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Cornell University Department of History

Academic department at Cornell University


Academic department at Cornell University

FieldValue
logoCornell History logo.png
parentCollege of Arts and Sciences
chairpersonSandra Greene
locationMcGraw Hall, Ithaca, New York, U.S.
website

The Cornell University Department of History is an academic department in the College of Arts and Sciences at Cornell University that focuses on the study of history. Founded in 1868, it is one of Cornell's original departments and has been a center for the development of professional historical research institutions in the United States, including the American Historical Association and the American Historical Review. It remains a highly-ranked program in the field and its alumni and faculty have won Nobel and Pulitzer Prizes, among other distinctions. In addition, three of Cornell's presidents have served among its ranks.

History

The department was founded in 1868 by President Andrew Dickson White as one of Cornell's original departments as the Department of History and Political Science. White had already earned a reputation as an up-and-coming historian, having taught at the University of Michigan as a Professor of History and English Literature from 1857 to 1863 and as a Lecturer of History from 1863 to 1867, while serving as a New York State Senator. Employing his reputation as a well-regarded historian in his own right, White attracted other notable and rising historians of the day to his department. He convinced Goldwin Smith to leave his comfortable post at Oxford and travel across the Atlantic to rural, upstate New York. When Smith realized just how lacking the new university's library was for historical study, he promptly had his entire 3,400 book collection shipped from England for donation to the Cornell University Library and made a $2,500 bequest for the purchase of more historical works. From the College of Horace Mann (later known as Antioch College), White attracted their Department Chairman William Channing Russel. Russel would later serve as the Department Chairman, Cornell's Vice President and acting President during White's long periods abroad.

In 1881, the department notably hired the first, full-time chair of American history ever. In the spring of 1872, non-resident professor George Washington Greene, grandson of American Revolutionary War General Nathanael Greene, offered a series of lectures on American history. Upon Russel's stepping down as the Department Chairman in 1881, the department attracted Moses Coit Tyler from the University of Michigan to take Russel's position. At Tyler's request, he exclusively taught American history .

In 1884, the department founded the American Historical Review in a joint effort with Harvard's Department of History in the model of the English Historical Review and the French Revue Historique. Also in 1884, Professors White and Charles Kendall Adams founded the American Historical Association with a handful of other leading historians of the day and both would later serve as its president. Other Cornellians to head the American Historical Association include faculty members Carl L. Becker and Mary Beth Norton, as well as alumni Robert Roswell Palmer and William Leuchtenburg.

In 1887, the Department was renamed the President White School of History and Political Science in honor of Andrew Dickson White's service to the university and the donation of his large personal library. Over the summer, the board of trustees nominated White, who was no longer university president, to be Dean of the school and Honorary Lecturer on History and Political Science, but White declined the offer. Soon thereafter, president Charles Kendall Adams, White's protégé, sought a younger dean and interviewed Woodrow Wilson and Herbert Baxter Adams for the position. Adams notably did not interview the older Moses Coit Tyler, current department chairman, or Herbert Tuttle, an associate professor, to much annoyance of Taylor and the faculty in general. The trustees eventually overrode Adams and installed Tyler as Dean.

On June 18, 1891, the Cornell Board of Trustees resolved that steps be taken to form a Department of History, Political and Social Science, and General Jurisprudence and the following year, the faculty of economics and finance and political and social institutions broke off into a single department separate from the White School. As the history and government departments were moved around campus over the next few decades, the White School became a more informal grouping of the two departments. In September 1932, Cornell revived the White School by moving the two disconnected departments to Boardman Hall, allocating space for three classrooms, administrative offices, and graduate student areas. White's will stipulated that on the death of his daughter (Karin A. White), his estate would be used to maintain the President White School. As the school no longer existed when she died in 1971, trustees used the funds to endow a professorship in history.

Reputation

The department's main offices are in McGraw Hall on the Arts Quad on the campus of [[Cornell University

In 2017, U.S. News & World Reports rankings of graduate programs placed the department 11th overall in the United States.{{cite web |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170610061853/https://www.usnews.com/best-graduate-schools/top-humanities-schools/history-rankings |archive-date=2017-06-10 |author-link=U.S. News and World Report

Many alumni and faculty members have won major awards for their work as historians. Alumnus Robert Fogel was the co-recipient of the 1993 Nobel Prize in Economics, in recognition of his quantitative historical analyses. Walter LaFeber won the Bancroft Prize in 1996 and David Brion Davis won in 1976.{{cite web |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070714142518/http://www.columbia.edu/cu/lweb/eguides/amerihist/bancroftlist.html |archive-date=2007-07-14 |author-link=Columbia University

Numerous people associated with the department have won Pulitzer Prizes. Former faculty member Fredrik Logevall was the recipient of the 2013 Pulitzer Prize for History. Michael Kammen was the 1973 winner of the prize. Professor David Brion Davis won in the category of General Nonfiction in 1969. Alumnus David Oshinsky won the award for History in 2006, and alumna Sheryl WuDunn won the award for International Reporting in 1990.

Alumnus John Mott was the co-recipient of the 1946 Nobel Peace Prize for his work as the head of the YMCA.

Two buildings at Cornell's main campus are named in honor of history department professors. White Hall, one of the original three buildings on the Arts Quad, named after Andrew Dickson White, and Becker House, a residential college named after Carl L. Becker in recognition of his pedagogical contributions to the Cornell community.

Notable people

Faculty

The department's first faculty included university president Andrew Dickson White and English historian Goldwin Smith. In 1881, the department named Moses Coit Tyler the first professor of American history in the United States. Three of Cornell's twelve presidents have been members of the department: Andrew Dickson White, Charles Kendall Adams, and Hunter R. Rawlings III. The longest teaching member of the faculty was Frederick Marcham who, upon completing his graduate work at Cornell in 1924, continued lecturing until a month before his death in 1992 – a total of 68 years.

Current faculty

The following is only a partial list.

NameTitleField of studyYear joined departmentReference
Professor19th-century United States, slavery, History of Capitalism
Howard A. Newman Professor of American StudiesUnited States, immigrants, refugees
ProfessorAmerican consumerism2014
Stephen '59 and Madeline '60 Anbinder Professor of African History, Department ChairpersonWest Africa
John Stambaugh Professor of HistoryGermany, political theory, sexuality, international law1977
Maurice and Hinda Neufeld Founders Professor in Industrial and Labor RelationsHistory of Capitalism
Professor, Department chairwomanSoutheast Asia
Mary Donlon Alger Professor of American HistoryUnited States1971
Associate ProfessorAfrican-American history, American social movements2014
ProfessorAmerican environmental history2005
'1974Bryce and Edith M. Bowmar Professor in Humanistic StudiesClassics1979
John Stambaugh Professor of HistorySoutheast Asia1999
ProfessorGender and culture in 17th- and 18th-century England

Former faculty and faculty emeriti

NameTitle(s)Field of studyYear joinedYear left/retiredReference
Professor of Hebrew and Oriental Literature and HistoryHebrew and Chinese literature18741876
Professor of History, University PresidentEurope18851889
Associate Professor of HistoryModern England, Maritime history1969?
John Wendell Anderson Professor of HistoryThe Enlightenment19171941
Professor of History, Department Chairman (1956–1963)China1938, 19461944, 1972
'1881John Stambaugh Professor of HistoryMiddle Ages18881923
Hu Shih Professor of Chinese historyChina19742012
Ernest I. White Professor of HistorySlavery19551969
'1892Instructor, Professor in Political Economy (and Finance)Political economy, finance18951911
John Stambaugh Professor of History, Department Chairman (1946–56)United States public land policy19361971
Instructor in HistoryRenaissance19741975
Non-resident ProfessorUnited States18711875
Goldwin Smith Professor of the History of ScienceScience19461977
Visiting Professor of Southeast Asian HistorySoutheast Asia19671972
Professor of Political Economy and PoliticsPolitical economy18911912
Hu Shih Professor of History and China-US RelationsModern China, Chinese-American relations, Cold War history20052017
Professor of HistoryClassics19601969
Newton C. Farr Professor of American History and CultureAmerican culture1965?
Goldwin Smith Professor of HistoryFrance, bread1969?
ProfessorEarly modern Europe19661973
ProfessorJapan
'1961Bryce and Edith M. Bowmar Professor of Humanistic StudiesIntellectual history19692013
Andrew H. and James S. Tisch Distinguished University Professor, Department ChairmanUnited States foreign policy, Cold War19592006
John Stambaugh Professor of History, Department ChairmanMiddle Ages19251941
John S. Knight Professor of International StudiesUnited States foreign relations20102015
?American history~1930~1931
ProfessorJudaic Studies19711975
Goldwin Smith Chair of English HistoryEngland19201928
Marie Underhill Noll Professor of American History, Goldwin Smith Professor of American History, Department Chairman (1977–1980)United States constitutional law19662012
Andrew H. and James S. Tisch Distinguished University Professor, Charles A. Alexander ProfessorScience1969?
Professor of Classics and History, President EmeritusClassics1995?
Merrill Family visiting professorEngland20142014
'1986ProfessorSoutheast Asia19871998
President White Professor of History19th century American history19662002
Professor of English and General Constitutional HistoryEngland18681871
Professor in HistoryProtestant Reformation19231941
Professor of Modern European HistoryModern Europe18941903
Professor in HistoryMiddle Ages19311941
Goldwin Smith Professor of Medieval History ; Bowmar Professor of Humanistic StudiesMiddle Ages1959????
Professor of Modern European HistoryModern Europe18901894
Professor of American History, Department Chairman (1881–?1887), White School Dean (1887-?)United States18811900
Professor, Department Chairman (1868–1881), University PresidentScience, warfare, religion18681887
Professor of Political Economy and Statistics, Dean of the College of Arts and Sciences (1901–1907)Political economy, statistics18911931
'1948John Stambaugh Professor of the History of Science, Department ChairmanPolitical economy, statistics1960?
Goldwin Smith Professor of Southeast Asian HistorySoutheast Asia19641990
'1966John Stambaugh Professor of History and Asian Studies, Department ChairmanSoutheast Asia19692002

Alumni

Undergraduate alumni

Note: Does not include those who have become faculty in the department, who are denoted by class year above, or those who also earned graduate degrees from the department, noted below.

NameClass yearNotabilityReference
1984Media entrepreneur
1982Liberal author and columnist
1985National Correspondent and reporter for CBS News
1881U.S. historian, diplomat, author, and educator
1942United States Congressman New York 37th District, 1965–73; 35th District, 1973–83; 30th District, 1983–85; President of the World Bank, 1986–91
1984Conservative author and political commentator
2000Political television host
1973CEO of Lloyds Banking Group
1968Hockey Hall of Fame goaltender; Member of the Canadian Parliament
1972U.S. Ambassador and Under Secretary of Defense for Policy
1948Nobel Prize-winning economic historian
1991Reporter at National Public Radio
Political scientist at the University of Pennsylvania focused on mass incarceration
Director of the Center on National Security at Fordham Law School
1966Professor of philosophy and law at UCLA
1953Artist and filmmaker
1981Congressman, Illinois 10th District, 2001–2010, Senator, Illinois 2010–2017.
1963Former Director of Policy Planning at the United States Department of State, professor at Stanford University
1943Leading scholar on Franklin Delano Roosevelt, professor at University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
1905Author of the first book to be awarded the Newbery Medal for an outstanding contribution to children's literature, historian, educator
1978Political pundit, host of Real Time with Bill Maher
1976Co-Founder and President of Bright Horizons Family Solutions
1888Nobel Peace Prize recipient (1946), YMCA and World Student Christian Federation leader
{{sortname1978Journalist with the Boston Globe who specialized in covering war crimes
1967Professor of Jewish political thought at the University of Toronto
1965Historian, professor, winner of the 2006 Pulitzer Prize for History
2006Politician, Member of the New York State Senate from the 38th district
1958Independent scholar and author who has written prolifically about political decentralism, environmentalism, luddism and technology
Political scientist and social theorist; professor at Temple University
1970Rabbi, author
Library scholar and information scientist, dean of the Syracuse University School of Information Studies
1941The most decorated American serviceman, according to the Guinness Book of World Records
1981Journalist at The New York Times, co-winner in 1990 of the Pulitzer Prize for her coverage on the Tiananmen Square protests of 1989, winner of the George Polk Award in 1989, and winner of the Overseas Press Club in 1990

Graduate alumni

NameClass yearDegreeNotabilityReference
1976Ph.D.Historian and administrator at Cornell
1975Ph.D.Historian of Southeast Asia at the University of Hawaii at Manoa
1971Ph.D.Southeast Asia Historian
1968Ph.D.Medieval historian; Academic administrator
1892M.PhilInfluential Austrian School economist
2006Ph.D.Chair of the history department and professor at the New School for Social Research
1971, 1974Ph.D.Historian, academic administrator
1949Ph.D.Historian of science
1972Ph.D.Former Rector of Thammasat University
2000Ph.D.Professor of American history at Princeton University, focusing on urban and suburban history and the history of conservatism
2000Ph.D.Professor at Yale University focusing on Asian American Studies
1957Ph.D.Historian of Modern Europe
Ph.D.Historian of Southeast Asia at Australian National University
1948Ph.D.Eisenhower White House staff and historian
1947Ph.D.Historian, professor, author of The Rise of the West: A History of the Human Community
Ph.D.Australian historian, author, and consultant specializing in Southeast Asia
1998Ph.D.Historian of U.S. 20th-century politics at Sacramento State University
1934Ph.D.Historian of 18th-century France at Princeton and Yale, winner of the Bancroft Prize, President of the American Historical Association
B.A., M.A.Thai poet and feminist
1984Ph.D.Professor of history at University of Washington
1973Ph.D.Former Professor of history at National University of Singapore
1969Ph.D.Ashby Lohse Chair in Water and Natural Resources at the University of Arizona James E. Rogers College of Law, former professor at Yale Law School
1995, 1998M.A./Ph.D.Professor at New School for Social Research
2000Ph.D.Author, activist, research on indigenous peoples at the University of Victoria
2000Ph.D.Author, activist, research on indigenous peoples at the University of Victoria
1966Ph.D.Historian, professor, authority on Thai

References

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