Štěpánek, Olga Folda, 1906-1998.
Name Entries
person
Štěpánek, Olga Folda, 1906-1998.
Name Components
Name :
Štěpánek, Olga Folda, 1906-1998.
Stepanek, Olga Folda, 1906-1998
Name Components
Name :
Stepanek, Olga Folda, 1906-1998
Genders
Exist Dates
Biographical History
Olga Folda Stepanek was born in 1906 in Linwood, Nebraska, and lived in Clarkson, NE, until she left to attend Downer College in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. She graduated in 1927 and spent the following year living with her parents in Prague, Czechoslovakia. She took two trips abroad, and traveled throughout Europe. She spent a year teaching high school in Illinois before completing a Master's in English from the University of Chicago. Following her graduation in 1930, she married Orin Stepanek, Professor of English and Slavonic languages at the University of Nebraska, Lincoln (UNL).
The Stepaneks had four daughters, Olenka (Lennie), Natasha (Tasha), Teresa (Tessie), and Antonia (Toni). Olga worked at home as a mother. She kept journals, remained a prolific letter writer, and wrote several short stories, including 'The Dowry' which appeared in "Prairie Schooner" in 1933, and 'Towers,' published in "American Czech Magazine." After Orin Stepanek's death in 1955, Olga Stepanek joined the faculty at UNL in the English department, and established the English as a Second Language Program. During the latter part
of her career, Olga Stepanek's creative interests turned towards visual arts, and in 1987 she won the first Lincoln-Lancaster Women's Commission 'Woman Artist Award for Visual Art.' Orin Stepanek was born in Crete, NE. After his education at the University of Nebraska and Harvard, he taught for several years, and then served in the U.S. Marine Corps during World War I. He then returned to Harvard, and from there he traveled to Prague, where he continued his studies and worked with the YMCA. In 1920 he returned to the University of Nebraska to teach literature and language, specializing in
comparative and Slavic literature. His publications include two Slavic grammars, articles on American literature and Czech culture, and a few original poems.
Olga Folda Stepanek was born in 1906 in Linwood, Nebraska, and lived in Clarkson, Nebraska, until she went to college in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. She graduated from Downer College in 1927 and spent the following year living with her parents in Prague, Czechoslovakia. She took two trips abroad and traveled throughout Europe, visiting Scotland, England, Belgium, Germany, Switzerland, and Italy. She spent a year teaching high school in Lena, Illinois, before completing a Master's in English from the University of Chicago.
Following her graduation in December of 1930, she married Orin Stepanek, Professor of English and Slavonic Languages at University of Nebraska-Lincoln. The Stepaneks had four daughters: Olenka Lennie, Natasha Tasha, Teresa Tessie, and Antonia Toni. Olga worked at home as a mother and maintained strong interests in reading and writing. She kept journals, remained a prolific letter writer, and wrote several short stories, including The Dowry, which appeared in a 1933 issue of Prairie Schooner, and Towers, which was published in American Czech Magazine.
After Orin's death in 1955, Olga joined the faculty at UNL in the Department of English and established the English as a Second Language program. During the latter part of her career, Olga's creative interests turned toward the visual arts, and in 1987 she won the first Lincoln-Lancaster Women's Commission Woman Artist Award for Visual Art. Olga died at age 91 in September 1998.
Orin Stepanek was born in 1888 in Crete, Nebraska. He received his undergraduate degree from the University of Nebraska in 1913 and went on to receive his Master's from Harvard in 1914. He taught at Michigan State College in 1914-1915 and then at a high school in St. Louis, Missouri, from 1915 until 1917. During WWI, Stepanek served in the U.S. Marine Corps and then returned to Harvard in 1918. The following year he went to Prague, Czechoslovakia, where he continued his studies and worked with the YMCA. In 1920 he came to the University of Nebraska to teach literature and language, specializing in comparative and Slavonic literature. Stepanek taught at UNL until his death in 1955. His publications include two Slavic Grammars, articles on American literature and Czech culture, and a few original poems.
eng
Latn
External Related CPF
Other Entity IDs (Same As)
Sources
Loading ...
Resource Relations
Loading ...
Internal CPF Relations
Loading ...
Languages Used
eng
Zyyy
cze
Zyyy
Subjects
Czech
Czechs
Nationalities
Activities
Occupations
Legal Statuses
Places
Nebraska
AssociatedPlace