One hundred and fifty-four Guggenheim Fellowships were awarded in 1951.[1][2] $568,000 was disbursed.[3]

1951 U.S. and Canadian Fellows

CategoryField of StudyFellowNotesRef
Creative ArtsFictionCharles Edward Butler[4]
John CheeverAlso won in 1960[5]
William GoyenAlso won in 1952[6]
Fine ArtsWilliam Ross Abrams[7]
Robert Noel BlairAlso won in 1946[8]
Adolf DehnAlso won in 1939[9][10]
Joseph DeMartini[11][10]
John Edward Heliker[12][10]
Lewis Iselin[13]
Malcolm Haynie MyersAlso won in 1951[14]
Arthur OsverAlso won in 1949[10]
Richard Warren Pousette-Dart[15]
Steve RaffoAlso won in 1950[16]
David SmithAlso won in 1950[12]
Music CompositionJacob Avshalomov[17]
William BergsmaAlso won in 1946[3]
Ingolf DahlAlso won in 1960[17][18]
Roger John GoebAlso won in 1950[19][20]
Robert KurkaAlso won in 1952[17]
Dai-keong LeeAlso won in 1945[21]
Poetrye. e. cummingsAlso won in 1933[22]
Rosalie MooreAlso won in 1950[18]
HumanitiesAmerican LiteratureThomas H. Johnson[23]
Jay LeydaAlso won in 1950[24]
BiographyDouglas Southall Freeman[25]
Horace Victor Gregory[12]
Elizabeth StevensonAlso won in 1958[26]
George Woodcock[27]
British HistoryConyers ReadAlso won in 1954[28][29]
ClassicsEdmund Grindlay Berry[27]
William Kendrick PritchettAlso won in 1955[18]
Edward Anthony Robinson[30]
William Pitkin WallaceAlso won in 1960[27]
Constantine George Yavis[31]
East Asian StudiesJohn K. FairbankAlso won in 1959[2][29]
Economic HistoryRobert Sabatino LopezAlso won in 1948[32][29]
EducationRobert Benjamin Irwin (id)[22]
English LiteratureLily Bess Campbell[18][33]
James Lowry CliffordAlso won in 1965[34]
Thomas Wellsted CopelandAlso won in 1963[35]
Joyce HemlowAlso won in 1960, 1966[27]
Cecil Yelverton Lang[36]
William Dougald MacMillan III[37]
George Winchester Stone, Jr.Also won in 1950, 1963[38]
Folklore and Popular CultureBenjamin Botkin[39]
French LiteratureAlfred Adler[40]
Gilbert ChinardAlso won in 1956[41]
André Benjamin DelattreAlso won in 1941[28]
Herbert DieckmannAlso won in 1948[2]
Claude André Vigée[2][42]
General NonfictionJoseph James Mathews[26][43][29]
German and East European HistoryJerome BlumAlso won in 1971[28][29]
Leften Stavros Stavrianos[35][29]
German and Scandinavian LiteratureHeinrich Edmund Karl HenelAlso won in 1954[27][44]
Walter Friedrich NaumannAlso won in 1961[44]
Iberian and Latin American HistoryWoodrow BorahAlso won in 1958[18]
Intellectual and Cultural StudiesGolo Mann[18][29]
Italian LiteratureA. William Salomone (it)[29]
LinguisticsNorman E. Eliason[37]
Albrecht Goetze[45]
Alo Raun (de) (et) (fi)[46]
Literary CriticismPhilip Rahv[39]
Ernest Lee Tuveson[18]
René WellekAlso won in 1952, 1956, 1966[47]
Medieval LiteratureE. Talbot DonaldsonAlso won in 1977[46]
Walter J. OngAlso won in 1949[2][33]
Music ResearchDonald Jay GroutAlso won in 1952[33]
Leo Franz SchradeAlso won in 1956[48]
Oliver StrunkAlso won in 1955[28]
Arnold Olaf Sungaard[42]
Near Eastern StudiesPaul Julius AlexanderAlso won in 1965[29]
Henri Frankfort[35]
Richard Nelson FryeAlso won in 1975[2]
Hal LehrmanAlso won in 1953[39]
PhilosophyRichard Milton Martin[28]
Rulon Seymour Wells, III[49]
ReligionWilliam Henry Paine HatchAlso won in 1953[2]
Russian HistoryRobert Francis Byrnes[46][28][39][29]
Spanish and Portuguese LiteratureRuth Lee Kennedy[2][42][50]
Luis Monguió[18]
United States HistoryArthur Cecil Bining[28][29]
Julian P. Boyd[51]
Mildred Lucile Campbell[29]
Michael Kraus[29]
Dumas MaloneAlso won in 1958[29]
William Quentin Maxwell[52][29]
Edouard A. StackpoleAlso won in 1963[2][42]
Willard Mosher Wallace[29]
Natural SciencesAstronomy and AstrophysicsSu-Shu Huang[35][44]
ChemistryHarrison Scott Brown[53]
Alan Frank CliffordAlso won in 1952[35]
Robert Brainard Corey[18]
Farrington Daniels[54]
Harry George Drickamer[55]
Albert Leon Henne[56]
Frederick Albert Matsen[57]
Walter John Moore[46][38]
Ralph Pearson[35]
R. Nelson Smith[3][18]
Harold R. Snyder1939 fellowship postponed until 1951[58]
Carl Swenson Vestling[59]
Earth ScienceBryan PattersonAlso won in 1954[35]
MathematicsRalph Fox[28]
Nathan Jacobson[39]
Irving Ezra SegalAlso won in 1946, 1967[35][39]
Max Shiffman[3][18][39]
Medicine and HealthGeorge Edward Burch[60]
Joseph Wiley Ferrebee[61]
Richard W. LippmanAlso won in 1950[18]
Shih-Chun Wang[62]
Molecular and Cellular BiologyHoward Alan Bern[18]
Frederick A. Fuhrman[3][18]
Ruth Hoffmann Hubbard[2]
Walter Lee Hughes[2]
Edna Beatrice Kearney[63]
Albert L. LehningerAlso won in 1962[35]
Douglas Alfred MarslandAlso won in 1959[64]
Charles Vernon Robinson[2]
William Cumming Rose[65]
Thomas Peter SingerAlso won in 1959[63]
Roger Yate StanierAlso won in 1945, 1967[18]
Alma Joslyn Whiffen-Barksdale[40]
Organismic Biology and EcologyOliver L. Austin[2][42]
Rachel Carson[38][52]
William Steel CreightonAlso won in 1952[66]
Maxwell John Dunbar[27]
Richard Benedict Goldschmidt[67]
Francis HarperAlso won in 1950[68][28]
Clarence Cook Little[69]
Joe Truesdell Marshall, Jr.[50]
Herbert Holdsworth Ross[35]
Alexander Frank SkutchAlso won in 1946[70][52]
Curt SternAlso won in 1962[18]
Albert Tyler[18]
PhysicsWillard LibbyAlso won in 1941, 1959[35]
Mael A. MelvinAlso won in 1956[71]
John Rader Platt[35]
Plant ScienceHenry N. Andrews, Jr.Also won in 1958, 1961[72]
Sterling Howard Emerson[18]
E. D. Merrill[73]
Eldon Henry Newcomb[44]
Nicholas Polunin (es)Also won in 1950[27]
Albert N. Steward[2]
Leland Shanor[35]
StatisticsLeonard Jimmie SavageAlso won in 1958, 1967[35]
Social SciencesAnthropology and Cultural StudiesKenneth Earl Kidd[27]
Bertram Shirley Kraus[50]
Walter Collins O'Kane[74]
EconomicsRichard A. MusgraveAlso won in 1965[40]
Edwin G. NourseAlso won in 1950[18][38][22]
Siegfried V. WantrupAlso won in 1947[18]
William Rulon Williamson[38]
LawAlbert A. Ehrenzweig (de)[18]
Alpheus Thomas Mason[75]
Samuel E. ThorneAlso won in 1948, 1956[42][33]
Political ScienceAlexander Brady[27]
George Hathaway Dession[76]
Carl J. FriedrichAlso won in 1954[2][42]
William Weed Kaufmann[42]
Samuel J. KonefskyAlso won in 1950[22]
Louise Overacker[2][3][42]
Alice Fleenor Sturgis[3][18]
PsychologyFritz HeiderAlso won in 1947[77]
Anne Roe[78]
SociologyWolfram EberhardAlso won in 1950[18]
T. Lynn SmithAlso won in 1953[79]
Kimball Young[18][35]

1951 Latin American and Caribbean Fellows

CategoryField of StudyFellowNotesRef
Creative ArtsFictionPierre Marcelin[80]
Philippe Thoby-Marcelin[80]
Fine ArtsJosé Vela ZanettiAlso won in 1952[81]
HumanitiesIberian and Latin American HistoryEdmundo O'Gorman (es) (fr)[82]
Medieval HistoryJosé Luis Romero (es)Also won in 1969[83]
Spanish and Portuguese LiteratureAmado Alonso[2]
Natural SciencesEarth ScienceJoão José Bigarella (pt)[84]
Carlos de Paula CoutoAlso won in 1949, 1966[85]
Geography and Environmental StudiesLeví Marrero Artiles[86]
MathematicsJosé AdemAlso won in 1952[87]
Medicine and HealthAugusto A. CamaraAlso won in 1950[88]
Ephraim DonosoAlso won in 1952[89]
Roberto Eusebio Mancini[90]
Juan García RamosAlso won in 1948[91]
NeuroscienceMario Altamirano Orrego[92]
Molecular and Cellular BiologyDanko Brncic Juricic (es)Also won in 1969[93]
Francisco J. S. LaraAlso won in 1950[94]
NeuroscienceJosé Bebin BustamanteAlso won in 1950[95]
Organismic Biology and EcologyRaymond Millard Cable[96]
Plant ScienceDomingo Cozzo[97]
José CuatrecasasAlso won in 1950[98]
Luis Enrique Gregory[99]
Jorge León Arguedas (es)Also won in 1952[100]
Alicia LourteigAlso won in 1952[101]
Social SciencesAnthropology and Cultural StudiesRicardo AlegríaAlso won in 1953[102]
Pedro Carrasco Pizana[103]
Julio César Cubillos Chaparro (es)[104]
SociologyJosé Vicente Freitas Marcondes[105]

See also

References

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