Bradley, Zorro A., 1925-2010
Person
Dates
- Existence: 19251006-20100214
- Existence: 1944-1945
- Existence: 1950-1951
Biographical / Historical
His (Bradley's) student days at the University of New Mexico were interrupted by tours of duty with the U.S. Army in France in 1944 and '45, and again in Korea in 1950 and '51. As a combat infantry soldier he received the Combat Infantry Badge with Star, the Silver Star, Bronze Star, two Purple Hearts, three Presidential Unit Citations and the President of Korea Medal of Valor. www.legacy.com/obituaries/newsminer/obituary.aspx?pid=139792555 Mr. Bradley was one of the first National Park Service anthropologists to come to Alaska and help plan the new park areas. He ran the Cooperative Park Studies Unit in the 1970s and then worked for the State Department of Fish and Game, Subsistence Division. As a National Park Service anthropologist, he also was in on planning and facilitating the subsistence research which was used in formulating Title 8 of ANILCA. Bill Schneider worked for Zorro during this period on this and other issues. http://www.jukebox.uaf.edu/YUCH/htm/zbrad.htm
Found in 1 Collection or Record:
Report on Need for Salvage Excavation of Ruin Bc 236 (*sensitive), 1958
File — Box: 10
Identifier: Coll 0021/01-29
Scope and Content
From the Series:
RSU REPORTS, some annual reports Photographs of walls before and after stabilization and treatment forms documenting the type of stabilization performed were assembled on an annual basis and bound into Ruin Stabilization Report volumes by the project director. Depending on the amount of work documented, records from work at multiple sites might be bound in a single volume, or there might be multiple volumes for a single year, arranged by site.
Dates:
1958