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Sharlot Hall Award Winner 1994
Doris K. Seibold recorded and preserved the folklore and traditions of southern Arizona's
multi-cultural border society. Dr. James S. Griffith, director of the Southwest
Folklore Center, noted that "anyone interested in the major legends, traditional
narratives, songs, and couplet verses of Southern Arizona needs to start with Doris'
work."
Born to an Arizona pioneering family, Doris grew up in the ranching world. She was
deeply interested in quarter horses, and made contributions to the breed's history and
development through research, writing and animal husbandry. Financing her college
education through the sale of her own calves, Doris graduated from Arizona State Teacher's
College at Flagstaff in 1934 with a degree in education, and with minors in history,
business and Spanish. She taught first in Patagoinia and then in Nogales, while
studying at the University of Arizona, earning her master's degree in 1946. Parts of
her thesis, "Localisms in the Spoken English of the Cattle Industry of Santa Cruz
County" were published in the Arizona Quarterly, a literary journal produced
by the University of Arizona before the 1950s. Other journals later carried
articles written by Doris, or based on material she collected.
Doris retired from teaching in the late 1970s, but remained active in her community and in
the education field for many years. In 1985, she was elected to the National Cowgirl
Hall of Fame as a Western Heritage Honoree, and in 1994, the Arizona Historical Society
commended her for her work in preserving Arizona history and culture.
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