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175:, personally designing ballots and setting up polling places in remote areas. While traveling the world he continued to write and create a variety of types and kinds of art, along with his work as a diplomat and military delegate.
164:, Near East and Middle East. His association with the U.S. military was not a brief affair. He served as a Reserve officer for 34 years, attaining the rank of colonel. His knowledge of the Middle East was valuable during
468:"The French As Colonizers: North Africa The Field Of Their Most Successful Work - How They Have Civilized People And Enriched The Land While Building For Themselves A Commercial Empire"
635:
134:
around 1909. His article "The
Southernmost people of the world" came out of this trip. Even after the article was written he continued to travel and explore in South America.
360:"Hunting The Guanaco: Including An Explorer's Observations Of This Southernmost Big Game Animal Of The World During Expeditions Through Tierra-Del-Fuego And Patagonia"
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320:"Tripoli In Barbary: Including An Insight Into North Africa And The Sahara And A Brief Comment On The French Scheme Of Empire In Africa"
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295:"The Toll Of The Straits: Stories of Storms, Wrecks, And Castaway Crews In The Fuegian Archipelago And The Patagonian Channels"
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130:. This experience led to his writing of The Gateway to the Sahara in 1909. Harper's magazine funded him on a trip to
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His world travels led to a decline in his overall health, in order to get better he traveled to the
American West as
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493:β’ -- (August, 1918) "Climbing the Shoulders of Atlas," Harper's Monthly Magazine 819 (1918): 420-434.
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http://americanart.si.edu/search/search_artworks1.cfm?StartRow=1&ConID=1704&format=short
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for a brief time before he was reappointed as a
Military observer, intelligence officer in the
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72:(1874β1967) was an American explorer, writer, artist and photographer from Massachusetts.
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384:"Turcos And The Legion: The Spahis, The Zouaves, The Tirailleurs, And The Foreign Legion"
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for a year. Then in 1919 he was appointed as the
Special Military aide to President
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115:, 1910. In 1915 he was a member of an expedition to the West African islands for the
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in 1918. After the war, he was a Member of the
American Peace delegation in
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100:, Paris. He was the head of the Art Department at Cornell from 1896-1904.
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428:
Proceedings of the
Nineteenth International Congress of Americanists
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Proceedings of the
Nineteenth International Congress of Americanists
424:"The Alaculoofs And Yahgans, The World's Southernmost Inhabitants"
208:
The
Gateway To The Sahara: Observations And Experiences In Tripoli
521:"Register of the Charles Wellington Furlong Papers, 1917-1963"
388:
The World's Work, Second War Manual: The
Conduct of the War
404:"The Haush And Ona, Primitive Tribes Of Tierra Del Fuego"
197:
Let 'Er Buck, A Story Of The
Passing Of The Old West
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171:In 1925, he helped establish a voting system in
16:American artist, writer and explorer (1874β1967)
178:He died in 1967, leaving behind two children.
88:in 1895. From 1901-1902, he was a student at
8:
636:American alumni of the Γcole des Beaux-Arts
29:
18:
126:He was the first American to explore the
223:The vanishing people of the Land of Fire
547:"The "Kitty A" West African Expedition"
512:
641:Artists from Cambridge, Massachusetts
621:Writers from Cambridge, Massachusetts
117:Harvard Museum of Comparative Zoology
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230:The southernmost people of the world
211:. New York: Charles Scribner's Sons.
247:"Salam: The Story Of A Hausa Slave"
144:In 1914, he became a member of the
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579:Charles Wellington Furlong papers
545:Amory, Henry R. (June 21, 1916).
141:had done for his health earlier.
590:The Papers of Charles W. Furlong
200:. New York: G. P. Putnam's Sons.
325:The Journal of Race Development
86:Massachusetts Normal Art School
1:
592:at Dartmouth College Library
444:"The Epic Drama Of The West"
84:in 1874. He graduated from
581:at the University of Oregon
551:The Harvard Alumni Bulletin
271:"Cruising With The Yahgans"
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245:— (September 1906).
70:Charles Wellington Furlong
631:Harvard University alumni
626:Cornell University alumni
448:Harper's Monthly Magazine
422:— (December 1915).
402:— (December 1915).
28:
466:— (October 1917).
358:— (October 1912).
293:— (October 1911).
82:Cambridge, Massachusetts
45:Cambridge, Massachusetts
442:— (August 1916).
269:— (April 1911).
616:American male writers
317:— (July 1911).
98:Ecole des Beaux Arts
80:Furlong was born in
364:The Outing Magazine
299:The Outing Magazine
275:The Outing Magazine
251:Appleton's Magazine
216:Tripoli in Barbary
139:Theodore Roosevelt
23:Charles W. Furlong
585:Ask Art Biography
148:until the end of
128:Tripolitan Sahara
111:, 1907-1908; and
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105:North Africa
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611:1874 births
606:1967 deaths
454:(795): 368β
150:World War I
600:Categories
561:2009-08-16
531:2007-11-01
507:References
484:2009-08-16
458:2009-08-16
434:2009-08-16
414:2009-08-16
394:2009-08-16
374:2009-08-16
350:2009-08-16
309:2009-08-16
285:2009-08-16
261:2009-08-16
103:He was in
60:Occupation
557:: 708β710
430:: 420β431
410:: 432β444
370:(1): 3β20
305:(1): 3β22
281:(1): 3β17
146:U.S. Army
113:Venezuela
497:Artworks
345:29737893
238:Articles
63:Explorer
452:CXXXIII
390:: 35β37
162:Balkans
121:Kitty A
94:Harvard
90:Cornell
343:
218:(1911)
478:XXXIV
341:JSTOR
279:LVIII
187:Books
182:Works
119:(the
255:VIII
76:Life
55:1967
52:Died
41:1874
38:Born
368:LXI
333:doi
303:LIX
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