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Samuel Shellabarger
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{{short description|American novelist}} {{for|his grandfather, the American politician|Samuel Shellabarger (Ohio politician)}} '''Samuel Shellabarger''' (18 May 1888 β 21 March 1954) was an American educator and author of both scholarly works and best-selling [[historical novel]]s. Born 18 May 1888 in Washington, D.C., Shellabarger was orphaned in infancy, upon the death of both his father Robert and his mother Elizabeth, in January 1889. Samuel resultantly was raised in the household of his paternal grandfather also named [[Samuel Shellabarger (congressman)|Samuel Shellabarger]], a noted lawyer who had served in Congress during the [[American Civil War]] and as Minister to Portugal. The younger Samuel Shellabarger's travels with his grandfather would prove invaluable in the provision of background material for the former's historical novels. Shellabarger attended private schools and in 1909 graduated from [[Princeton University]], where he would later teach.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Grendler |first=Paul F. |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=4bLOEAAAQBAJ |title=The European Renaissance in American Life |date=2006-03-30 |publisher=Bloomsbury Publishing USA |isbn=978-0-313-03848-8 |pages=215 |language=en}}</ref> After studying for a year at [[Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich|Munich University]] in Germany, he resumed his studies at [[Harvard University]] and [[Yale University]]. Despite taking a year off to serve in [[World War I]], he received his doctorate in 1917. In 1915 he married Vivan Georgia Lovegrove Borg whom he had met the year before during a vacation in Sweden. They had four children, but the two boys died: one as an infant and the other serving in [[World War II]]. From 1938 to 1946 Samuel Shellabarger served as the head of [[Columbus School for Girls]] in Columbus, Ohio. Shellabarger himself died of a heart attack at his [[Princeton, New Jersey]] home on 21 March 1954. Having already published some scholarly works and not wanting to undermine their credibility by publishing fiction, Shellabarger used pen names for his first mysteries and romances: "John Esteven"<ref>{{Cite book |last=Whittington |first=Harry |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=R4h7vNQ1eQwC |title=Paperback Quarterly (Vol. 4 No. 2) Summer 1981 |date=2010-09-01 |publisher=Wildside Press LLC |isbn=978-1-4344-0627-9 |pages=30 |language=en}}</ref> and then "Peter Loring." He continued to write scholarly works and to teach, but his historical novels proved so popular that he soon started using his own name on them. Some of them were best-sellers and were made into movies.
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