The American Historical Association (AHA) is the oldest and largest society of historians and teachers of history in the United States. See also History An historian is an individual who studies and writes about History, and is regarded as an Authority on it In Education, a teacher is one who helps Students or pupils often in a School, as well as in a Family, religious or History is the study of the past particularly the written record Those who study history as a Profession are called Historians Etymology The United States of America —commonly referred to as the Founded in 1884, the association promotes historical studies, the teaching of history, and the preservation of and access to historical materials. It publishes The American Historical Review five times a year, with scholarly articles and book reviews. The AHA is the major organization for historians working in the United States, while the Organization of American Historians is the major organization for historians who study and teach about the United States. The Organization of American Historians ( OAH) formerly known as the Mississippi Valley Historical Association, is an organization of historians focusing
Current activities
As an umbrella organization for the profession, the AHA works with other major historical organizations and acts as a public advocate for the field. Within the profession, the association defines ethical behavior and best practices, particularly through its Statement on Standards of Professional Conduct. The AHA also develops standards for good practice in teaching and history textbooks, but these have limited influence. The association generally works to influence history policy through the National Coalition for History.
The association publishes The American Historical Review (a major journal of history scholarship covering all historical topics since ancient history) and Perspectives on History (the monthly news magazine of the profession). On September 28, 2006 the AHA started a blog AHA Today that the AHA describes as, "a blog focused on the latest happenings in the broad discipline of history and the professional practice of the craft that draws on the staff, research, and activities of the AHA. "
The association's annual meeting each January brings together more than 5,000 historians from around the United States to discuss the latest research, look for jobs, and discuss how to be better historians and teachers. The 2008 Annual Meeting will be held in Washington D. C. January 3-6, 2008. The theme of the meeting is Uneven Developments. The Association's web site offers extensive information on the current state of the profession, tips on history careers, and an extensive archive of historical materials(including the G.I. Roundtable series, a series of pamphlets prepared for the War Department in World War II). World War II, or the Second World War, (often abbreviated WWII) was a global military conflict which involved a majority of the world's nations, including
The Association also administers two major fellowships, 24 book prizes, and a number of small research grants.
History

Executive officers of the
American Historical Association at the time of the association's incorporation by Congress, photographed during their annual meeting on December 30, 1889 in
Washington, D.C. Seated (L to R) are
William Poole,
Justin Winsor,
Charles Kendall Adams (President),
George Bancroft,
John Jay, and
Andrew Dickson White, Standing (L to R) are
Herbert B. Adams and C.
Washington DC ( formally the District of Columbia and commonly referred to as Washington, the District, or simply D William Frederick Poole ( 24 December 1821, Salem Massachusetts - 1 March 1894) was an American Bibliographer Justin Winsor ( January 2, 1831 – October 22, 1897) was a prominent American writer librarian and historian Charles Kendall Adams (1835–1902 was an American educator and historian George Bancroft (October 3 1800 &ndash January 17 1891 was an American Historian and Statesman who was prominent in promoting Secondary education John Jay (December 12 1745 – May 17 1829 was an American Politician, Statesman, revolutionary, Diplomat, a Supreme Court Andrew Dickson White (November 7 1832 &ndash November 4 1918 was a U Herbert Baxter Adams ( April 16, 1850 – July 30, 1901) was an American educator and historian W. Bowen.
As James Sheehan (2005) points out, the association always tried to serve multiple constituencies, including archivists, members of state and local historical societies, teachers, and amateur historians, who looked to it - and not always with success or satisfaction - for representation and support. The early leaders of the association tended to be gentlemen with the leisure and means to write many of the great 19th-century works of history, such as George Bancroft, Justin Winsor, and James Ford Rhodes. George Bancroft (October 3 1800 &ndash January 17 1891 was an American Historian and Statesman who was prominent in promoting Secondary education Justin Winsor ( January 2, 1831 – October 22, 1897) was a prominent American writer librarian and historian James Ford Rhodes ( 1 May 1848 – 22 January 1927) was an American Industrialist and Historian born in Cleveland Much of the early work of the association focused on establishing a common sense of purpose and gathering the materials of research through its Historical Manuscripts and Public Archives Commissions.
Publication Standards
From the beginning, however, the association was dominated by historians employed at colleges and universities, and served a critical role in defining their interests as a profession. The association's first president, Andrew Dickson White was president of Cornell University. Andrew Dickson White (November 7 1832 &ndash November 4 1918 was a U and its first secretary, Herbert Baxter Adams, established one of the first history Ph. Herbert Baxter Adams ( April 16, 1850 – July 30, 1901) was an American educator and historian D. programs to follow the new German seminary method at Johns Hopkins University. The clearest expression of this academic impulse in history came in the development of the American Historical Review in 1895. Formed by historians at a number of the most important universities in the United States, it followed the model of European history journals. Under the early editorship of J. Franklin Jameson, the Review published several long scholarly articles every issue, only after they had been vetted by scholars and approved by the editor. John Franklin Jameson ( September 19, 1859 – September 28, 1937) was an American historian author and journal editor who played Each issue also reviewed a number of history books for their conformity to the new professional norms and scholarly standards that were taught at leading graduate schools to Ph. D. candidates. From the AHR, Sheehan concludes, "a junior scholar learned what it meant to be a historian of a certain sort".
The academicians insisted on a perspective that looked beyond particular localities to a larger national and international perspectives, and that in practice it should be done along modern and scientific lines. To that end, the association actively promoted excellence in the area of research, the association published a series of annual reports through the Smithsonian Institution and adopted the American Historical Review in 1898 to provide early outlets for this new brand of professional scholarship. The Smithsonian Institution (smɪθsoʊnɪən is an educational and research institute and associated Museum complex administered and funded by the Government of
Teaching and the Committee of Seven
In the area of teaching, the association's Committee of Seven Report on The Study of History in Schools [1] largely defined the way history would be taught at the high school level as a preparation for college, and wrestled with issues about how the field should relate to the other social studies. High school is the name used in some parts of the world (in particular Scotland, North America and Australia) to describe an institution [2] The Association also played a decisive role in lobbying the federal government to preserve and protect its own documents and records. After extensive lobbying by AHA Secretary Waldo Leland and Jameson, Congress established the National Archives and Records Administration in 1934. Waldo Gifford Leland (1879 in Newton Massachusetts - October 19, 1966) was an American Historian and Archivist whose work The United States National Archives and Records Administration ( NARA) is an independent agency of the United States federal government charged
As the interests of historians in colleges and universities gained prominence in the association, other areas and activities tended to fall by the wayside. The Manuscripts and Public Archives Commissions were abandoned in the 1930s, while projects related to original research and the publication of scholarship gained ever-greater prominence.
Recent Developments
In recent years, the association seems to have recognized their problem and tried to come to terms with the growing public history movement. Public history is the practice of conveying History to an audience that is not specialized in the field of history being presented - generally this means a non-academic Meanwhile, the association also seems to be losing ground in its efforts to be a leader among academic historians, as well. The association started to investigate cases of professional misconduct in 1987, but ceased the effort in 2005 "because it has proven to be ineffective for responding to misconduct in the historical profession. "[3]
2007 Convention
The 2007 Annual Meeting was held January 4–7, 2007 in downtown Atlanta. The theme of the meeting was "Unstable Subjects: Practicing History in Unsettled Times."A list of all the meeting's sessions and events is available in the 2007 online program. But the meeting gained the most public attention at the time for a controversy that arose when Atlanta police arrested a distinguished professor for jaywalking between hotels, and held him in jail overnight. [4]
2006 convention
The 120th Annual meeting of the American Historical Association took place 5-8 January 2006 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. In attendance were some 5,600 participants. The AHA sponsored over 200 official AHA panels and some 110 other panels were sponsored by affiliated history societies. The diverse panels included sessions on ancient, world, comparative, and American history. Over 150 private and non-profit companies, commercial, and university presses exhibited their wares in the exhibit hall. AHA's Theodore Roosevelt- Woodrow Wilson Public Service Award was presented to Steven Spielberg. Steven Allan Spielberg, KBE (Hon (born December 18 1946 is an American Film director, Screenwriter and producer. The prize was given to him for his founding of the Shoah Visual History Foundation. Stanford University Professor James Sheehan delivered his presidential address, "The Problem of Sovereignty in European History. " Dr. Arnita Jones, the Executive Secretary, reported a disturbing trend: "Individual membership has for long been drawn significantly on tenured faculty members in higher education institutions, but the percentage of tenured and tenure-track faculty has shrunk over the years, with serious implications for our membership base. "
Current officers and principal staff
President: Barbara Weinstein (Univ. of Maryland)
President-elect: Gabrielle Spiegel (Johns Hopkins Univ. )
Vice President, Professional Division: Anthony T. Grafton (Princeton Univ. )
Vice President, Research Division: Teofílo Ruiz (Univ. of California at Los Angeles)
Vice President, Teaching Division: Karen Haltunnen (Univ. of Southern California)
Executive Director: Arnita A. Jones
Editor, American Historical Review: Robert A. Schneider
Editor, Perspectives on History: Pillarisetti Sudhir
Past presidents
Presidents of the AHA are elected annually and give a president's address at the annual meeting:
- Andrew Dickson White (1884, 1885)
- George Bancroft (1886)
- Justin Winsor (1887)
- William Frederick Poole (1888)
- Charles K. Adams (1889)
- John Jay (1890)
- William Wirt Henry (1891)
- James Burrill Angell (1892-93)
- Henry Adams (1893-94)
- George Frisbie Hoar (1895)
- Richard Salter Storrs (1896)
- James Schouler (1897)
- George Park Fisher (1898)
- James Ford Rhodes (1899)
- Edward Eggleston (1900)
- Charles F. Adams (1901)
- Alfred Thayer Mahan (1902)
- Henry Charles Lea (1903)
- Goldwin Smith (1904)
- John Bach McMaster (1905)
- Simeon E. Baldwin (1906)
- J. Franklin Jameson (1907)
- George Burton Adams (1908)
- Albert Bushnell Hart (1909)
- Frederick Jackson Turner (1910)
- William M. Andrew Dickson White (November 7 1832 &ndash November 4 1918 was a U George Bancroft (October 3 1800 &ndash January 17 1891 was an American Historian and Statesman who was prominent in promoting Secondary education Justin Winsor ( January 2, 1831 – October 22, 1897) was a prominent American writer librarian and historian William Frederick Poole ( 24 December 1821, Salem Massachusetts - 1 March 1894) was an American Bibliographer Charles Kendall Adams (1835–1902 was an American educator and historian John Jay (1817ᇲ was an American lawyer and diplomat son of William Jay and a grandson of Chief Justice John Jay. William Wirt Henry ( February 14, 1831 - December 5, 1900) was a Virginia lawyer and politician historian and writer a biographer of Patrick James Burrill Angell ( January 7, 1829 near Scituate Rhode Island &ndash April 1, 1916, Ann Arbor Michigan) was an Henry Adams may refer to Henry Adams (mechanical engineer (1858-1929 American engineer Henry Adams (pastor (1802-1872 American George Frisbie Hoar ( August 29, 1826 &ndash September 30, 1904) was a prominent United States Politician and Richard Salter Storrs ( August 21, 1821 - June 7, 1900) American Congregational Clergyman, was born in James Schouler ( March 20, 1839 - 1920 American Lawyer and Historian, was born in West Cambridge (now Arlington Massachusetts James Ford Rhodes ( 1 May 1848 – 22 January 1927) was an American Industrialist and Historian born in Cleveland Edward Eggleston ( December 10, 1837 - September 4, 1902) was an American historian and Novelist. Charles Francis Adams Jr (May 27 1835 &ndash May 20 1915 was a member of the prominent Adams and Crowninshield political families and son of Charles Francis Alfred Thayer Mahan (September 27 1840–December 1 1914 was a United States Navy Flag officer, geostrategist, and educator Henry Charles Lea ( September 19, 1825 - October 24, 1909) was an American Historian, civic reformer and political activist Goldwin Smith ( August 13, 1823 &ndash June 7, 1910) was a British - Canadian Historian and Journalist John Bach McMaster ( June 29 1852 – May 24 1932) was an American Historian. Simeon Eben Baldwin ( February 5, 1840 &ndash January 30, 1927) jurist law professor and governor of Connecticut was the son of jurist John Franklin Jameson ( September 19, 1859 – September 28, 1937) was an American historian author and journal editor who played Albert Bushnell Hart PhD ( July 1, 1854 &ndash July 16, 1943) American Historian, was born at Clarkesville, For other people of this same name see Frederick Jackson and Frederick Turner Frederick Jackson Turner ( November 14, 1861 Sloane (1911)
- Theodore Roosevelt (1912)
- William A. Dunning (1913)
- Andrew C. McLaughlin (1914)
- H. Morse Stephens (1915)
- George Lincoln Burr (1916)
- Worthington C. Ford (1917)
- William R. Theodore Roosevelt (ˈroʊzəvɛlt October 27 1858 January 6 1919 also known as T William Archibald Dunning (1857-1922 was an American Historian who founded the Dunning School of Reconstruction historiography at Columbia Andrew Cunningham McLaughlin (1861 in Beardstown Illinois – 1947 was an American historian of Scottish immigrant parents H Morse Stephens ( October 3, 1857 - April 16, 1919) was an Historian and professor of history at the University of California George Lincoln Burr ( January 30 1857 &ndash 1938 was a US Historian, Diplomat, Author, and Educator, best Worthington Chauncey Ford (February 15 1868 - 1941 was an American Historian and editor of a number of collections of documents from early American history Thayer (1918-19)
- Edward Channing (1920)
- Jean Jules Jusserand (1921)
- Charles H. Haskins (1922)
- Edward P. Cheyney (1923)
- Woodrow Wilson (1924, died before completing his term)
- Charles M. Andrews (1924, 1925)
- Dana C. Munro (1926)
- Henry Osborn Taylor (1927)
- James H. Breasted (1928)
- James Harvey Robinson (1929)
- Evarts Boutell Greene (1930)
- Carl Lotus Becker (1931)
- Herbert Eugene Bolton (1932)
- Charles A. Beard (1933)
- William E. Dodd (1934)
- Michael I. Edward Perkins Channing (born 15 June 1856, Massachusetts, US Jean Adrien Antoine Jules Jusserand ( February 18, 1855 &ndash July 18, 1932) was a French Author and diplomat Charles Homer Haskins (1870-1937 was an American historian of the Middle Ages, and advisor to US President Woodrow Wilson. Edward Potts Cheyney, AM LLD (1861&ndash1947 was an American historical and economic writer born at Wallingford Pennsylvania. Thomas Woodrow Wilson (December 28 1856—February 3 1924 was the twenty-eighth President of the United States. Charles McLean Andrews ( February 22, 1863 – September 9, 1943) was one of the most distinguished American Historians of Dana Carleton Munro LHD ( June 7, 1866 - January 13, 1933) was an American Historian, brother of Wilfred Harold Munro James Henry Breasted ( August 27 1865 &ndash December 2, 1935) was an American Archaeologist and Historian. James Harvey Robinson ( June 29, 1863 &ndash February 16, 1936) was an American historian Evarts Boutell Greene, (1870 - 1947 American historian born in Kobe Japan, where his parents were missionaries graduated Harvard University (B Carl Lotus Becker (1873–1945 was an American historian He was born in Waterloo, Black Hawk County Iowa. Herbert Eugene Bolton ( July 20, 1870 – January 30, 1953) was an American Charles Austin Beard ( November 27, 1874 – September 1, 1948) is widely regarded along with Frederick Jackson Turner, as one of William Edward Dodd ( 1869 - February 9, 1940) was a historian who served as President Franklin Delano Roosevelt 's ambassador to Rostovtzeff (1935)
- Charles McIlwain (1936)
- Guy Stanton Ford (1937)
- Laurence M. Guy Stanton Ford (1873– December 29, 1962) was the sixth president of the University of Minnesota, serving from 1938 to 1941 professor of history and Larson (1938)
- William Scott Ferguson (1939)
- Max Farrand (1940)
- James Westfall Thompson (1941)
- Arthur M. Schlesinger (1942)
- Nellie Neilson (1943)
- William L. Max Farrand PhD (1869-1945 was an American university professor and writer on historical subjects born at Newark N James Westfall Thompson (1869&ndash1941 was an American historian specializing in the history of medieval and early modern Europe particularly of the Holy Roman Empire and This article is about the elder Arthur M Schlesinger (1888-1965 Nellie Neilson ( April 5, 1873 – May 26, 1947) was an American Historian. Westermann (1944)
- Carlton J. H. Hayes (1945)
- Sidney B. Fay (1946)
- Thomas J. Wertenbaker (1947)
- Kenneth Scott Latourette (1948)
- Conyers Read (1949)
- Samuel E. Morison (1950)
| - Robert L. Kenneth Scott Latourette ( August 6, 1884 – December 26, 1968) was an American historian and historiographer who specialized in the Samuel Eliot Morison, Rear Admiral, United States Naval Reserve ( July 9, 1887 – May 15, 1976) was an American Schuyler (1951)
- James G. Randall (1952)
- Louis Gottschalk (1953)
- Merle Curti (1954)
- Lynn Thorndike (1955)
- Dexter Perkins (1956)
- William L. Langer (1957)
- Walter Prescott Webb (1958)
- Allan Nevins (1959)
- Bernadotte E. Schmitt (1960)
- Samuel Flagg Bemis (1961)
- Carl Bridenbaugh (1962)
- Crane Brinton (1963)
- Julian P. James G Randall ( 1881 &ndash 1953) was a leading American historian of the mid 20th century specializing on Abraham Lincoln and the era of the American Louis Gottschalk may refer to Louis Moreau Gottschalk, American composer Louis A Merle Curti (1897-1997 was a leading American Historian. His specialty was social and intellectual history Lynn Thorndike (born 1882 in Lynn, Massachusetts, USA died 1965 was an American historian of medieval science and Alchemy. William Leonard Langer ( March 16 1896 – December 26 1977) was the chair of the History department at Harvard University Walter Prescott Webb ( April 3, 1888 &ndash March 8, 1963) was a 20th century U Allan Nevins ( May 20, 1890 - March 5, 1971) was an American historian and journalist Samuel Flagg Bemis (born October 20, 1891 in Worcester Massachusetts; died 1973 was a Pulitzer Prize winning historian and biographer Carl Bridenbaugh ( August 10, 1903 - January 6, 1992) was an American Historian of Colonial America. Clarence Crane Brinton ( Winsted Connecticut, 1898 - Cambridge Massachusetts, September 7, 1968) was an American historian of France as well Boyd (1964)
- Frederic C. Lane (1965)
- Roy F. Nichols (1966)
- Hajo Holborn (1967)
- John K. Fairbank (1968)
- C. Vann Woodward (1969)
- R. R. Palmer (1970)
- David M. Potter (1971)
- Thomas C. Cochran (1972)
- Lynn Townsend White, Jr. (1973)
- Lewis Hanke (1974)
- Gordon Wright (1975)
- Richard B. Morris (1976)
- Charles Gibson (1977)
- William J. Hajo Holborn (b Berlin, May 18, 1902, d Bonn, June 20, 1969) was a German-American historian and specialist in modern John King Fairbank ( 24 May, 1907 - 14 September 1991) was among the most prominent American scholars of East Asia Comer Vann Woodward ( November 13, 1908 - December 17, 1999) was a pre-eminent American Historian focusing primarily on Robert Roswell Palmer ( January 11, 1909 &ndash June 11, 2002) commonly known as R David M Potter ( 6 December 1910 - 18 February 1971) was an American historian of the South. Thomas Cunningham Cochran ( November 30, 1877 &ndash December 10, 1957) was a Republican member of the U Lynn Townsend White Jr ( April 29 1907 – March 30 1987) was a professor of medieval History at Princeton, Gordon Wright ( April 24, 1912 - January 11, 2000) was an American Historian. Richard Brandon Morris (July 24 1904 - March 3 1989 was an American Historian best known for his pioneering work in colonial American legal history and the early history This article refers to the TV journalist For other people with the same name see Charles Gibson (disambiguation. Bouwsma (1978)
- John Hope Franklin (1979)
- David H. John Hope Franklin (born January 2, 1915) is a United States historian and past president of the American Historical Pinkney (1980)
- Bernard Bailyn (1981)
- Gordon A. Craig (1982)
- Philip D. Curtin (1983)
- Arthur S. Link (1984)
- William H. McNeill (1985)
- Carl N. Degler (1986)
- Natalie Zemon Davis (1987)
- Akira Iriye 1988
- Louis R. Bernard Bailyn (b 1922 Hartford Connecticut) is an American historian author and professor specializing in U Gordon Alexander Craig ( November 13, 1913 &ndash October 30, 2005) was a Scottish-American historian of German, Swiss Philip D Curtin (born 1922 is a Professor Emeritus at Johns Hopkins University and historian on Africa and the Atlantic slave trade. Arthur S Link (1920-1998 was a leading American historian Born in New Market Virginia, to a German Lutheran family he graduated from the University of North Carolina William Hardy McNeill (born October 31, 1917) is a noted world historian. Carl Neumann Degler (born 1921 is an American Historian. Degler is a past president of the Organization of American Historians, the American Historical Natalie Zemon Davis (born November 8, 1928) is a Canadian and American Historian of early modern Europe. is a Japanese political scientist and historian of American diplomatic history especially US-Asian relations and international issues Harlan 1989
- David Herlihy 1990
- William E. David Herlihy (1930 &ndash 1991 was an American historian who wrote on Medieval and Renaissance life Leuchtenburg (1991)
- Frederic E. Wakeman Jr 1992
- Louise A. Frederic Evans Wakeman Jr ( ( December 12, 1937 &ndash September 14, 2006) was a prominent American scholar of Chinese history Tilly 1993
- Thomas C. Holt(1994)
- John H. Coatsworth (1995)
- Caroline Walker Bynum (1996)
- Joyce Appleby (1997)
- Joseph C. Thomas C Holt is James Westfall Thompson Professor of American and African American History at the University of Chicago; he has produced a number of works on the John H Coatsworth is Professor of History and International and Public Affairs at Columbia University director of Columbia's Institute for Latin American Studies Caroline Walker Bynum is an American Medieval scholar She is a University Professor Emerita at Columbia University, where she still teaches Joyce Oldham Appleby is Professor Emerita of History at UCLA. Miller (1998)
- Robert Darnton (1999)
- Eric Foner (2000)
- William Roger Louis (2001)
- Lynn Hunt (2002)
- James M. McPherson (2003)
- Jonathan Spence (2004)
- James J. Robert Darnton (born May 10, 1939) is an American Cultural historian, recognized as a leading expert on eighteenth-century France. Eric Foner (born February 7, 1943 in New York City) is an American historian Lynn Hunt is a renowned American historian and is the Eugen Weber Professor of Modern European History at the University of California Los Angeles. For the Civil War General of a similar name see James B McPherson James M Jonathan D Spence (Chinese name, August 11, 1936 &ndash) is a British-born Historian and Public intellectual specializing in Chinese Sheehan (2005)
- Linda K. Kerber (2006)
- Barbara Weinstein (2007)
- Gabrielle M. Spiegel, president elect
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See also
- Herbert Baxter Adams prize, annual award given by the association. The Herbert Baxter Adams Prize is an annual award of the American Historical Association. [5]
References
- ^ [1] The Study of History in Schools, report to the American Historical Association by the Committee of Seven, New York, The Macmillan Company; London, Macmillan and Co. , Ltd. , 1899.
- ^ Robert Orrill and Linn Shapiro | Forum Essay: From Bold Beginnings to an Uncertain Future: The Discipline of History and History Education | The American Historical Review, 110.3
- ^ Press Release: AHA Announces Changes in Efforts Relating to Professional Misconduct
- ^ Reporter's Notebook: Highlights from the 2007 Annual Meeting of the American Historical Association
- ^ Herbert Baxter Adams Prize. American Historical Association (2008-01-11). 2008 ( MMVIII) is the current year in accordance with the Gregorian calendar, a Leap year that started on Tuesday of the Common Events 1055 - Theodora is crowned Empress of the Byzantine Empire. Retrieved on 2008-04-28. 2008 ( MMVIII) is the current year in accordance with the Gregorian calendar, a Leap year that started on Tuesday of the Common Events 1192 - Assassination of Conrad of Montferrat (Conrad I King of Jerusalem, in Tyre, two days after his title
Selected Bibliography
- Alonso, Harriet Hyman. " Slammin' at the AHA. " Rethinking History 2001 5(3): 441-446. ISSN 1364-2529 Fulltext in Ingenta and Ebsco. The theme of the 2001 annual meeting of the AHA, "Practices of Historical Narrative," attracted a variety of panels. The article traces one such panel from its conception to presentation. Taking the theme to heart, the panelists created a "slam" (or reading) of narrative histories written by experienced historians, a graduate student, and an undergraduate student, and then opened the session to readings from the audience.
- American Historical Association Committee on Graduate Education. "We Historians: the Golden Age and Beyond. " Perspectives 2003 41(5): 18-22. ISSN 0743-7021 Surveys the state of the history profession in 2003 and points out that numerous career options exist for persons with a Ph. D. in history, although the traditional ideal of a university-level appointment for new Ph. D. 's remains the primary goal of doctoral programs.
- Bender, Thomas, Katz, Philip; Palmer, Colin; and American Historical Association Committee on Graduate Education. The Education of Historians for the Twenty-First Century. U. of Illinois Press, 2004. 222 pp.
- Elizabeth Donnan and Leo F. Stock, eds. An Historian's World: Selections from the Correspondence of John Franklin Jameson, (1956), Jameson was AHR editor 1895-1901, 1905-1928
- Higham, John. History: Professional Scholarship in America. (1965, 2nd ed. 1989).
- Meringolo, Denise D. "Capturing the Public Imagination: the Social and Professional Place of Public History. " American Studies International 2004 42(2-3): 86-117. ISSN 0883-105X Fulltext in Ebsco. Unlike academic history, public history was often a collaborative effort, did not necessarily rely on primary research, was more democratic in participation, and did not aspire to absolute "scientific" objectivity. Heritage movements and historical preservation were also considered public history. Though public history originated in the AHA it separated out in the 1930s due to differences in methodology, focus, and purpose. The foundations of public history were lain on the middle ground between academic history and the public audience by National Park Service administrators during the 1920's-30's.
- Morey Rothberg and Jacqueline Goggin, eds. , John Franklin Jameson and the Development of Humanistic Scholarship in America (3 vols. , 1993-2001)
- Novick, Peter. That Noble Dream: The "Objectivity Question" and the American Historical Profession. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1988. Cambridge University Press (known colloquially as CUP is a Publisher given a Royal Charter by Henry VIII in 1534
- Orrill, Robert and Shapiro, Linn. "From Bold Beginnings to an Uncertain Future: the Discipline of History and History Education. " American Historical Review 2005 110(3): 727-751. ISSN 0002-8762 Fulltext in History Cooperative, University of Chicago Press and Ebsco. In challenging the reluctance of historians to join the national debate over teaching history in the schools, the authors argue that historians should remember the leading role that the profession once played in the making of school history. The AHA invented school history in the early 20th century and remained at the forefront of K-12 policymaking until just prior to World War II. However, it abandoned its long-standing activist stance and allowed school history to be submerged within the ill-defined, antidisciplinary domain of "social studies. "
- Sheehan, James J. "The AHA and its Publics - Part I. " Perspectives 2005 43(2): 5-7. ISSN 0743-7021
- Stearns, Peter N. ; Seixas, Peter; and Wineburg, Sam, ed. Knowing, Teaching, and Learning History. New York U. Press, 2000. 576 pp.
- Tyrrell, Ian. Historians in Public: The Practice of American History, 1890–1970. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2005
External links
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