Collier's New Encyclopedia (1921)/White, Stewart Edward

WHITE, STEWART EDWARD, an American author, born in Grand Rapids, Mich., in 1873. He was educated at the University of Michigan and at the Law School of Columbia University. He was a member of the American Institute of Arts and Letters and of the American Association for the Advancement of Science, and a fellow of the Royal Geographical Society of London. During the World War he served as a major with the 144th F. A. Besides contributing to many of the most prominent magazines, he wrote &ldquo;Westerners&rdquo; (1901); &ldquo;Claim Jumpers&rdquo; (1901); &ldquo;The Blazed Trail&rdquo; (1902); &ldquo;Conjuror's House&rdquo; (1903); &ldquo;The Forest&rdquo; (1903); &ldquo;The Magic Forest&rdquo; (1903); &ldquo;The Silent Places&rdquo; (1904); &ldquo;The Mountains&rdquo; (1904); &ldquo;Blazed Trail Stories&rdquo; (1904); &ldquo;The Pass&rdquo; (1906); &ldquo;The Mystery&rdquo; (with Samuel Hopkins Adams, 1907); &ldquo;Arizona Nights&rdquo; (1907); &ldquo;Camp and Trail&rdquo; (1907); &ldquo;The Riverman&rdquo; (1908); &ldquo;The Rules of the Game&rdquo; (1909); &ldquo;The Cabin&rdquo; (1910); &ldquo;The Adventures of Bobby Orde&rdquo; (1911); &ldquo;The Land of Footprints&rdquo; (1912); &ldquo;African Camp Fires&rdquo; (1913); &ldquo;Gold&rdquo; (1913); &ldquo;The Rediscovered Country&rdquo; (1915); &ldquo;The Gray Dawn&rdquo; (1915); &ldquo;The Leopard Woman&rdquo; (1916); &ldquo;Simba&rdquo; (1918); &ldquo;The Forty-Niners&rdquo; (1918).