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Robert Hunter (author) : ウィキペディア英語版 | Robert Hunter (author)
Robert Hunter (April 10, 1874 – May 14, 1942) was an American sociologist, progressive author, and golf course architect. ==Early life and family==
Wiles〔''The Golf Course'', by Geoffrey Cornish and Ronald Whitten, 1981, Rutledge Press, New York, ISBN 0-8317-3947-9, p. 188〕 Robert Hunter was born on April 10, 1874 at Terre Haute, Indiana 〔("ROBERT HUNTER, 68, SOCIOLOGIST, DIES; Headed Group for Abolition of Child Labor Here Author of Social Economy Works" ) obituary in ''The New York Times'' May 17, 1942〕〔U.S. Passport Application -18 May 1906〕 the middle of five children born over thirteen years 〔1880 US Census Records〕 to William Robert and Caroline “Callie” (née Fouts) Hunter.〔〔 Hunter’s father was a native of Tennessee, and a veteran of the American Civil War, having served as a colonel with the Illinois 21st Infantry.〔Indiana Historical Society〕 At war’s end William Hunter relocated to Terre Haute where he married 〔Indiana Marriage Collection, 1800-1941〕 and became a manufacturer of horse-drawn carriages and buggies in partnership with his father-in-law, Andrew B. Fouts. Robert Hunter's maternal second great-grandfather was Samuel Hawkins, an American Revolutionary War veteran who had served with General George Rogers Clark at the Battle of Vincennes.〔Greater Terre Haute and Vigo County: Closing the First Century's Charles Cochran Oakey – 1908〕 During the 1884 presidential race New York Governor Grover Cleveland made a campaign stop at Terre Haute, where William Hunter had been put in charge of the local reception committee. As a result, his ten-year-old son was given the honor of shaking the candidate’s hand after riding a white pony at the head of a parade greeting the Democratic nominee to their city.〔
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