Harold William Thompson


Prof Harold William Thompson FRSE FSA DLitt was an American folklorist and historian. He was also a competent musician, specialising in playing the organ.

Life

He was born in Buffalo, New York in 1891. He graduated PhB from Hamilton University in 1912 then gained a doctorate from Harvard University in 1915. He won a Guggenheim Fellowship allowing him further postgraduate study at Edinburgh University.
Around 1920 he started lecturing in English at New York State University.
In 1932 he was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society of Edinburgh. His proposers were William Metzler, John Alexander Inglis, Robert Hannay and Charles Galton Darwin. Elected as an Ordinary Fellow rather than Foreign or Honorary Fellow, this indicates his physical presence in Edinburgh at that time.
From 1936 to 1939 he corresponded with Ezra Pound.
In 1940 he joined Cornell University as a Lecturer in English and became Professor of English in 1951.
In 1944, with Louis C. Jones he founded the New York Folklore Society.
He retired in 1959, living his final years in Homer, New York.
He died at Cortland Memorial Hospital in New York State on 21 February 1964.

Family

His wife was Professor of English at New York State University.

Publications