One hundred and fifty-eight Guggenheim Fellowships were awarded in 1950.[1][2] This marked the 25th anniversary of the fellowship.[3]

1950 U.S. and Canadian Fellows

CategoryField of StudyFellowNotesRef
Creative ArtsFictionLincoln Barnett[2][4][5][6][7]
Eleanor ClarkAlso won in 1947[8]
Eleanor GreenAlso won in 1949[9]
Peter M. H. Taylor[4]
Janet Lewis Winters[10][5]
Fine ArtsFederico CastellonAlso won in 1941[11]
Milton Goldstein[12][7]
Martin JacksonAlso won in 1949[6]
Malcolm Haynie MyersAlso won in 1951[13]
Steve RaffoAlso won in 1951[14]
Andrée Ruellan[15]
David SmithAlso won in 1951[16]
Benton Murdoch SpruanceAlso won in 1962[6]
Music CompositionElliott CarterAlso won in 1945[17]
Irving Gifford FineAlso won in 1958[18]
Roger John GoebAlso won in 1951[18]
Gerald Raymond KechleyAlso won in 1949[19][20]
Harry PartchAlso won in 1943, 1944[21][10]
Leo Smit[18]
Robert E. WardAlso won in 1949, 1966[22]
Ben Brian WeberAlso won in 1952[18]
PoetryRosalie MooreAlso won in 1951[10][9]
Theodore RoethkeAlso won in 1945[19]
Theatre ArtsBoris Aronson[23]
Rosamond Gilder[24][25]
HumanitiesAmerican LiteratureJay LeydaAlso won in 1951[10][5]
Architecture, Planning and DesignHoward I. Chapelle[26]
Christopher Tunnard[2]
BibliographyLawrence Clark PowellAlso won in 1966[10][5]
BiographyVictor Wolfgang von HagenAlso won in 1949[2][9]
British HistoryWilliam HallerAlso won in 1947, 1956[25][7]
ClassicsAubrey Diller (de)[27][28][29]
Gilbert Arthur Highet[30]
Chester G. StarrAlso won in 1958[31][29]
East Asian StudiesHarold Robert Isaacs[12][7]
Economic HistoryBray HammondAlso won in 1955[32]
English LiteratureNorthrop Frye[33]
Davis Philoon Harding[2]
Virgil Barney HeltzelAlso won in 1949, 1965[31]
Edward Niles HookerAlso won in 1942[34][10][9]
George Winchester Stone, Jr.Also won in 1951, 1963[32]
Hugh Thomas Swedenberg[10][9]
John Harold Wilson[35]
Fine Arts ResearchAlbert William Christ-Janer[31]
Richard KrautheimerAlso won in 1953, 1963[36]
Martin Sebastian Soria (es) (pl)[37][29][38]
Edgar Wind[2]
Folklore and Popular CultureHerbert Norman Halpert[6]
Marshall Winslow Stearns[39][7]
French LiteratureM. Amelia Klenke[35]
Georges Claude MayAlso won in 1984[2]
General NonfictionDiana TrillingAlso won in 1991[9]
German and East European HistoryDietrich Gerhard (de)[40]
German and Scandinavian LiteratureJean Hamilton Hubener[33]
Victor LangeAlso won in 1966[7]
History of Science and TechnologyMarshall ClagettAlso won in 1946[29][32]
Italian LiteratureCharles S. SingletonAlso won in 1954, 1962[2]
LinguisticsRobert Fowkes[41]
W. Cabell Greet[25]
Henry M. Hoenigswald[6]
Helge Kökeritz (sv)Also won in 1943[2]
Literary CriticismRichard Harter Fogle (de)[5][42]
Walter B. C. WatkinsAlso won in 1946[43][42]
Medieval HistoryHerbert Bloch[2]
Medieval LiteraturePearl Kibre[44]
Gerhart B. Ladner (de)[28][29]
Music ResearchIsabel Pope Conant[18][2][38]
Near Eastern StudiesEdith PoradaAlso won in 1982[45]
Kenneth Meyer SettonAlso won in 1949[33][6]
PhilosophyMonroe Curtis Beardsley[6]
Max Black[7]
Ernest NagelAlso won in 1934[46]
Gregory VlastosAlso won in 1958[47][33][7]
ReligionRobert McQueen GrantAlso won in 1953, 1959[48][49]
Russian HistoryBertram D. WolfeAlso won in 1949, 1953[50]
South Asian StudiesFranklin Edgerton[2]
Spanish and Portuguese LiteratureStephen Gilman[35][38]
María Rosa Lida de MalkielAlso won in 1949[10][9][38]
Juan López-Morillas (es)Also won in 1957[2][38]
Edwin Seth Morby (es) (fr)Also won in 1964[10][9][38]
United States HistoryRobert Donald Clark[51]
John Hope FranklinAlso won in 1973[5][32]
George Edwin McMillan[49]
James Z. Rabun[52]
Charles Maurice WiltseAlso won in 1949[32]
Natural SciencesApplied MathematicsHarry Richard Seiwell[2]
Astronomy and AstrophysicsBart Jan Bok[2][20]
Dave Fultz[48][31][29][20]
ChemistryRobert Arnold Alberty[53][29][20]
Sidney William Benson[10][20]
Bryce L. CrawfordAlso won in 1972[54][20]
Norman Henry CromwellAlso won in 1957[53][20]
William Garfield Dauben (de)Also won in 1965[10][20]
Paul Mead Doty[2][20]
Theodore A. GeissmanAlso won in 1964[10][20]
Frederick Otto KoenigAlso won in 1949[10][20]
Lester Peter Kuhn[26][20]
Blaine C. McKusick[3][6][26][20]
Kenneth Sanborn Pitzer[2][4][6][32][7][20]
Milton David Soffer[2][12][20]
Earth ScienceFrancis John TurnerAlso won in 1959[10][20]
MathematicsRalph Philip Boas, Jr.[2][20]
Samuel EilenbergAlso won in 1974[12][20]
Philip Hartman[55][20]
Norman Earl Steenrod[6][20]
Medicine and HealthRichard W. LippmanAlso won in 1951[10][20]
Samuel Robert Means ReynoldsAlso won in 1937[20]
Stephen Polyak[31][29][20]
M. C. Terry[10][5][20]
Gerhardt von Bonin[31][29][20]
Molecular and Cellular BiologyErnest BorekAlso won in 1957[20]
Edward Charles Cantino[6][20]
Frank Host Dickey[10][20]
Arthur William GalstonAlso won in 1946[56]
Irving GoodmanAlso won in 1949[57][12][20]
Evan Charles Horning[6][20]
Robert E. Hungate[58][19]
Frank Harris JohnsonAlso won in 1944, 1945[59][6][20]
Michael Kasha[31][29][20]
Kenneth James McCallum[33][20]
F. H. L. Taylor[2][20]
Kenneth V. ThimannAlso won in 1957[2][20]
Hans Handforth ZinsserAlso won in 1949[6][20]
Organismic Biology and EcologyWilliam Eugene Berg[10][20]
Herbert FriedmannAlso won in 1953, 1955[5][12][32][20]
Francis HarperAlso won in 1951[60]
Harlow Burgess Mills[31][29][20]
Francis Joseph Ryan[20]
Ray Fred Smith[10][20]
George Willard Wharton, Jr[4][20]
PhysicsJulian Himely Bigelow[6][20]
Sidney Michael Dancoff[31][29][20]
David A. Lind[10][20]
Julian Ellis Mack[29][20]
Lauriston C. Marshall[10]
Plant ScienceEdgar AndersonAlso won in 1943, 1956[40][20]
Howard Scott Gentry[10][20]
Sergius Harry Mamay (es)[40][20]
Nicholas Polunin (es)Also won in 1951[33][20]
Charles Madeira Rick, Jr.Also won in 1948[10][20]
StatisticsEmil J. Gumbel[61]
George Kingsley Zipf[2]
Social SciencesAnthropology and Cultural StudiesEdward Wyllys Andrews, IV[32]
David Bidney[62][28][29]
Hjalmar R. Holand[29]
Walter Taylor[38]
EconomicsWassily W. LeontiefAlso won in 1940[2]
Charles Edward LindblomAlso won in 1985[2]
W. Rupert Maclaurin[2]
Edwin G. NourseAlso won in 1951[10][2][6][4][63][35][32][7]
Political ScienceRobert Alan DahlAlso won in 1978[2]
Samuel J. KonefskyAlso won in 1951[63][12][7]
Samuel LubellAlso won in 1953[12][7]
Bernard Schwartz
Julian Towster[7]
Eric Herman Wilhelm VoegelinAlso won in 1955[42]
PsychologyJean EvansAlso won in 1955[64]
Mary HenleAlso won in 1960[20]
SociologyWolfram EberhardAlso won in 1951[10][20]

1950 Latin American and Caribbean Fellows

CategoryField of StudyFellowNotesRef
Creative ArtsFine ArtsJuan Cruz Reyes[65]
HumanitiesArchitecture, Planning and DesignAlvaro Ortega[66]
Iberian and Latin American HistoryFrancisco Cuevas Cancino (es)[67]
Intellectual and Cultural HistoryJuan Larrea y Celayeta (es)Also won in 1949[68]
Natural SciencesChemistrySimão Mathias[69]
Marcos Tschapek[70]
Earth ScienceIsmael Escobar Vallejo[71]
MathematicsMischa CotlarAlso won in 1952[72]
Medicine and HealthAugusto A. CamaraAlso won in 1951[73]
Luis Vargas García Alons[74]
Molecular and Cellular BiologyFrancisco J. S. LaraAlso won in 1951[75]
Osvaldo Argentino Peso[76]
Raúl Esteban TruccoAlso won in 1949[77]
NeuroscienceJosé Bebin BustamanteAlso won in 1951[78]
Organismic Biology and EcologyAbelardo Moreno BonillaAlso won in 1949[79]
Dioscoro S. RaborAlso won in 1956[80]
Plant ScienceRamón Ferreyra Huerta (es)[81]
José CuatrecasasAlso won in 1951[82]
Henri Alain LiogierAlso won in 1953, 1957[83]
Veridiana Victoria Rossetti[84]
Alberto Soriano[85]
Social SciencesAnthropology and Cultural StudiesMilciades Chaves Chamorro[86]

See also

References

  1. "1950". Guggenheim Foundation. Archived from the original on 2006-02-19. Retrieved 2022-10-10.
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 "24 Guggenheim awards won by New Englanders". The Boston Globe. Boston, Massachusetts, USA. 1950-04-17. p. 11. Retrieved 2022-11-05 via newspapers.com.
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  4. 1 2 3 4 5 "2 professors from N.C. colleges win prized Guggenheim Fellowship awards". The Herald-Sun. Durham, North Carolina, USA. 1950-04-17. p. 9. Retrieved 2022-11-05 via newspapers.com.
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