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BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCH
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January 19, 2006
Harold L. "Hal" Mansfield was born in Fort Collins, Colorado. After he graduated from high school in
1949 and served in the U. S. Army from 1951 to 1954, he attended Colorado State University and graduated
in June of 1958 with a Bachelor of Science degree in psychology.
After working several years in the private and governmental sectors, he received a National Defense
Education Scholarship at the University of Denver, where he earned a master's degree in 1967. For five
years, he taught at Regis College (now university) in Denver. While at Regis, in addition to teaching
fulltime, he served as Acting Chair of the psychology department and Director of the Social Science
division.
He returned to fulltime student status at DU in 1972 and received his Ph.D. in general experimental
psychology from The University of Denver in 1974. He immediately accepted a faculty position at Fort
Lewis College in Durango, Colorado, a state-supported, four-year, liberal-arts-college, which - for
a time - was part of the Colorado State University system.

In 1993, he retired from Fort Lewis College, where he taught psychology, statistics and writing for
18 years. He was department chair and professor of psychology when he retired. He now holds the title
of professor emeritus from FLC. His wife of 37 years, Lorita Young Mansfield, died in 1993. His daughter,
Maura Ann (Misty), and her husband,
Peter T. (Toby) Peterson, live in Issaquah, Washington.
In addition to fiction writing, part of his retirement regimen includes researching, thinking about,
and writing about contemporary social, economic, political and energy issues. He was co-founder and
Chair of the San Juan Solar Energy Association in the late 1970s and early 1980s and served several
terms on the Colorado Solar Advisory Committee (a governor appointment position). During the 1980-81
academic year, while on leave from FLC, he served as Deputy Director of the American Section of the
International Solar Energy Society.

Some brief examples of his work are enclosed. A sample of his non-fiction work, "Manhunt," can be viewed
at: crimemagazine.com
After a lifetime in Colorado, including the past thirty-one years in Durango, Colorado, he moved to
Green Valley, Arizona in September of 2005. He recently finished a politically oriented short story
("How Laura Bush Became President") and a farce ("A Death Prophecy") which can be found from links on
the Adult Fiction page.
Photo Note: Both are pictures of Engineer Mountain about one half hour north of Durango. The first is
from the highway near Coal Bank pass, obviously in the fall, while the second is from a trail just northeast
of the peak in late summer, just a bit after peak wildflower season.