History has been one of the core disciplines at Temple University since the time the university was founded in 1888. After 1965, when Temple joined the Pennsylvania Commonwealth System of Higher Education, the department expanded its graduate programs leading to the M.A., and Ph.D. degrees. The History Department maintains a strong reputation in all areas of American history, the Atlantic World, military history and the history of foreign relations--the latter two fields institutionalized in the History Department's Center for the Study of Force and Diplomacy (CENFAD). Temple has long been among the leading history departments in the nation in its training of African American scholars. According to the Survey of Earned Docorates, between 1973 and 2005 Temple was among the leading institutions in the United States in the percentage of its History doctorates awarded to African Americans.
Temple graduate students participate regularly in the intellectual life of the region through their connections to such organizations and institutions as the McNeil Center for Early American Studies, the Pennsylvania Historical Society, the Atwater Kent Museum, and the American Philosophical Society.
There are nearly 400 History majors at Tenple. Undergraduate students can choose to major or minor in history, and they can select from a wide variety of tracks. Special Programs allow undergraduates to major in History and earn secondary-school teaching certification or to major in history and earn a Masters in Education in five years. Majors may enter a History Honors Program and join Phi Alpha Theta, the History Honors Society. Both majors and minors work closely with faculty and participate in the Undergraduate History Association. The History Department's award-winning faculty works closely with students at all levels.
What can you do with a history degree? (click here)
Chair of the History Department:
Professor Andrew C. Isenberg
Department of History
Temple University
913 Gladfelter Hall
1115 W. Berks Street
Temple University
Philadelphia, PA 19122
215-204-6176
aisenber@temple.edu
For inquiries about the M.A. program, contact:
Professor Rita Krueger
M.A. Co-ordinator
History Department
913 Gladfelter Hall
1115 W. Berks Street
Temple University
Philadelphia, PA 19122
krueger@temple.edu
For inquiries about the PH.D. program, contact:
Professor Petra Goedde
Director of Graduate Studies
History Department
913 Gladfelter Hall
1115 W. Berks Street
Temple University
Philadelphia, PA 19122
pgoedde@temple.edu
For inquiries about undergraduate courses and independent studies, contact:
Professor Beth Bailey
Director of Undergraduate Studies
History Department
913 Gladfelter Hall
1115 W. Berks Street
Temple University
Philadelphia PA 19122
beth.bailey@temple.edu
For inquiries about schedules, declaring a major, credits and general guidance, etc., contact:
Professor David Jacobs
Undergraduate Advisor
History Department
913 Gladfelter Hall
1115 W. Berks Street
Temple University
Philadelphia, PA 19122
(215) 204-7966
djacobs@temple.edu
For inquiries about History at the Ambler Campus:
Professor Harriet Freidenreich
Coordinator of History, Ambler Campus
224 Widener Hall
Temple University Ambler
580 Meetinghouse Road
Ambler, PA 19002
(267) 468-8224 or (267) 468-8217
hfreiden@temple.edu
For inquiries about the Honors Program in History, contact:
Professor Elizabeth Varon
Director, History Honors Program
History Department
913 Gladfelter Hall
1115 W. Berks Street
Temple University
Philadelphia PA 19122
elizabeth.varon@temple.edu
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Recent History Faculty Books
Department News
The History Department welcomes two new assistant professors this fall: Seth Bruggeman (Ph.D., William and Mary) in American public history, and Benjamin Talton (Ph.D., University of Chicago), modern West African history; and two lecturers: Friederike Baer (Ph.D., Brown University), early American history; and Stephen Patnode (Ph.D. SUNY-Stony Brook) twentieth-century US labor history.
Prof. Beth Bailey has won the 2007 Distinguished Writing Award from the Army Historical Foundation for "The Army in the Marketplace," Journal of American History (June 2007).
Prof. Kathy Walker has won the 2008 Krishna Bharadwaj Prize from the Journal of Peasant Studies for her article, "'Gangster Capitalism' and Peasant Protest in China."
Prof. Bettye Collier-Thomas will be a fellow at the Woodrow Wilson Center in 2008-09.
Prof. Kathleen Biddick has been awarded a fellowship by the Leslie White Center for the Humanities at Dartmouth College to participate in their Spring 2009 Humanities
Institute devoted to the topic: "States of Exception: Sovereignty, Security, Secrecy."
Doctoral student Michele Louro has was a Fulbright Fellowship to India for 2008-09.
David Ulbrich (Ph.D. 2007) will be Visiting Assistant Professor at Ohio University beginning this fall.
Ryan Edgington (Ph.D. 2008) will be Visiting Assistant Professor of History at Haverford College in 2008-09.
David Zierler (Ph.D. 2008) will begin in July as a Historian at the Department of State.
Ph.D candidate Ruth Ann Denaci has been won the Jean Moxley Gant Fellowship at the David Library of the American Revolution.
Ajunct Professor Martin Levitt has been named President-elect of the Academy of Certified Archivists.
For Students:
History major wins 2008 Library Prize; two others receive honorable mention!
Three history students have swept the 2007 Library Prize for Undergraduate Research!
Events:
Temple University's Premodern Studies Colloquium presents a symposium on "Premodern Sovereignties and the Discourses of Political Theology and Biopolitics" on Friday September 5, 2008
(further details)
The October 10th Dissent in America Teach-in features poet Meredith Avakian on "Poetry, Politics, and Protest." Meredith will be discussing the social and political role of poetry and reading from her new book. On October 17th finance Professor Jonathan Scott will be leading the teach-in on the "Panic of 2008"
Anderson Hall 821 at 3:40
The Temple in Vietnam Program is a unique opportunity for undergraduate students of history, Asian studies, and political science to study at An Giang University in outhern Vietnam with Temple History Professor Dr. Nguyen Thi Dieu.
(Click here for further information.)
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