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White House History Fellowships
White House History Fellowships 2007 Recipients
White House History Fellowships 2006 Recipients
White House History Fellows 2005 Recipient
White House History Fellowships 2004 Recipients
White
House History Fellowship 2003 Recipients
The White House Historical Association
and the Organization of American Historians seek proposals for
research projects focusing on the roles of the White House as
home, workplace, museum, structure, and symbol. Teachers and
scholars whose work enhances understanding of how the White House
functions in its several capacities and of life and work at all
levels within the walls of the President's House are encouraged
to apply. (Studies that deal primarily with political or governmental
policy issues would not be appropriate for this program, but
ones concerning the operation of the White House as a political
institution would be considered.)
In an effort to reach a number of learning
communities, the cosponsors offer three fellowships:
- The White House History Fellowship in Precollegiate Education forinitiatives that reach the K-12 classroom.
- The White House History Research Fellowship for forwarding or completing dissertation, postdoctoral, or advanced academic work.
- The White House History Fellowship in Public History for public presentation in the form of exhibits, multimedia projects, films, etc., or for other projects that make historical collections available to broad audiences.
Awards are $2000/month. We will consider proposals for
fellowships lasting one to six months. To apply, please send the following items as an MS-Word or Rich Text Format (RTF) format file to whfapps07@lists.oah.org by December 1, 2007:
1. C.V. or resume;
2. A two-page summary of your project including the proposed
final product of the research and timetable;
3. Three professional references;
4. A modest travel stipend is also available.
If interested, submit a travel budget as well.
Please send materials to:
White House Historical Association Fellowship
Organization of American Historians
112 North Bryan Avenue
PO Box 5457
Bloomington, IN 47408-5457
Committee members are:
Luisa E. Bonillas, Arizona State University
Dickson D. Bruce Jr., University of California, Irvine
Eve Carr, Cape Fear Museum
Randall M. Miller, Saint Joseph's University
Lee Ann Potter, National Archives and Records Administration
John P. Riley, White House Historical Association
John H. Sprinkle, Jr., National Park Service (Committee Chair)
Awards will be announced prior to the OAH annual meeting each
spring.
2007 Recipients
White House History Research Fellowships for scholars pursuing projects
that illuminate the historical roles of the White House as home, workplace,
museum, structure and symbol.
Kimberly Ann Hyde, Case Western Reserve University, "Louis
Comfort Tiffany and the White House"
White House History Fellowships in Precollegiate Education for White House
and presidential history initiatives that reach the K-12 classroom.
Glenda Armand Sheppard, Los Angeles Unified School District, California, "Frederick
Douglass: From Slave Cabin to the White House"
Michelle L. Pearson, Hulstrom Options at Rocky Top Middle School, Thornton,
Colorado, and Christopher T. Jennings, Library of Congress, Washington,
D.C., "Using Google Earth to Track the Mobile White House"
2006 Recipients
White House History Research Fellowships for scholars pursuing
projects that illuminate the historical roles of the White House
as home, workplace, museum, structure and symbol.
Pamela Scott, Independent Scholar, "Designated for Public Purposes: The
Evolution of Lafayette Square" Catherine Clinton, Writer, "Mrs. Lincoln"
White House History Fellowships in Precollegiate Education for White House
and presidential history initiatives that reach the K-12 classroom.
Susan
Hamilton Mitchell, Oceanside (CA) Unified School District, "Encounters
at the White House: The President and Native American Delegations (1850-1865)"
2005 Recipient
White House History Fellows in PreCollegiate Education
L. Mark Sweeney, Cactus Shadows High School, Cave Creek, Arizona. “The
Presidency and the Press: An Examination of Spin.”
Concentrating on the reelection campaigns of 1984 through 2004,
Sweeney will create a curriculum unit that will focus on
the codependent relationship of the president and the press. Sweeney will
examine the evolution of the news conference at the White House
and other venues for parrying between the media and the chief
executive. Daily diaries, press conference transcriptions,
historic photographs, and other materials will supplement this
project for high school American history and government classes. Activities
will also help students understand the media’s role
in defining, presenting, and filtering presidential candidates.
2004 Recipients
White House History Fellowship in PreCollegiate Education
Sally Sims Stokes, Independent Scholar. “White House Workers.”
Stokes will mine interviews in the archives at the Smithsonian’s
Center for Folklife and Cultural Heritage to create an online
exhibit of the behind-the-scenes efforts of White House residence
staff. Activities will urge the analysis of White House protocol
and the workers as de facto (and multi-generational) family. Recollections
– both transcribed and presented via audio and video – will
be presented on the Web and a classroom component will be
created to supplement a traveling exhibit.
White House History Fellowship in Public History
Rick Potter, Curator of Collections, Woodrow Wilson Presidential
Library at his Birthplace. “Woodrow Wilson’s West
Wing.” Potter will examine the political and architectural
history of Wilson’s West Wing for a permanent exhibit at
the Staunton, Virginia museum. World War I brought the first crisis
center in the West Wing, Wilson held the first formal presidential
press conferences, and Ellen Wilson’s impact was seen
in the development of the landscape, particularly the Rose
Garden.
2003 Recipients
For White House and presidential history initiatives that
reach the K-12 classroom
Jane Cook, Independent Author, "Bear Cubs for Mr. Jefferson:
White House Moments and American Changes." Cook will
write a book of historical sketches for ages 8 to 13 on important
historical events that emanated from the White House. Original
research into these moments will be complemented by interviews
of descendants and former White House staff. The books chapters
will span nearly 200 years and explore major themes in American
history through the experiences of America's leaders, e.g., "Abe's
Signature and Handshake" (Emancipation Proclamation) and
"Dolley's Rescue" (War of 1812).
Michelle Pearson, Annunciation School, Denver, CO, "A Visit
with History: A Lesson Collection Used to Teach the Journal, White
House History." This project will develop lessons
to be used in conjunction with an illustrated scholarly journal. Units
will be aimed at grades 7-12, making use of new work on the history
of the White House and making it available to a classroom audience. Two
workshops will follow in the Denver area providing integration
of White House studies while adhering to district and state standards. Further,
Pearson has obtained matching funds from a foundation source that
will help teachers purchase the journal issues and supplemental
materials. In addition, through an educational network,
Classroom Connection, the lessons may be disseminated through
nine western states.
Fellowships for scholars pursuing projects that illuminate the
historical roles of the White House as home, workplace, museum,
structure and symbol.
Eleanor Alexander, Georgia Institute of Technology, "Slaves
in the White House." This topic for a monograph examines
the lives, culture, and experiences of slaves who lived and worked
in the Executive Mansion, from George Washington to Zachary Taylor. Scholarly
attention to the topic has been scant. Alexander takes on
the challenge of documenting the lives of enslaved domestic staff
removed from plantation culture to the urban environment of the
nation's capital. In addition, she will examine the
reaction from domestic and international figures to the use
of slaves in the President's House, a weighty republican
symbol.
Natalie Dykstra, Hope College, "On Stage at the Lincoln White
House: Performing Freedom in Elizabeth Keckley's Behind the Scenes." Keckley,
a former slave who worked as a modiste for Mary Lincoln, wrote
an autobiography that has been cited frequently as source material
for the Lincoln White House. Dykstra, however, hopes to look
beyond the first family to Keckley's own story of autonomy and
economic accomplishment. The project examines how Keckley
joined her claims for personal freedom to the symbolic power of
the White House and how, from this national stage, she testified
to a larger story about African-American women and their complex
relationship to freedom, work, and self-representation during
and after the Civil War. Dykstra will also try to determine
if Keckley's profits from this "tell-all" White
House memoir were tied to her efforts to fund the First Black
Contraband Relief Organization, which she founded.
C. M. Harris, Independent Scholar, "Documentary Social History
of the Jefferson White House." Harris will initiate
the collection of primary source material in an effort to make
available a finding aid for the period 1800-1809. He will
identify, calendar and collect copies of manuscripts, printed
period letters, memoranda and diary entries. Harris contends
that modern scholars have not sufficiently appreciated Jefferson's
transformation of the Presidential "Palace" of Washington
and L'Enfant into the President's (and People's) House of Jefferson. His
effort will be to collect in one place those sources apart
from Jefferson's purposeful political correspondence that
may, upon analysis, shed light on Jefferson's efforts to
establish a new, principled standard of behavior among elite
citizens of the new Republic.
David Krugler, University of Wisconsin, Platteville, "The
D-Minus Scenario: How Washington, D.C. Prepared for Nuclear War." As
part of a new book on how the nation's capital readied itself
for an attack between WWII and the Cuban Missile Crisis, Krugler
is studying White House emergency planning and the structure's
symbolic significance during the Cold War. Within his
analysis of continuity of government measures, Krugler will
explore the crafting of attack and post-attack scenarios,
which agencies influenced decisions on the White House bomb
shelter, and other structural safeguards, and who would be
essential to carry on the tasks of the chief executive from
the seat of government.
Edward Robinson, Pembroke College, University of Oxford, "A
Press Photographer in the White House: Frances Benjamin Johnston,
1889-1905." This fellowship supports research for
a dissertation on pioneering photojournalist Johnston who created
a visual biography of the White House at the turn of the 20th
century. Johnston enjoyed "behind-the-scenes" access
to the places and figures of the White House. First families,
executive staff, domestic staff, and architectural interiors
were captured by Johnston and she fed an explosion of illustrated
newspapers and magazines. Robinson will explore how
the White House understood the role of photography (and its
political uses) and its relation to the press a century ago.
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