Frederick Morgan Padelford (1875–1942), pronounced Pa-DEL-ford, was an American professor and author. He worked at the University of Washington in Seattle for 41 years. He chaired the English Department and served as dean of the graduate school.[1][2] The Orbis Cascade Alliance has a collection of his papers.[3]
He was a Spenserian scholar.[1] A review of one of his works described him as writing with great spirit and mastery of evidence.[4]
He married Jessie Elizabeth (Bessie) Pepper (1874–1967). Her father was President of Colby College. Their children were Morgan, Charlie, Eunice, and Philip Sidney Padelford (June 8, 1912 – October 12, 2009).[5]
Padelford Hall, a building on the University of Washington Seattle campus, was named in his honor.[6]
Select translations from Scaliger's Poetics by Frederick Morgan Padelford.
Samuel Osborne, janitor,[7] about "Janitor Sam" Osborne, an African American whose history and treatment at Colby College is controversial and for whom the president's house at Colby is now named.[8]
The comedy of errors, by William Shakespeare, ed. by Frederick Morgan Padelford, New York, Macmillan, 1912