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David Lowenthal

Birthdate:
Birthplace: New York, New York, United States
Death: September 14, 2018 (95)
London, Greater London, England, United Kingdom (frailty of ol age)
Immediate Family:

Son of Max Lowenthal and Eleanor Lowenthal
Husband of Private User
Father of Private and Private
Brother of John Lowenthal and Elizabeth "Betty" Levin

Occupation: American Historian & Geographer; professor emiritus University College London
Managed by: Randy Schoenberg
Last Updated:
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Immediate Family

About David Lowenthal

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/David_Lowenthal

https://www.theguardian.com/culture/2018/sep/27/david-lowenthal-obi...

Biography David Lowenthal was born on 26 April 1923 in New York City to Max Lowenthal and Eleanor Mack,[1] and is also the brother of John Lowenthal[2] and Betty Levin.

Lowenthal graduated from the Lincoln School in New York, which encouraged interdisciplinary investigation.[3] He went to Harvard University during WWII, studying across several disciplines but graduating with a B.S. in history in 1944. He returned to study for an M.A. in geography at the University of California, Berkeley, in 1950.[4] At Berkeley his research was on the Guianas, working with Carl Sauer. He earned his PhD in history from the University of Wisconsin–Madison, for a study of the life of George Perkins Marsh, an early geographer and conservationist.

Lowenthal was inducted into the U.S. Army Infantry in May 1943 and deployed in September 1944, three months after D-Day. He left active service with trench foot, and it was while recuperating in Somerset that his long association with England, later to become his adopted country, began. In December 1944, he was reassigned to Army Intelligence and embarked on a mission to count toilets in German castles to ascertain how well each might support the occupation forces. While taking part in the Intelligence Photographic Documentation Project, a never-completed mission was to survey and catalogue the whole of western Europe’s terrain and built environment, Lowenthal fell from his truck and fractured his wrist, resulted in being recalled to Washington in September 1945.

Career Lowenthal served as a research analyst in the U.S. Department of State from 1945 to 1946. From 1952 to 1956, he was an assistant professor of History at Vassar College. He then undertook several postings, between the USA, Caribbean and the UK. From 1956 to 1970 at the University of the West Indies in Jamaica, he was a history lecturer, research associate, and a consultant to the Vice Chancellor. From 1958 to 1972, he was also a research associate at the American Geographical Society. Between 1961 and 1972 he worked at the Institute of Race Relations in London. He was a professor of geography at University College London from 1972 to 1985 and remained an Emeritus professor there until his death.

Lowenthal died in London on 15 September 2018, having celebrated his 95th birthday with friends earlier in the year, in both London and San Francisco.[5]

He and his family lived in Harrow on the Hill in north-west London for many years, and after retirement, in California.

Contributions Lowenthal's doctoral work was on the 19th-century North American philologist, geographer and environmentalist George Perkins Marsh, whose work laid the foundations of the environmental conservation movement in the United States[6], led to his book George Perkins Marsh: versatile Vermonter (1958, revised 2003).

Other key texts of his in the field of historical geography include The Heritage Crusade and the Spoils of History (1996), and Passage du Temps sur le Paysage (2008).[7] Landscape photographs taken by Lowenthal in the 1950s were included in a French exhibition at Le Pavillon Populaire in Montpellier, France, from 8 February to 16 April 2017 and accompanying book Notes sur l'asphalte, une Amérique mobile et précaire, 1950-1990. His last book, Quest for the Unity of Knowledge, will be published posthumously.[5]

He was well known for his work on landscapes, and advised international heritage agencies and institutions, including UNESCO, the International Council on Monuments and Sites, the International Council of Museums, ICCROM, the Getty Conservation Institute, the World Monuments Fund, the Council of Europe, Europa Nostra, English Heritage, the U.S. National Trust for Historic Preservation, the National Trust of Australia, and the Norwegian Directorate for Cultural Heritage.[4]

His historical analysis of the ever-changing role of the past in shaping our lives, The Past is a Foreign Country (1985), is his best-known work, widely considered to be a classic text.[8][9] A new book, The Past Is a Foreign Country – Revisited, came out in 2015, for which he was honoured with a British Academy Medal in the same year.[10]

Lowenthal was also active in the Sark community, first visiting the island in the 1990s. He returned several times since 2010 while becoming involved in the Sark community's battle against constitutional reform preferential to the Barclay twins.

Recognition Lowenthal was awarded several medals by institutions around the world. These included:

The Victoria Medal of the Royal Geographical Society, awarded in 1997 "for conspicuous merit in research in geography".[11] The Cullum Geographical Medal of the American Geographical Society , awarded in 1999 for “geographical discoveries, or in the advancement of geographical science”.[12] The Scottish Geographical Medal of the Royal Scottish Geographical Society, awarded in 2004 for "conspicuous merit and a performance of world-wide repute".[13] In 2016 (at the age of 93) he received the British Academy Medal for The Past Is a Foreign Country—Revisited (Cambridge University Press, 2015). The medal honors "a landmark academic achievement which has transformed understanding in the humanities and social sciences" in a book that explores "the manifold ways in which history engages, illuminates and deceives us in the here and now".[14] Guggenheim Fellowship(1965).[15] Fellow of the British Academy (FBA) (2001),[7] Honorary Doctorate, Memorial University of Newfoundland (2008)[16] Forbes Lecture Prize from the International Institute for Conservation (2010).[4][17]

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David Lowenthal's Timeline

1923
April 26, 1923
New York, New York, United States
2018
September 14, 2018
Age 95
London, Greater London, England, United Kingdom