachelors from the University of Arizona in 1948, then his doctorate degree of Harvard university in 1953. Wendorfs first archaeology job was in New Mexico at a construction site of a natural gas pipeline. This involved Wendorf excavating roughly one hundred and fifty sites off this pipeline. He then became a research archaeologist with the Museum of New Mexico in Santa Fe. Soon after Wendorf was contacted by an amateur archaeologist about the remains of human bone fragments that he had previously found around Midland.[3] This excavation took place at what is now known as the “Midland Man” site and was a milestone for Wendorf. Following this excavation Wendorf joined the staff of what is now Texas Tech University where he held the first ever summer archaeological field school. In 1958 he went back to being the associate director at the Museum of New Mexico.[4] Wendorf was one of the first archaeologists to answer an international plea to excavate along the Nile River Valley.[3] Wendorf created SMU’s anthropology department…now one of the university’s strongest departments in 1964. At this time Wendorf switched his archaeological focus from the American Southwest to northeast Africa. Wendorf expanded his work by getting involved in the protection of historical shipwrecks. His investigations eventually led to the Abandoned Shipwreck act of 1987, which protects historical shipwrecks the United States. Wendorf was the director of The Combined Prehistoric Expedition until 1999. This expedition was in Africa and covered from the early stone age till around to late Bronze Age and has given us a tremendous amount of insight on behavior during those historic times along the Nile and in the desserts. Wendorfs work has won him many awards including;

· Elected into the national academy of sciences in 1987

· Received a medal from the supreme council of antiques of Egypt in 1974

· Received a Lucy Wharton Drexl Medal for archaeological achievement in 1996.

Wendorf retired in 2003. Wendorf died on Wednesday, July 15, 2015 due to a long term illness. He was a father to his three daughters, Gail Wendorf, Cindy Ruiz and Kelly Wendorf, and to his three sons, Carl Wendorf, Michael Wendorf and Scott Wendorf. Denver Fred Wendorf was a husband to his wife Christy Bender and a brother to his sisters, Mildred DiMaggio and Mary Ann Stripling.[4]

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See also

Notes

  1. 1 2 "Press Release" (PDF). Peabody.Harvard.edu. Peabody Museum of Archeology & Ethnology. 2008. Retrieved February 22, 2012.
  2. "Excavator of "Midland Man" site dies at age 90". Midland Reporter-Telegram. Midland Reporter-Telegram. 2015. Retrieved July 16, 2015.
  3. 1 2 "World renowned SMU archaeologist Fred Wendorf has died". smu.edu. Retrieved 2016-03-10.
  4. 1 2 Simnacher, Joe. "Denver Fred Wendorf, renowned SMU anthropologist, dies at 90". The Dallas Morning News. Retrieved 2016-03-10.

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