Olmsted joined the faculty of UCLA in 1928 as an assistant professor of history[10][11] and was promoted to full professor in 1951.[12] From 1939 to 1945, Olmsted served as the faculty representative to the Pacific Coast Athletic Conference, acting as president of the conference in 1946. Olmsted also served as assistant to UCLA's Dean of Letters and Sciences, Gordon S. Watkins. When the University of California, Riverside created its College of Letters and Science in 1953, Olmsted was appointed by Watkins (UCR's first provost) as both a professor of history, the chairman of the humanities division, and the college's first faculty member.[13][14][15] Olmsted was involved in many extracurricular activities. He was a member of the Pacific Coast Committee for the Humanities. He was a charter member of the Los Angeles chapter of Sigma Xi[16] and he established the chapter of Phi Beta Kappa at UCR. Olmsted retired from teaching in 1970.[3] Circa 2004 a new humanities building on the UCR campus, Olmsted Hall, was named in his honor.[17]
Publications
Jean Picard et les débuts de l'astronomie de précision au XVIIe siècle: actes du colloque du tricentenaire (in French). Paris: Ed. du Centre national de la recherche scientifique. 1987. ISBN9782222041047.[18]
Notes
^As of 2014, Olmsted is one of only 11 UCLA students to become a Rhodes scholar.[6]
^Cook, Howard S. (April 1953). "The Riverside Campus". California Monthly. University of California.
^ abcF.M. Carney; N. Ravitch; L.M. Van Deusen; R.V. Hine (1986). Krogh, David (ed.). "John W. Olmsted, History: Riverside". University of California: In Memoriam: 225–227. Archived from the original on 2015-10-18.