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In support of his research, Earle has received major fellowships from the NEH and the American Council of Learned Societies. [15] He spent the 2006–2007 academic year as the Ray Allen Billington Chair in U.S. History at Occidental College and the Huntington Library and the 1999–2000 academic year as an NEH Fellow at the Huntington.
Some political historians made fun of their own predicament, as when William Leuchtenburg wrote, "the status of the political historians within the profession has sunk to somewhere between that of a faith healer and a chiropractor. Political historians were all right in a way, but you might not want to bring one home to meet the family."
He earned his Ph.D. in history from Columbia University in 1974. [2] After teaching at various colleges and universities for forty years, he is now retired, works as an independent scholar, and shares a home in New Jersey with his wife Nancy A. Hewitt and their miniature poodle, Scooter (named after 1950s New York Yankees star and broadcaster ...
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Lionel Groulx (1878–1967) – The history of Quebec in particular and French North America in general; Harold Innis (1894–1952) – Economic historian of Canada; Jack Granatstein (born 1939) – Political and Military historian of Canada; W.L. Morton (1908–1980) – Expert on western Canada; See also List of Canadian historians.
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Executive officers of the American Historical Association at the time of the association's incorporation by the U.S. Congress photographed during their annual meeting on December 30, 1889, in Washington, D.C. Seated (left to right) are: William Poole, Justin Winsor, Charles Kendall Adams (President), George Bancroft, John Jay, and Andrew Dickson White, Standing (left to right) are: Herbert B ...
Greenberg’s Ph.D. thesis won Columbia University’s 2001 Bancroft Dissertation Award [2] and became his first book, Nixon’s Shadow (2003), which won the Washington Monthly Annual Political Book Award and the American Journalism Historians Association's Book Award.