MHS News
The MHS Welcomes 14 New Fellows
The Fellows of the MHS approved the election of the following new Fellows at the Annual Meeting on 16 May.
Carolyn Eastman of Richmond, VA
Carolyn Eastman is an associate professor of history at Virginia Commonwealth University in Richmond, where she moved this year after teaching for a decade at the University of Texas at Austin. She took her Ph.D. at Johns Hopkins in 2001, three years after she held an MHS short-term fellowship to work on her dissertation. That study resulted in her book A Nation of Speechifiers (2009), an inquiry into the development of the public sphere in America, which won the James Broussard Prize of the Society of Historians of the Early American Republic (SHEAR) for the best first book. She held an MHS-NEH Long-term Fellowship in 2008-2009 for research on her second major project, a study of the development of visual culture in the Atlantic world in the eighteenth century.
Louise H. (Polly) Flansburgh of Lincoln, MA
Louise H. (Polly) Flansburgh founded Boston by Foot in 1976 and directed the organization for more than thirty years before becoming president and trustee in 2007. Each year between May and October, the organization promotes public awareness of the city’s rich historical and architectural heritage through walking tours. Since the founding of the organization, its trained volunteer guides have introduced 250,000 visitors to the city’s most important and enduring sites. She is a graduate of Cornell University and Northeastern University and was a Fulbright Scholar.
Richard Gilder of New York, NY
Richard Gilder is nationally recognized as a collector and supporter of American history. A co-founder of the Gilder Lehrman Institute of American History, he heads the brokerage firm Gilder, Gagnon, Howe & Company, is the chairman of the Executive Committee of the New-York Historical Society, serves on the Executive Board of the Omohundro Institute of Early American History and Culture, and is a trustee of many cultural institutions. He received the National Humanities Medal for work in promoting the study and love of American history in 2005.
Kenneth Gloss of Boston, MA
Kenneth Gloss is the proprietor of the Brattle Book Shop in Boston, one of the nation’s oldest and best known antiquarian books shops. Widely recognized and respected for his expertise in rare books, he has lectured and written extensively on the subject. He has appeared as an expert on Antiques Roadshow, as a guest on radio broadcasts, and as an expert witness for the Federal prosecutor in Boston.
Jayne Gordon of Concord, MA
Jayne Gordon became the first Director of Education and Public Programs for the MHS in 2006. Previously, she was Executive Director of the Thoreau Society, the world's oldest and largest organization devoted to the legacy of an American author. Jayne taught high school history before becoming Director of the Orchard (Alcott) House for sixteen years. She has held the position of Director of Education at both the Concord Museum and the Thoreau Institute (Walden Woods Project), and of Education/Interpretive Specialist at two National Park sites: Minute Man and Longfellow. For many years she taught graduate courses in Museum Studies at Tufts University. She has been involved with organizations connecting history, literature and landscape for forty years.
Ruth Wallis Herndon of Grand Rapids, OH
Ruth Wallis Herndon teaches American history at Bowling Green State University, where she moved from the University of Toledo on the completion of an MHS-NEH Long-term Fellowship in 2007. Prior to that award, she held a New England Regional Fellowship Consortium grant in 2001-2002. Professor Herndon’s research focuses on marginalized populations during the colonial period. Her first book, Unwelcome Americans (2001), studied the transient poor in colonial New England. A co-edited anthology, Children Bound to Labor, looked at pauper apprenticeship, also the focus of her research while she was at the Society courtesy of the NEH. She is now working on a study of children in Boston’s almshouse who were bound out as apprentices during the eighteenth century. In another project, she and a Native American scholar are attempting to retell the story of colonial New England using Narragansett as well as Euro-American sources. Professor Herndon has served on the Society’s Long-term Fellowship selection committee, and presented a portion of her research at the December session of the Boston Area Early American History Seminar.
Barry Levy of Amherst, MA
Barry Levy, a professor of history at the University of Massachusetts, Amherst, concentrates his research on American social history since the middle of the seventeenth century. His first book, Quakers and the American Family, focused on Pennsylvania, where he did his doctoral work, but New England in general and Massachusetts more particularly have been the subject of his recent research. His book Town Born: The Political Economy of New England Towns from their Settlement to the Revolution appeared in 2009; he is now working on a sequel on the role of Massachusetts in the British and American empires, 1690-1820. Professor Levy is a member of the Society and has made presentations to the Boston Area Early American History Seminar.
Louis Masur of Hartford, CT
Louis Masur is the William R. Kenan, Jr., Professor in American Institutions and Values at Trinity College. Professor Masur is the author of half a dozen books, including Rites of Execution (1989) on capital punishment in the United States; Runaway Dream (2009) on Bruce Springsteen and American culture; 1831: The Year of the Eclipse (2001). Two books he wrote will be of particular interest to Massachusetts readers: The Soiling of Old Glory (2008) on an ugly incident in Boston’s racial history, the attack on Ted Landsmark at City Hall Plaza in 1976; and a happier work, Autumn Glory (2003), on the first World Series. He served for a decade as the editor of Reviews in American History, and has also received teaching awards at Trinity, City College of New York (where he taught in the 1990s), and Harvard.
David J. Mehegan of Hingham, MA
David J. Mehegan worked at the Boston Globe in a variety of capacities from 1976 until his retirement in 2009. For about a decade during this time he was the Assistant Book Editor then the Book Review Editor. A graduate of Suffolk University, in 2011 he earned a Ph.D. in Editorial Studies at Boston University. He is revising his dissertation, an edition of letters on race in the United States by Alistair Cooke, for publication as a trade book.
Sir Adam Roberts of London
Sir Adam Roberts, a senior research fellow of the Centre for International Studies at Oxford University, was the Montague Professor of International Relations there from 1986 to 2007. An expert in the fields of international security, international organizations, and international law, he has also worked on the history of thought about international relations. In 2009 he became the president of the British Academy.
Eric Slauter of Chicago, IL
Eric Slauter is an associate professor of English at the University of Chicago, where he has taught since 2000. Professor Slauter’s research focuses on eighteenth-century thought, particularly political thought. His first book, The State as a Work of Art: The Cultural Origins of the Constitution, appeared in 2008. His current projects include a cultural history of natural rights in the late seventeenth and eighteenth centuries.
Theodore E. Stebbins, Jr. of Brookline, MA
Theodore E. Stebbins, Jr., is a distinguished fellow and consultative curator of American Art at Harvard University’s Fogg Art Museum, where he has been affiliated since 2000. Prior to coming to Harvard for 22 years he was the John Moors Cabot Curator of American Paintings at the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston. He has also been an associate professor of art history and curator of American painting and sculpture at Yale University. One of the nation’s leading scholars of American art, Stebbins has had a long professional association with the MHS.
Xiao-huang Yin of East Lansing, MI
Xiao-huang Yin is Professor and Director of Global Studies in the Arts and Humanities at Michigan State University. He is also a Changjiang (Yangtze River) Scholar and a Co-Convener of Global & Transnational Studies at Nanjing University in China. He received his Ph.D. from Harvard in 1991, and shortly thereafter he held an MHS short-term fellowship to conduct research on the origins of Boston’s Chinese population. Professor Yin has presented work at the Society’s Immigration and Urban History Seminar, and this April he offered an essay at “What’s New About the New Immigration to the U.S.?,” the Society’s conference on recent immigration. A revised version of his conference piece will appear in the conference essay collection.
Philip Zea of Deerfield, MA
Philip Zea, a graduate of Wesleyan University and the Winterthur Program at the University of Delaware, is the president of Historic Deerfield. He held positions at Historic Deerfield, Old Sturbridge Village, Colonial Williamsburg, where he was curator of furniture, and Historic New England, where he was vice president for museums and collections, before returning to Historic Deerfield as the chief executive.
Photo by Stu Rosner