Maurice Garland Fulton (December 3, 1877 – 1955) was an American historian and English professor. He was a professor of English and History at the New Mexico Military Institute for three decades. He was the (co-)author or (co-)editor of several books, and "an authority on the Lincoln County War and Southwestern history."[1]
Fulton graduated from the University of Mississippi, where he earned a Ph.B. in English in 1898, followed by an A.M. in 1901.[2][4] He attended graduate school at the University of Michigan, but came short of earning a PhD.[3][4]
Fulton married Vaye McPhearson Callahan.[1] He died on February 12, 1955, in Roswell, New Mexico, at 77.[2] He was buried in South Park Cemetery, Roswell, NM.[1] His papers are at the University of Arizona.[5]
Selected works
Fulton, Maurice G. (1912). Expository Writing: Materials for a College Course in Exposition by Analysis and Imitation. New York: Macmillan. OCLC367449881.
Garrett, Pat (1927). Fulton, Maurice G. (ed.). Authentic Life of Billy the Kid. New York: Macmillan. OCLC459886698.
Fulton, Maurice G. (1930). Charles Lamb in Essays and Letters. New York: Macmillan. OCLC2093756.
Fulton, Maurice G. (1933). Writing Craftsmanship: Models and Readings. New York: Macmillan. OCLC1060526160.
Fulton, Maurice G.; Horgan, Paul, eds. (1937). New Mexico's Own Chronicle; Three Races in the Writings of Four Hundred Years. Dallas, Texas: B. Upshaw and Co. OCLC49597488.
Fulton, Maurice G.; Horgan, Paul, eds. (1944). Diary and Letters of Josiah Gregg. Norman, Oklahoma: University of Oklahoma Press. OCLC500377799.
Fulton, Maurice G. (1968). History of the Lincoln County War. Tucson, Arizona: University of Arizona Press. OCLC166484144.
^ abcdefgMoore, Mary Lou (Winter 1967). "A Dedication to the Memory of Maurice Garland Fulton 1877–1955". Arizona and the West. 9 (4): 313–316. JSTOR40167448.