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Wilfred Byron Shaw

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Template:Short description Template:Use mdy dates Wilfred Byron Shaw (1881–1959) was an American writer and sketch artist.

Early life

He was born in 1881 in Adrian, Michigan,[1] to Byron L. Shaw (1843–1933) and Olive Stockwell (1842–1919).[2]

His father's brother was the farmer and artist Horatio Shaw.[3]

Education

Shaw graduated from the University of Michigan in 1904.[1] He also attended art school in Chicago.[4]

Career

University administration

Soon after graduation, he was named the general secretary of the Alumni Association (a job he held until 1929)[1][5] and editor of the Michigan Alumnus.[1] In 1909, he accompanied President Harry Burns Hutchins (and other UM employees) on a trip to Chicago, Des Moines, and Omaha, to meet with UM alumni.[5]

In 1912, he was part of the committee who approved maize and blue as official University of Michigan colors.[6]

In 1913, he helped to organize the Association of Alumni Secretaries.[5]

In 1929, he was appointed director of alumni relations, a position that the Regents established for continuing education and other services to graduates. He retired from this position in 1951.[1]

Art

Shaw was a sketch artist, often drawing university buildings for inclusion in The Ann Arbor News.[7][8] Sixteen of his drawings are owned by the University of Michigan Museum of Art.[9] His portrait of Fred Newton Scott is owned by the National Portrait Gallery.[10]

He was also known for drawing caricatures of his colleagues. These are currently in storage at the Bentley Historical Library.[11][12]

He also designed the logo for the University of Michigan's "atomic research center," the "Phoenix Project," in 1948.[13][14][15][16]

Writing

In 1918, Shaw published James Burrill Angell and the University of Michigan.[17]

In 1920, Harcourt, Brace, and Howe published his book The University of Michigan, about the history of the university.[18][19]

In 1934, Shaw founded and served as the first editor of the Michigan Alumnus Quarterly Review.[1][20][21]

In 1936, he published "A Bibliography of the University of Michigan."[22]

Personal life

He married Marion B. Dickinson (1883–1958), and they had two children, Brackley Shaw (1913–1996) and Penelope Shaw (1921–1996).[2]

References

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