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Brison D. Gooch : ウィキペディア英語版
Brison D. Gooch

Brison Dowling Gooch (March 1, 1925 – November 25, 2014) was an American historian who was a professor emeritus of 19th-century European history at Texas A&M University in College Station, Texas (TAMU). He was an authority on the Revolutions of 1848, Napoleon III, Belgium, and the Crimean War.
==Background==
Gooch was one of six children to born to Austin McLellan Gooch, a carpenter, and the former Clara Helen Dowling, in Bar Harbor in Hancock County, Maine. In the United States Army,〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=Maine Genealogy: The Enlistment Record of Brison D. Gooch )〕 at the end of World War II, he served in Belgium and Germany. While in Germany, he attended the Nuremberg trials and heard discussions of German army atrocities in Russia. He received his Bachelor of Arts degree from Miami University in Oxford, Ohio. Prior to his tenure at TAMU, which included terms as the history chairperson and associate dean of Liberal Arts, Gooch taught at Culver Military Academy and was a history professor at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, the University of Oklahoma at Norman, and department head at the University of Connecticut at Storrs. In an academic career that spanned four decades, Gooch taught during summer sessions at the University of Nebraska at Lincoln, the University of Maine, and the University of Wisconsin at Madison, where he had received both his M.A. and Ph.D. degrees. He also was a Carnegie visiting scholar for a year at Yale and Fulbright Faculty Research scholar in Belgium. Gooch’s second wife, Shirley Jean Ferrell Black Gooch (April 20, 1935 – September 3, 1996), known professionally as Shirley J. Black, was also a TAMU professor of European history and highly active in the profession.〔

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