Shipley was a student of
anthropologist and linguist
Alfred Kroeber, and linguist
Mary Haas at
UC Berkeley. During
World War II, he was part of a program to teach US Army soldiers to speak
Mandarin Chinese at Berkeley. Shipley began studying the Mountain Maidu language in 1953 with Maym Benner Gallagher, a Maidu elder. He continued to work with Kenneth Holbrook to continue to document and record the Maidu language. Their collaboration led to a book of Maidu texts and dictionary. as well as a
grammar of Maidu. Shipley taught as a professor of linguistics at
UC Santa Cruz from 1966 to 1991. After his retirement, he continued to work in spreading knowledge about the Maidu language and culture. His book of translated Maidu stories, ''The Maidu Indian Myths and Stories of Hánc'ibyjim'', was published by Heydey Books in 1991. He died of complications from
pneumonia on January 20, 2011. He was the father of screenwriter
Michael Shipley. ==References==