William Turrentine Jackson


W. Turrentine "Turpie" Jackson was an American professor of history, specializing in Western U.S. history.

Biography

Jackson grew up in El Paso, Texas. He graduated in 1935 with B.A. from Texas Western College and in 1940 with Ph.D. from the University of Texas at Austin, where his thesis advisor was Walter Prescott Webb. Jackson taught at UCLA, Iowa State University, the University of Chicago, the University of Glasgow, and four other universities and also served in the intelligence division of the U. S. Navy, before he joined in 1951 the faculty of the history department of the University of California, Davis. He taught there until he began phased retirement in 1982 with full retirement in 1985.
Jackson's research covered policy history and social history. He debunked the stereotype of rugged individualism and small property owners in the Old West with evidence for development involving U.S. government surveys, U.S. federal subsidies, and international capital. He published extensively and served on the editorial boards of several academic journals. Three of his books won prizes.
Wells Fargo hired Jackson as a consultant and corporate historian.

Awards and honors

Articles

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