Walter Mason Camp
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Walter Mason Camp | |
|---|---|
| Born | April 21, 1867 Camptown, Pennsylvania |
| Died | August 3, 1925 (aged 58) Kankakee, Illinois |
| Occupation(s) | Writer, editor |
| Spouse |
Emeline L. F. Sayles
(m. 1898) |
| Signature | |
Walter Mason Camp (1867–1925) was an American editor, author, railroad expert and historical researcher.
Walter Mason Camp was born in Camptown, Pennsylvania, on April 21, 1867.[1] He attended public school in Wyalusing, Pennsylvania before attending the Pennsylvania State College until 1891 and then the University of Wisconsin from 1895 to 1896. He was a student of civil engineering and his post-graduate studies focused on electricity and steam. From 1897 until his death, he was the editor of The Railway and Engineering Review (later renamed Railway Review), a railroad construction and engineering journal published in Chicago. He was a member of many different organizations relating to engineering and history.[2] Camp married Emeline L. F. Sayles in 1898.[1] They had no children. He died unexpectedly at Kankakee, Illinois, on August 3, 1925, after living in Chicago for many years.[2]
Camp also spent time interviewing and documenting the experiences of Native Americans and United States soldiers in the American Indian Wars. Intending to draft a book on the topic, he collected source material in the form of interview notes, personal correspondence, field notes and maps.[3] The Battle of Little Bighorn seemed to have been emphasized in his research. Camp's materials are now held in public collections, including at the Brigham Young University Library in Provo, Utah,[3] the University of Colorado at Boulder Library, Little Bighorn Battlefield National Monument at Crow Agency, Montana, at the Indiana University Bloomington Library,[4] and the Denver Public Library[5] in Denver, Colorado.
About his passion for oral history and his intentions for his research, Camp said:
After having listened to the story of the Little Bighorn Expedition from the lips of some of the men who participated therein, the current literature [in 1909] on the subject seemed to present such a tangle of fiction, fancy, fact and feeling that I formed an ambition to establish the truth. It occurred to me that the essential facts must rest in the minds of many men then living, and that these facts, if collected, would constitute fairly accurate history. This has been my plan—to gather my data from eyewitnesses.[6]
