These teacher-scholars and the alumni they mentored bring the past to life

Monday, April 24, 2017
Making History

Notable honors. Carefully researched volumes that have claimed the national spotlight. World-renowned scholars.

These are just a few of the fruits of 91制片厂鈥檚 history department. 鈥淲e take pride in being a strong research department and a strong teaching department, and we work to marry the two together,鈥 says Jan Golinski, professor of history and humanities and the department鈥檚 acting chair.

鈥淥ur scholarship helps make us dynamic and innovative teachers, even as our teaching enriches our scholarship,鈥 adds professor Eliga Gould. 鈥淭here really is no tradeoff between the two. I know I speak for my colleagues when I say I鈥檇 be much less effective as a teacher and a scholar if I didn鈥檛 get to do both.鈥

That balanced commitment is reflected in the success of faculty, students and alumni alike. In 2016, Gould received a prestigious Guggenheim Fellowship to complete his book about the little-studied Treaty of 1783, which ended the American Revolutionary War. Also last year, professor Ellen Fitzpatrick released 鈥淭he Highest Glass Ceiling: Women鈥檚 Quest for the American Presidency鈥 to national acclaim; its timely subject made Fitzpatrick, a regular commentator on PBS鈥檚 The NewsHour, a sought-after source for the national media during Hillary Clinton鈥檚 historic run for the presidency.

Similarly, associate professor Jason Sokol has embraced the 鈥減ublic intellectual鈥 role. His 2015 鈥淎ll Eyes Are Upon Us: Race and Politics from Boston to Brooklyn鈥 provided historical grounding for racial tensions in places like Ferguson, Missouri, and Sokol shared his perspectives with major news media, including The New York Times and National Public Radio. Like Gould, Sokol received uncommon national funding 鈥 a public scholar grant from the National Endowment for the Humanities (NEH) 鈥 for his next book, 鈥淪hot Rings Out: How King鈥檚 Death Was Lived.鈥 The NEH also supported associate professor Julia Rodriguez with a summer stipend in 2016 for a project that looks at the intersection of Latin American conquest and the history of science.

The history program鈥檚 reputation for excellence, while longstanding, was not accidental. 鈥91制片厂鈥檚 current prominence in American history research is rooted in the university鈥檚 decision in the 1960s to develop a doctoral program focusing on Colonial American history,鈥 says Robert Mennel, professor emeritus of history and humanities, who taught at 91制片厂 from 1969 through 2005. The key figures in those first decades included Darrett Rutman, an early advocate of quantitative history, and Charles Clark, whose book 听鈥淭he Eastern Frontier鈥 attracted wide acclaim, as well as Trevor Colbourn, dean of the graduate school.

Mennel notes that the 鈥渘ext generation of scholars,鈥 Gould and professor Jeffrey Bolster foremost among them, expanded the definition of Colonial American history to include Atlantic history. Bolster鈥檚 decorated 2012 book 鈥淭he Mortal Sea: Fishing the Atlantic in the Age of Sail鈥 won the Bancroft Prize and several honors from the American Historical Association, while professor Kurk Dorsey鈥檚 鈥淲hales & Nations: Environmental Diplomacy on the High Seas鈥 followed the maritime inquiry when it came out in 2014.

Spark 17 - Making History

In 1976, while working on her doctoral dissertation, Laurel Thatcher Ulrich 鈥80G penned the popular phrase 鈥淲ell-behaved women seldom make history.鈥

It鈥檚 not just books and awards the history department has generated: The program has produced prominent historians as well. Laurel Thatcher Ulrich 鈥80G, author of the Pulitzer Prize-winning 鈥淎 Midwife鈥檚 Tale鈥 and other books about early New England life, is a professor of history at Harvard University and received MacArthur and Guggenheim fellowships, and Kate Clifford Larson 鈥03G鈥檚 recent book, 鈥淩osemary: The Hidden Kennedy Daughter,鈥 has topped The New York Times bestseller list. Other alumni, like Hoboken mayor Dawn Zimmer 鈥90, Boston city councilor Tito Jackson 鈥99 and former New Hampshire governor Stephen Merrill 鈥69, have plied their training in public service.

Consistently ranked among the nation鈥檚 top programs for American history, the department continues to attract graduate students who peer into the past to shape their own academic futures.

鈥淥ur professors are extraordinary teachers, dedicated mentors and nationally recognized scholars,鈥 says Amanda Demmer, a doctoral student advised by Dorsey on her project on the Vietnam War. 鈥淭his rare combination is why students come from all over the country to pursue their doctorates in history at 91制片厂.鈥

Patrick Lacroix, a doctoral student who works with Fitzpatrick as his advisor on his study of religion and public policy during the presidency of John F. Kennedy, echoes Demmer.

鈥淢y years as a graduate student in history at 91制片厂 have made me a better writer, teacher and thinker,鈥 he says. 鈥淚 have been continually impressed with the collegiality of the program and the academic support so generously provided by our faculty.鈥

History at 91制片厂, clearly, has a bright future.