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         Dobie J Frank:     more detail
  1. ROMONA. A Story by Helen Hunt Jackson. With an Introduction by J. Frank Dobie. by Helen Hunt [1830 - 1885]. Dobie, J. Frank [1888 - 1964]. Jackson, 1959-01-01
  2. The WRITINGS Of J. FRANK DOBIE. A Bibliography. Introduction by Harry H. Ransom. by J. Frank. 1888 - 1964]. McVicker, Mary Louise. [Dobie, 1968-01-01
  3. The FLAVOR Of TEXAS. by J. Frank [1888 - 1964]. Dobie, 1936
  4. Out Of The Rock, a Gallery of Uncommon Personalities...... by J. Frank (1888-1964) Dobie, 1972
  5. Biography - Dobie, J(ames) Frank (1888-1964): An article from: Contemporary Authors by Gale Reference Team, 2002-01-01
  6. The Connally-Dobie gift;: Materials by and relating to J. Frank Dobie, 1888-1964 by J. Frank Dobie, 1974
  7. CORONADO`S CHILDREN by J. Frank (James Frank) (1888-1964) Dobie, 1931-01-01
  8. Coronadoïÿýs children; tales of lost mines and buried treasures of the Southwest, by J. Frank Dobie ... illustrated by Ben Carlton Mead by J. Frank (James Frank) (1888-1964) Dobie, 1931-01-01
  9. Three Friends: Roy Bedichek, J. Frank Dobie, Walter Prescott Webb by William A. Owens, 1975
  10. An American Original: The Life of J. Frank Dobie by Lon Tinkle, 1984-02
  11. The Mustang Professor: The Story of J. Frank Dobie by Mark Mitchell, 1992-11
  12. A dedication to the memory of James Frank Dobie, 1888-1964 by Jeff Dykes, 1966
  13. A Texan in England by James Frank Dobie, 1980-12
  14. Three Men in Texas: Bedichek, Webb, and Dobie: Essays by Their Friends in the Texas Observer

1. DOBIE, JAMES FRANK (1888-1964)
Biography and bibliography of the author.Category Regional North America Authors Dobie, J. Frank...... Dobie, JAMES Frank (18881964). J. Frank Dobie, folklorist, was born on a ranch inLive Oak County, Texas, on September 26, 1888, the eldest of six children of
http://www.rra.dst.tx.us/c_t/people/jfDOBIE.cfm
Home About RRA RRA Activities Information Repository ... Search Link to Southwestern Classics On-Line “ Guide to Life and Literature of the Southwest ” by J.F. Dobie The writings of J. Frank Dobie From "A Literary History of the American West" DOBIE, JAMES FRANK (1888-1964). J. Frank Dobie, folklorist, was born on a ranch in Live Oak County, Texas, on September 26, 1888, the eldest of six children of Richard J. and Ella (Byler) Dobie. His ranching heritage became an early influence on his character and personality. His fundamentalist father read the Bible to Frank and the other five children, and his mother read them Ivanhoe and introduced them to The Scottish Chiefs Pilgrim's Progress , and Swiss Family Robinson . He left the ranch when he was sixteen and moved to Alice, where he lived with his Dubose grandparents and finished high school. In 1906 he enrolled in Southwestern University in Georgetown, where he met Bertha McKee, whom he married in 1916, and Professor Albert Shipp Pegues, his English teacher, who introduced him to English poetry, particularly the Romantics, and encouraged him as a writer. Dobie's education as a teacher and writer continued after graduation in 1910. He worked two summers as a reporter, first for the San Antonio Express and then the Galveston Tribune . He got his first teaching job in 1910 in Alpine, where he was also the principal, play director, and editor of the school paper. He returned to Georgetown in 1911 and taught in the Southwestern University preparatory school until 1913, when he went to Columbia to work on his master's degree. With his new M.A. he joined the University of Texas faculty in 1914. At this time he also joined the

2. J. Frank Dobie
J. Frank Dobie. (18881964). Papers 1890s-1975
http://www.library.swt.edu/swwc/archives/writers/dobie.html
J. Frank Dobie
Papers: 1890s-1975
(Bulk dates: 1914-1964) Acquisition: Donated since 1988 by Bill and Sally Wittliff. Access: Direct inquires to Connie Todd, Curator, Southwestern Writers Collection, Southwest Texas State University, San Marcos, Texas, 78666-4604. Processed by: Gwynedd Cannan, May, 1994. photograph of J. Frank Dobie by Russell Lee
Biography
J. Frank Dobie, teacher, storyteller, folklorist, historian, and author, was born September 18, 1888, on a ranch in the South Texas brush country of Live Oak County. Raised in the toughening, physically bracing traditions of a remote ranching region, Dobie nonetheless developed an early love for language and literature. His mother encouraged reading, providing her children with mail-ordered books, and his father developed the boy's narrative sense with nightly readings of the King James version of the bible. Dobie's mother saw to it that he and his siblings were sent away to relatives in the small town of Alice so that they could obtain the requisite schooling to pursue higher education. Dobie received his BA from Southwestern University in Georgetown, Texas. There, under the influence of Professor Albert Shipp Pegues, he became enthralled by the English romantic poets. There too he met the poetry-loving Bertha McKee, who would become his wife, lifelong companion, adviser, booster and critic. After Dobie received his degree in 1910, he taught at a high school in Alpine, Texas, and worked summers as a newspaper reporter. Deciding he wished to teach poetry at a more advanced level than high school, Dobie pursued a Masters at Columbia University. He later admitted to being only a lackluster student who learned more from New York and the New York theater than he did from the university.

3. Alvin Ailey
Biography of dancer, choreographer and founder of the world famous Alvin Ailey Dance Theater. J.Frank Dobie, (18881964) folklorist, was born on a ranch in Live Oak County, Texas, on September 26, 1888, the eldest of six children of Richard J.
http://www.famoustexans.com/dobie.htm
Home Stage/Screen Music Sports ... Journalism J.
He spent World War II teaching American literature in Cambridge. After the war he returned to Europe to teach in England, Germany, and Austria. He said of his Cambridge experience in "A Texan in England" that it gave him a broader perspective, that it was his beginning of his acceptance of civilization, an enlightened civilization free of social and political rigidities and with full respect for individuality. In Texas the University of Texas regents, critical of the university's liberal professors, had fired President Homer P. Rainey in November 1944. Dobie, a liberal Democrat, was outraged and vociferous, and Governor Coke Stevensonqv said that he was a troublemaker and should be summarily dismissed. Dobie's request for a continuation of his leave of absence after his European tour in 1947 was denied by the regents, and he was dismissed from the UT faculty under what became known as the "Dobie rule," which restricted faculty leaves of absence to two years except in emergencies.
Dobie died on September 18, 1964. He had been feted by the Southwestern Writers and the Texas Folklore Society. Special editions of the Texas Observer and the Austin American-Statesmanq had been devoted to his praise by his many admirers, and President Lyndon B. Johnsonqv awarded him the nation's highest civil award, the Medal of Freedom, on September 14, 1964. His funeral was held in Hogg Auditorium on the UT campus, and he was buried in the State Cemetery.

4. Life And Literature In The Southwest
1946(1946) QL 666 O6 D593 HRC Dobie. Dobie, J. Frank (James Frank), 18881964. / The first cattle in Texas and the
http://users.erols.com/hardeman/lonestar/olbooks/dobie/dobie.htm
Southwestern Classics On-Line Lone Star Junction
Guide to

Life and Literature
of the
Southwest

By J. Frank Dobie
Introduction to Online Edition J. Frank Dobie (1888-1964) was already widely known as a Texas author and folklorist when he first published his Guide to Life and Literature of the Southwest in 1943. The Guide evolved from notes Dobie had collected and revised over the previous dozen or so years. It served as the basis for a class which he then taught at the University of Texas in Austin. It was further refined and significantly expanded for republication in 1952. The text for the online edition which follows is derived from the 1952 version of Dobie's work. The Guide , as Dobie was the first to point out, is "fragmentary, incomplete, and in no sense a [comprehensive] bibliography" of Southwestern culture. Rather, it is a commentary and listing of a miscellany of writings on the Southwest that Dobie considered "good reading." The Guide's purpose, according to Dobie, was primarily: to help people of the Southwest learn more of the land to which they belong, to make their past more alive, to bring them to a realization of the values of their own cultural inheritance, and to stimulate them to observe. By nature, any such work becomes dated, as many new titles are added which often provide deeper insight into new aspects of Southwestern history and culture. Nevertheless, Dobie's

5. DOBIE, JAMES FRANK (1888-1964)
Dobie, JAMES Frank (18881964). J. Frank Dobie, folklorist, was born on a ranch in Live Oak County, Texas, on September 26, 1888, the eldest of six children of Richard J. and Ella (Byler) Dobie.
http://www.rra.dst.tx.us/c_t/people/J_frank_dobie.cfm
Home About RRA RRA Activities Information Repository ... Search Link to Southwestern Classics On-Line “ Guide to Life and Literature of the Southwest ” by J.F. Dobie The writings of J. Frank Dobie From "A Literary History of the American West" DOBIE, JAMES FRANK (1888-1964). J. Frank Dobie, folklorist, was born on a ranch in Live Oak County, Texas, on September 26, 1888, the eldest of six children of Richard J. and Ella (Byler) Dobie. His ranching heritage became an early influence on his character and personality. His fundamentalist father read the Bible to Frank and the other five children, and his mother read them Ivanhoe and introduced them to The Scottish Chiefs Pilgrim's Progress , and Swiss Family Robinson . He left the ranch when he was sixteen and moved to Alice, where he lived with his Dubose grandparents and finished high school. In 1906 he enrolled in Southwestern University in Georgetown, where he met Bertha McKee, whom he married in 1916, and Professor Albert Shipp Pegues, his English teacher, who introduced him to English poetry, particularly the Romantics, and encouraged him as a writer. Dobie's education as a teacher and writer continued after graduation in 1910. He worked two summers as a reporter, first for the San Antonio Express and then the Galveston Tribune . He got his first teaching job in 1910 in Alpine, where he was also the principal, play director, and editor of the school paper. He returned to Georgetown in 1911 and taught in the Southwestern University preparatory school until 1913, when he went to Columbia to work on his master's degree. With his new M.A. he joined the University of Texas faculty in 1914. At this time he also joined the

6. PROJECT GUTENBERG - Catalog By Author - Dobie, J. Frank [James
Etexts by Author Dobie, J. Frank James Frank, 18881964 D Index Main Index Guide to Life and Literature of the Southwest
http://www.informika.ru/text/books/gutenb/gutind/TEMP/dobie_j_frank_james_frank_

7. Handbook Of Texas Online: DOBIE, JAMES FRANK
Dobie, JAMES Frank (18881964). J. Frank Dobie, folklorist, was born on a ranch in Live Oak County, Texas, on September 26, 1888, the eldest of six children of Richard J. and Ella (Byler) Dobie.
http://www.tsha.utexas.edu/handbook/online/articles/view/DD/fdo2.html
format this article to print
DOBIE, JAMES FRANK (1888-1964). J. Frank Dobie, folklorist, was born on a ranch in Live Oak County, Texas, on September 26, 1888, the eldest of six children of Richard J. and Ella (Byler) Dobie. His ranching heritage became an early influence on his character and personality. His fundamentalist father read the Bible to Frank and the other five children, and his mother read them Ivanhoe and introduced them to The Scottish Chiefs Pilgrim's Progress , and Swiss Family Robinson . He left the ranch when he was sixteen and moved to Alice, where he lived with his Dubose grandparents and finished high school. In 1906 he enrolled in Southwestern University in Georgetown, where he met Bertha McKee, whom he married in 1916, and Professor Albert Shipp Pegues, his English teacher, who introduced him to English poetry, particularly the Romantics, and encouraged him as a writer. Dobie's education as a teacher and writer continued after graduation in 1910. He worked two summers as a reporter, first for the San Antonio Express and then the Galveston Tribune . He got his first teaching job in 1910 in Alpine, where he was also the principal, play director, and editor of the school paper. He returned to Georgetown in 1911 and taught in the Southwestern University preparatory school until 1913, when he went to Columbia to work on his master's degree. With his new M.A. he joined the University of Texas faculty in 1914. At this time he also joined the Texas Folklore Society.

8. Browse Top Level > Texts > Project Gutenberg > Subject > Library Science
Author Dobie, J. Frank (James Frank), 18881964 Keywords Authors D Dobie,J. Frank (James Frank), 1888-1964; Titles G ; Subject Library Science.
http://www.archive.org/texts/textslisting-browse.php?collection=gutenberg&cat=Su

9. Browse Top Level > Texts > Project Gutenberg > Authors > D
Dixon, Thomas; Dobie, J. Frank (James Frank), 18881964; Dodge, MaryMapes, 1830-1905; Donn-Byrne, Brian Oswald 1889-1928; Donnell, Annie
http://www.archive.org/texts/textslisting-browse.php?collection=gutenberg&cat=Au

10. ClassZone: Language Of Literature Authors
J. Frank Dobie. 18881964. "One day it came to me that I would collect and tell the legendary tales of Texas
http://www.classzone.com/lol_demo/authors/07/7dobie.htm
J. Frank Dobie
"One day it came to me that I would collect and tell the legendary tales of Texas ..."
Texan by Birth
J[ames] Frank Dobie was born in on a ranch in Live Oak County, Texas and lived in his native state most of his life. In college, Dobie planned to study law but instead developed a passion for literature and the classics. Dobie was in his forties when his first major novel, A Vaquero of the Brush Country, was published in 1929. His second work, Coronado's Children, gained him popular attention.
Texan By Choice
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11. Tales Of Old-time Texas (in MARION)
Author Dobie, J. Frank (James Frank), 18881964. Published
http://gcl.greenville.lib.sc.us/MARION/AAV-4302
Tales of old-time Texas
Title:
Author:
Published:
  • Boston, Little, Brown, c1955.
Edition:
  • 1st ed.
Subject:
Material:
  • 336 p. ; ill. ; 22 cm.
Note:
  • Includes bibliographies and index.
ISBN:
  • System ID no:
    • AAV-4302
    Holdings:
    Greenville Main Library
    • CALL NUMBER: 398.2 Dobie BOOKS Available
  • 12. Cowboys & Cowgirls: A Select Bibliography
    Dobie, J. Frank (18881964). THE LONGHORNS (Grosset Dunlap, c1941). Dobie,J. Frank, ed. MUSTANGS AND COW HORSES (Texas Folk-Lore Society, 1940).
    http://www.geocities.com/Athens/Forum/3807/features/cowboys.html
    Neander97 / Historical Trivia: Select readings on the heros and heroines of the Old Westthose pargons of Americanacowboys, cowgirls, their horses, cattle, livestock; and ranches, ranching cattle drives and much more.
    A Select Bibliography Abbott, E. C. (1860-1939). WE POINTED THEM NORTH; RECOLLECTIONS OF A COWPUNCHER Adams, Andy (1859-1935). THE LOG OF A COWBOY: A NARRATIVE OF THE OLD TRAIL DAYS (Houghton Mifflin Co., 1903). Adams, Andy. TRAIL DRIVE: A TRUE NARRATIVE OF COWBOY LIFE FROM ANDY ADAMS' LOG OF A COWBOY (Holiday House, 1965). Adams, Ramon F. (1889-1976). THE BEST OF THE AMERICAN COWBOY (University of Oklahoma Press, 1957). Adams, Ramon F. (Encino Press, 1969). Adams, Ramon F. (Encino Press, 1971). Adams, Ramon F. THE BEST OF THE AMERICAN COWBOY (University of Oklahoma Press, 1957). Adams, Ramon F. COME AN' GET IT; THE STORY OF THE OLD COWBOY COOK (University of Oklahoma Press, 1952). Adams, Ramon F. WESTERN WORDS; A DICTIONARY OF THE RANGE, COW CAMP AND TRAIL (University of Oklahoma Press, 1944). Allen, Jules Verne (1883-1944).

    13. LEGENDS SOUTHWEST NEW (in MARION)
    Dobie, J. Frank (James Frank), 18881964. Apache gold Yaqui silver, byJ. Frank Dobie; illustrated by Tom Lea. Boston, Little, Brown, 1939.
    http://vax.vmi.edu/MARION?S=LEGENDS SOUTHWEST NEW

    14. Life And Literature In The Southwest
    J. Frank Dobie (18881964) was already widely known as a Texas author and folkloristwhen he first published his Guide to Life and Literature of the Southwest
    http://site17585.dellhost.com/lsj/olbooks/dobie/dobie.htm
    Southwestern Classics On-Line Lone Star Junction
    Guide to

    Life and Literature
    of the
    Southwest

    By J. Frank Dobie
    Introduction to Online Edition J. Frank Dobie (1888-1964) was already widely known as a Texas author and folklorist when he first published his Guide to Life and Literature of the Southwest in 1943. The Guide evolved from notes Dobie had collected and revised over the previous dozen or so years. It served as the basis for a class which he then taught at the University of Texas in Austin. It was further refined and significantly expanded for republication in 1952. The text for the online edition which follows is derived from the 1952 version of Dobie's work. The Guide , as Dobie was the first to point out, is "fragmentary, incomplete, and in no sense a [comprehensive] bibliography" of Southwestern culture. Rather, it is a commentary and listing of a miscellany of writings on the Southwest that Dobie considered "good reading." The Guide's purpose, according to Dobie, was primarily: to help people of the Southwest learn more of the land to which they belong, to make their past more alive, to bring them to a realization of the values of their own cultural inheritance, and to stimulate them to observe. By nature, any such work becomes dated, as many new titles are added which often provide deeper insight into new aspects of Southwestern history and culture. Nevertheless, Dobie's

    15. Texana Book Reviews (March 1998)
    writer and one of the bestknown Texans, for that matter was J. Frank Dobie.Of course, this storyteller was actually James Frank Dobie (1888-1964).
    http://site17585.dellhost.com/lsj/cox/cox98/cox98mar.htm
    Texana Book Reviews March 1998
    (by Mike Cox)
    Mier Expedition: A Definitive History
    (March 27, 1998) At daybreak on Sunday, Nov. 10, 1843, the steamship New York hove within sight of Texas. Joseph D. McCutchan and 76 other survivors of what has become known as the Mier Expedition an unauthorized Texas invasion of Mexico in 1842 that ended in imprisonment and death for many stood on deck as the vessel made for the wharf at Galveston. "With proud anticipation we reach the Wharf not a shout not a hurra not a sound of wellcome, went up towards Heaven," McCutchan later wrote in his not always correctly spelled diary. "No friendly hand was stretched out to congratulate us, save those who had, perhaps, a personal friend, or relative among!" This survivor's description is from what should be considered the definitive history of this lessor-known aspect of Texas history, Joseph Milton Nance's "Dare-Devils All: Texas Mier Expedition." Published by Eakin Press, the 560-page hardcover sells for $59.95. The Mier Expedition had its genesis with Texas' response to a Mexican attack on San Antonio in 1842. A force of 750 Texas soldiers marched to the Rio Grande and captured Laredo (at that time only a city on the Mexican side of the Rio Grande) and then moved downriver to Guerro, which they also took. But the leader of the Texans, Gen. Alexander Somervell, decided it was not prudent to stay in Mexico. The general and more than half of his men went back to Texas.

    16. Records For Ranch Life. (LC) (in MARION)
    Dobie, J. Frank (James Frank), 18881964. Cow people by J. Frank Dobie.Boston, Little, Brown 1964. Dobie, J. Frank (James Frank), 1888-1964.
    http://vax1.memphis.lib.tn.us/MARION/@RANCH LIFE/9d2f6000c000/0
    Ranch life. (LC)
    Records 1 to 15 of 28

    17. Records For Cowboys. (LC) (in MARION)
    Dobie, J. Frank (James Frank), 18881964. Dobie, J. Frank (James Frank), 1888-1964.Southwestern lore. Hatboro, Pa., Folklore Associates, 1965 c1931.
    http://vax1.memphis.lib.tn.us/MARION/@COWBOYS/ffa020001100/0
    Cowboys. (LC)
    Records 1 to 15 of 39

    18. Project Gutenberg Author Record
    Project Gutenberg Author record. Dobie, J. Frank (James Frank), 18881964. Titles.Guide To Life And Literature Of The Southwest, With A Few Observations.
    http://www.ibiblio.org/gutenberg/authors/dobie__j._frank__james_fr.html
    Project Gutenberg Author record
    Dobie, J. Frank (James Frank), 1888-1964
    Titles
    Guide To Life And Literature Of The Southwest, With A Few Observations
    To the main listings page
    Main Project Gutenberg Web page (online)

    19. Project Gutenberg Author Index
    Dixon, Thomas. Dobie, J. Frank (James Frank), 18881964. Dobson, Austin, 1840-1921.Dodge, Mary Mapes, 1830-1905. Donn-Byrne, Brian Oswald 1889-1928.
    http://www.ibiblio.org/gutenberg/authors/author_index_D.html
    Project Gutenberg
    Author Index "D"
    Dana, Marvin, 1867- Dana, Richard Henry, 1815-1882 Dante Alighieri, 1265-1321 Danton, Georges Jacques, 1759-1794 ... Dyer, Frank Lewis, 1870-1941
    To the main listings page
    Main Project Gutenberg Web page (online)

    20. Txfolk
    Legends Texas. .L42 1981 NRG, RGC 15.) GR AUTHOR Dobie, J. Frank (James Frank),18881964. 110 TITLE Legends of Texas / edited by J. Frank Dobie.
    http://www2.austin.cc.tx.us/pgoines/txfolk.html
    Texas Folklore Titles 1. The American cowboy : an exhibition at the Library of Congress
    2. Border healing woman : the story of Jewel Babb
    3. Built in Texas
    4. Dancing with the devil : society and cultural poetics in Mexican- American south Texas
    5. Dog ghosts, and other Texas Negro folk tales ; The word on the Brazos : Negro preacher tales from the Brazos bottoms of Texas
    6. Folklore and culture on the Texas-Mexican border
    7. The Folklore of Texan cultures
    8. The Guadalupe Mountains : island in the desert
    9. The Healer of Los Olmos, and other Mexican lore
    10. Hecho en Tejas : Texas-Mexican folk arts and crafts
    11. Hoein' the short rows / 12. Inherit the Alamo : myth and ritual at an American shrine 13. Juneteenth Texas : essays in African-American folklore 14. Legendary ladies of Texas 15. Legends of Texas 16. Living on the edge : collected essays on coastal Texas 17. The Loblolly book : water witching, wild hog hunting, home remedies, grandma's moral tales, and other affairs of plain Texas living 18. Man, bird, and beast 21. Stories that must not die

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