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American anthropologist (1924–2014) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Alan R. Woolworth (August 19, 1924 – August 13, 2014) was an American archaeologist known for his career at the Minnesota Historical Society.[1] Most of his career focused on the Indigenous peoples in Nebraska, North Dakota, South Dakota, and Minnesota.[2]
Alan R. Woolworth was born on August 19, 1924, in Clear Lake, South Dakota, where he was raised.[3] At 19, he enlisted in the army. He served in the 70th Infantry Division and was stationed in France and Germany where he was wounded. He later served in Czechoslovakia.[2] He received a Purple Heart with an oak leaf cluster and a Bronze Star.[4]
Upon returning from Europe, he attended the University of Nebraska and the University of Minnesota to study archaeology.[2] He earned his bachelors degree in History and Anthropology at the University of Nebraska, and his masters at the University of Minnesota.[4]
Beginning in 1952, he served as the staff archeologist at the State Historical Society of North Dakota for five years.[2] He later worked as a curator in the Dearborn Historical Museum in Michigan for three years.[2] He then spent several decades at the Minnesota Historical Society. Throughout his time there, he was museum curator, head of the Museum and Historic Sites department, chief archaeologist, and finally a research fellow.[2] A compiled collection of his papers can be found at the Minnesota Historical Society.[2]
Woolworth, along with his wife, Nancy, formed the Woolworth Research Associates.[2] He also helped start a publishing company called the Prairie Smoke Press.[4]
Alan R. Woolworth passed away on August 13, 2014, shortly before his 90th birthday, in North Memorial Hospital in Minneapolis.[3] Woolworth left behind two daughters and four grandchildren.[4] He was known as a friend to the Sioux Community until his death.[3]
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