Brent Ashabranner

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Born(1921-11-03)November 3, 1921
DiedDecember 1, 2016(2016-12-01) (aged 95)
EducationOklahoma A&M
Brent Ashabranner
Born(1921-11-03)November 3, 1921
DiedDecember 1, 2016(2016-12-01) (aged 95)
Resting placeArlington National Cemetery[1]
EducationOklahoma A&M
Spouse
Martha White
(m. 1941)
Children2
Military career
BranchUnited States Navy
Service years1942–1945
ConflictsWorld War II
Writing career
Notable awardsALA Notable Book
1983 The New Americans: Changing Patterns in U.S. Immigration
1984 To Live in Two Worlds: American Indian Youth Today
1984 Gavriel and Jemal: Two Boys of Jerusalem
1985 Dark Harvest: Migrant Farmworkers in America
1986 Children of the Maya: A Guatemalan Indian Odyssey
1987 Into a Strange Land: Unaccompanied Refugee Youth in America
1988 Always to Remember: The Story of the Vietnam Veterans Memorial

Boston Globe–Horn Book Award – Non-fiction Honor Book
1986 Dark Harvest: Migrant Farmworkers in America[2]

Carter G. Woodson Book Award
1983 Morning Star, Black Sun: The Northern Cheyenne Indians and America's Energy Crisis
1985 To Live in Two Worlds: American Indian Youth Today
1986 Dark Harvest: Migrant Farmworkers in America[3]

Christopher Award
1987 Into a Strange Land: Unaccompanied Refugee Youth in America

School Library Journal – Best Book of the Year
1986 Children of the Maya: A Guatemalan Indian Odyssey

Brent Kenneth Ashabranner (November 3, 1921[4] – December 1, 2016) was an American Peace Corps administrator, including its 1967–69 deputy director, and author of more than 30 books, primarily non-fiction children's literature, which received over 40 awards.[5]

Ashabranner was born in 1921 in Shawnee, Oklahoma.[6] His family later moved to El Reno and then Bristow due to economic hardship during the Great Depression. An avid reader and writer with interests in foreign countries, track, and tennis, he graduated from high school in 1939.[citation needed]

Ashabranner studied English at Oklahoma A&M, where he discovered influential writers and met his future wife, Martha White. Encouraged by a professor to write pulp Westerns, he earned extra income from fiction and later took a part-time campus job. They married in mid-1941. His brother Gerard, self-taught in law, passed the state bar and became a practicing attorney.[citation needed]

After the U.S. entered World War II, Ashabranner joined the Navy Seabees and served in the Pacific.[6] After the war, he and his wife returned to Oklahoma A&M, earning degrees in English and Home Economics by 1948. Ashabranner completed a master’s in English in 1951, became an English instructor, and they had two daughters in the early 1950s.[6]

Helping other countries

In 1955, Ashabranner was given a chance to work in Africa. With its well-rated agricultural department, Oklahoma A&M was asked by the Truman administration's Point Four Program to help Ethiopia start an agricultural college. The school was in agreement and had for several years sent people for this purpose. Ethiopia later asked for help with creating school books, and Oklahoma A&M was again asked to recruit advisors, one of whom was Ashabranner. The job was for two years, after which he and his family were to return to Stillwater and the English department. Instead, they ended up living in Africa and Asia for 25 years.[citation needed]

Ethiopia

Ashabranner's job, in national capital Addis Ababa, was to start two magazines modeled after My Weekly Reader and Scholastic Corporation's Junior Scholastic. One magazine would be for Ethiopia's elementary grades and written in Amharic, the national language, and the other would be written in English for later grades. The goal was to teach readers about their country and its history. While Ashabranner struggled with Amharic, his work partner, Russel Davis, learned it much more readily. The two traveled Ethiopia for a month with native counterparts to take in the country's culture. They visited the historic city of Aksum, and various cultural groups including the Amharas, Gallas, Guragies, and Falasha. Ashabranner and Davis used what they learned from this trip, and others like it, to tell educational stories in their magazine articles, and they wrote their first book, The Lion's Whiskers, published in 1959. Ashabranner's wife, Martha, once taught home economics skills at a local girls' school, as well.[citation needed]

Libya and Nigeria

When their time in Ethiopia was up, the Point Four Program asked Ashabranner to help them in Libya. After much consideration, he resigned from the newly renamed Oklahoma State University and his family went to Libya. Davis returned to the U.S. and became an educator at Harvard University, but they continued to write six more books together. While in Libya, one such book was Ten Thousand Desert Swords in 1960. The family next went to Nigeria, long a colony of Britain and about to receive its independence. While Ashabranner worked there, U.S. President John F. Kennedy created the Peace Corps and its first director, Sargent Shriver, visited Nigeria to see about establishing the program. Ashabranner, at that time part of the United States Agency for International Development, was assigned to escort Shriver, who then appointed Ashabranner in charge of setting up operations after Nigeria agreed to participate. Also while there, Ashabranner became a non-fiction writer, working with Davis on their last and best-selling book together, Land in the Sun: The Story of West Africa (1963).[citation needed]

India, America, and Southeast Asia

Ashabranner's next assignment was in India, where he was the local director when its Peace Corps program became the largest in the world in 1965. After nearly four years in India, the next Peace Corps director asked Ashabranner to return to America and become the international program's deputy director. He bought a house in a Maryland suburb of Washington, D.C. and his daughters graduated from Walter Johnson High School there.[citation needed] In May 1969, Ashabranner was among the guests invited to the Nixon White House for Joseph Blatchford's swearing-in ceremony as the third Peace Corps director.[7] Ashabranner's daughter Melissa earned degrees from Temple University and Yale, while daughter Jennifer trained professionally in pet grooming and photography. Ashabranner and his wife then returned oversees while he worked with the philanthropic Ford Foundation, moving from the Philippines to Indonesia in 1976.[citation needed]

Full-time writing

In 1980, Ashabranner and his wife returned to America to be near their daughters and devote his full-time work to writing non-fiction books for young readers. Most of his more recent work is illustrated by Paul Conklin, whom Ashabranner first met in Nigeria. Daughter Jennifer also illustrated several of Ashabranner's books, beginning with Always to Remember (1988) about the Vietnam Veterans Memorial. He collaborated with daughter Melissa in Into a Strange Land (1987) and Counting America (1989).[citation needed] Ashabranner won the Carter G. Woodson Award "for the most distinguished books appropriate for young readers that depict ethnicity in the United States" three times (1983, 1985, 1986).[8] In 1988, Ashabranner and his wife moved to Williamsburg, Virginia.[9] While his last book was published in 2002, Ashabranner told his doctor he'd be writing as long as he lived.[citation needed]

Death and legacy

Published works

References

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI