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Mark Twain Forum <[log in to unmask]>
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From:
Taylor Roberts <[log in to unmask]>
Date:
Thu, 21 Jan 2016 14:55:36 -0500
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Mark Twain Forum <[log in to unmask]>
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I am sorry to report that long-time MT Forum contributor Charles Boewe
died on January 1st. The following obituary is from
http://www.walkersfuneralservice.com/obituaries/Charles-Boewe

Charles Ernst Boewe, 91, was born March 11, 1924, in West Salem,
Illinois. He was the son of Fred and Susie (Walters) Boewe, of West
Salem. He died January 1, 2016, in Pittsboro, North Carolina, having
been a Pittsboro resident for over 20 years, first at Fearrington
Village and then at Twin Rivers.

Boewe is survived by Mary (Scurrah) Boewe, his wife of 65 years, also
a resident of Pittsboro; by daughters Abigail (Boewe) Burnett of
Kingston, Arkansas and Emily (Boewe) Oliver and husband Doug, of
Hopkinton, Massachusetts, and by grandchildren Charles Oliver and
Evelyn Oliver, also of Hopkinton. He was preceded in death by his
parents and his brother, John Boewe.

Charles Boewe graduated from high school in Albion, Illinois then
served in the U.S. Army during World War II as a medic in training.
Following the war he graduated from Syracuse University, in Syracuse,
New York and went on to receive graduate degrees, including a Ph.D. in
literature, from the University of Wisconsin, where he also taught.

From 1964 to 1980 he served as the Executive Secretary of the United
States Educational Foundation (the Fulbright Foundation) in Iran,
India and Pakistan. He was also a Fulbright scholar in Norway and
South India, and helped establish the American Studies Research Center
in Hyderabad, India.

Following his return to the United States Boewe was a scholar in
residence at Transylvania University, in Lexington, Kentucky, before
retiring to Louisville, Kentucky, then moving to Pittsboro in 1992. As
an independent scholar he published articles and books on a variety of
subjects, including Prairie Albion; An English Settlement in Pioneer
Illinois. His most notable research and publications concerned the
life, work and letters of early botanist C.S. Rafinesque, for which in
2014 the International Association for Plant Taxonomy awarded him its
Stafleu Medal. He also published a memoir about growing up in West
Salem, titled The Town on the Square; Portrait of a Vanished World
(2008) and was working on a memoir about his career in educational
exchange when he died.

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