Guy Sumner Lowman, Jr.
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Guy Somner Lowman, Jr. (born in Columbia, Missouri, 1909; died in 1941) was an American linguist who received a bachelor's degree from the University of Wisconsin-Madison in 1929 and a Ph.D. in Philosophy from the University of London in 1931. From 1931 to 1933 he was a Sterling Fellow at Yale University. He worked as chief field investigator for the Linguistic Atlas of the United States and Canada from 1931 to 1941, interviewing more than a thousand informants along the eastern seaboard of the United States and Canada. He also conducted field interviews in Southern England to find correspondences in English and American dialects. He was a member of the Modern Language Association and served as chairman of the phonetics section.
After his death in 1941, the University of Wisconsin-Madison established the Guy S. Lowman Scholarship to further research in linguistics.
[edit] Literature
- Kurath, Hans, with Miles L. Hanley, Bernard Bloch, Guy S. Lowman Jr. and Marcus L. Hansen. 1939-1941. Linguistic Atlas of New England. 2 volumes, Providence, RI: Brown University. Reprint edition, 3 volumes, New York: AMS Press, 1972.
- Kurath, Hans and Guy S. Lowman, Jr. 1961. The Dialectal Structure of Southern England: Phonological Evidence. University, Alabama: University of Alabama Press.(= Publications of the American Dialect Society 54)
- Viereck, Wolfgang. 1975. Lexikalische und grammatische Ergebnisse des Lowman-Survey von Mittel- und Südengland. 2 volumes. München: Wilhelm Fink.
[edit] Sources
- Voices from the Days of Slavery - Interviewer Biographies (American Memory from the Library of Congress) [1]

