Barrows was born in Armada, Michigan on April 15, 1877, the son of David H. Barrows and Lucy Elizabeth née Tenney.[2] He graduated from Armada High School at the age of 14,[3][4] then in 1896 from the Michigan State Normal School in Ypsilanti. Barrows taught history and geography at the Ferris Institute in Big Rapids, Michigan for five years.[3][4] He was married to his first wife Janie E. Gleason on August 16, 1898. They would have one son, Robert Harlan.[2] Barrows matriculated to University of Chicago where he graduated with a B.S. degree in 1903.[2] He attended graduate school at the same institution during 1903–1906, studying in the newly-formed department of geography – the first in the nation.[3]
During 1904–1907 he was an assistant in geology at the University of Chicago. Barrows was named an instructor in geology and geography in 1907, becoming an assistant professor in 1908, then an associate professor of geography in 1910. His course titled, The Historical Geography of the United States, would become a model for similar courses taught across the country.[5] In 1912 he was awarded a Master of Pedagogy.[2] His wife died on July 23, 1913, then his son in 1919.[3] Barrows was named a professor in 1914.[2] On September 4, 1915, Barrows married his second wife, Adda B. Weber. The couple would have two daughters: Dorothy Elizabeth and Jean. During World War I he served on the United States War Trade Board. In 1919 he was named chair for the University of Chicago department of geography.[2]
During his career, Barrows co-wrote a series of textbooks on geography.[1] In 1922 he was elected as president of the Association of American Geographers.[2] His influential 1922 address to the association, Geography as Human Ecology, helped supplant the then-prevalent school of environmental determinism. Starting in 1933, he served as a consultant in Washington D.C.[6] during the New Deal administration of President Franklin D. Roosevelt. He worked on the Mississippi Valley Committee during 1933–1934,[7] the Water Resources Committee in 1935–1941, and the Northern Great Plains Committee during 1938–1940. Barrows stepped down as chair of the University of Chicago geography department in 1942, then was named emeritus professor.[6] He died at Highland Park, Illinois on May 15, 1960.[8]
Bibliography
These are books authored (or co-authored) by Barrows:
Salisbury, Rollin D.; Barrows, Harlan Harland (1918), The Environment of Camp Grant, [Illinois] State Geological Survey.
Barrows, Harlan H. (March 1923), "Geography as Human Ecology", Annals of the Association of American Geographers, 13 (1): 1–14, doi:10.2307/2560816, JSTOR2560816.
^ abcdefgMarquis, Albert Nelson; Leonard, John William, eds. (1926), Who's who in Chicago, vol. 4, A. N. Marquis & Company, p. 63.
^ abcdColby, Charles C.; White, Gilbert F. (1961), "Harlan H. Barrows, 1877–1960", Annals of the Association of American Geographers, 51 (4): 395–400, doi:10.1111/j.1467-8306.1961.tb00389.x.
^Platt, Robert S. (January 1961), "Obituary: Harlan H. Barrows", Geographical Review, 51 (1), Taylor & Francis, Ltd.: 139–141, JSTOR212493.
Further reading
Harlan H. Barrows, Pine Mountain Settlement School, retrieved 2024-03-04.
Koelsch, William A. (December 1969), "The Historical Geography of Harlan H. Barrows", Annals of the Association of American Geographers, 59 (4), Taylor & Francis, Ltd.: 632–651, doi:10.1111/j.1467-8306.1969.tb01804.x, JSTOR2561831.