The Clements Library Research Fellowships 2017, USA

Publish Date: Dec 12, 2016

Deadline: Jan 15, 2017

About the fellowship

The Clements Library research fellowships exist to help scholars gain access to the Library’s rich array of primary sources on early American history. On almost any aspect of the American experience from 1492 through 1900, the Clements holdings—books, manuscripts, pamphlets, maps, prints and views, newspapers, photographs, ephemera—are among the best in the world. Since the Library’s opening in 1923, historians have published more than 600 noteworthy books based on the Clements collections. The potential for rewarding research at the Clements—on military history, gender and ethnicity, religion, the American Revolution, Native Americans, politics and government, slavery and antislavery, the Civil War, travel and exploration—is remarkably strong. For any serious student of America’s early heritage, the Clements Library is an attractive destination indeed.

The Clements Library offers research fellowships in the following categories for calendar year 2017

Jacob M. Price Visiting Research Fellowships – Price Fellowships offer support for short-term research at the Clements Library by graduate students and junior faculty on any topic of American history that is supported by the collections. Grants are for $1,000 and require a minimum visit of one week. Applications must be received by January 15 for research to be undertaken in that calendar year. 

Howard H. Peckham Fellowship on Revolutionary America – Established in honor of the Library’s second Director, the Peckham Fellowship supports research on American history between 1764 and 1783. The fellowship provides $10,000 for a project involving a residence of two months or more at the Library. This is a post-doctoral fellowship requiring a completed Ph.D. or equivalent qualifications at time of application. Applications must be received by January 15 for research to be undertaken in that calendar year.

*NEW* Norton Strange Townshend Fellowship – Named for physician and educator Norton Strange Townshend (1815-1895), this fellowship offers $10,000 in support of scholarly research on diversity, equity and inclusion in American history during the nineteenth century. Successful applicants are expected to spend a minimum of two months at the Clements. This is a post-doctoral fellowship that requires a completed Ph.D. or equivalent qualifications at the time of application. Applications for the first year of this fellowship (2017) must be received by February 15 for residence in that calendar year.

Earhart Fellowships on American History – Earhart Fellowships offer $10,000 for scholarly research on any aspect of American history prior to 1901. Successful applicants are expected to spend a minimum of two months at the Clements. This is a post-doctoral fellowship that requires a completed Ph.D. or equivalent qualifications at the time of application. Applications must be received by January 15 for residence in that calendar year.

Reese Fellowship in the Print Culture of the Americas – Funded by the William Reese Company, this fellowship encourages research in the history of the book and other print formats, bibliography, and other aspects of print culture in America, including publishing and marketing, from the sixteenth century to 1900. Projects may investigate any printed genre (e.g. books, prints, newspapers, magazines, pamphlets, published photographs, broadsides, maps, etc.). Support for work in manuscript collections will be limited to projects related to printed materials (e.g. annotations in books, publishers’ business archives, etc.). The Reese Fellowship provides $5,000 to support one month of in-residence study in the Clements Library collections. This is a post-doctoral fellowship requiring a completed Ph.D. or equivalent qualifications at time of application. Applications must be received by January 15 for research to be undertaken in that calendar year.

All applications must include the following items:

  • Application form
  • Curriculum vitae of no more than six pages
  • Brief, two-page summary of the project, including the current status of your research. Please identify what Clements Library material you wish to consult
  • Two letters of recommendation, to be sent directly to the Clements Library, from individuals who are familiar with your scholarly work

Applications may be submitted by surface mail or via email as one attachment. Please do not include images within the attachment.

Please send completed hard-copy application materials to:

Research Fellowships
Clements Library
University of Michigan
909 S. University Ave.
Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109-1190
For further information contact: clements-fellowships@umich.edu or call 734-764-2347.

Fellowships awarded for 2016

Post-Doctoral Fellowships

Howard H. Peckham Fellowship on Revolutionary America:

Dr. Art Cohn, Lake Champlain Maritime Museum: “Connected by History: Sir Henry Clinton and Benedict Arnold During the Revolutionary War.”

Dr. Mark Quintanilla, Hannibal-LaGrange University: “The West Indian Frontier: British Colonization of the Ceded Islands.”

Upton Foundation Fellowship:

Dr. Donald F. Johnson, North Dakota State University: “Occupied America: Military Rule and the Everyday Experience of Revolution.”

Reese Fellowship in the Print Culture of the Americas:

Dr. Patrick Bottiger, Kenyon College: “A Shared Memory?: Native Oral Histories, Anglo Printed Pasts, and the Creation of Tippecanoe.”

Jacob M. Price Visiting Research Fellowships

Kristen E. Beales, The College of William and Mary: “Religion and Commerce in Eighteenth Century America.”

Dr. John Collins, Eastern Washington University: “The Ghost of Thomas of Lancaster: Wartime and Emancipation in the American Revolution.”

Mary Draper, University of Virginia: “The Urban World of the Early Modern British Caribbean.”

Christopher M. Florio, Princeton University: “The Poor Always with You: Poverty in an Age of Emancipation, 1833-1879.”

Nancy Gallman, University of California, Davis: “American Constitutions: Life, Liberty & Property in Colonial East Florida.”

Katie Lantz, University of Virginia: “Contested Futures: Anishinaabe and American Societies in the Great Lakes, 1790-1840.”

Daniel Papsdorf, Duke University: “Power and Persuasion: Natives and Non-Natives in the Mississippi Valley, 1763-1803.”

Tyler Rudd Putman, University of Delaware: “The Incommunicable Experience of War, 1775-1918.”

Dr. Bryan C. Rindfleisch, Marquette University: “Possessed of the most Extensive Trade Connexions, and Influence: The Atlantic Intimacies of an Eighteenth-Century Indian Trader.”

Gary Sellick, University of South Carolina: “A Fleeting Glimpse of Freedom: The Evolution of British Emancipation Policy During the Revolutionary War.”

William E. Skidmore II, Rice University: “A Nation of Abolitionists: The Rise of the Global Antislavery Movement, 1840-1890.”

Sarah Templier, Johns Hopkins University: “Merchants, Shopkeepers, Smugglers and Thieves: Circulating and Consuming Textiles and Clothing in the Eighteenth-Century French and British Empires.”

Catherine Tourangeau, Yale University: “An Ocean of Joiners: Voluntary Associations in the British Atlantic.”

For more information click "Further official information" below.


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Disciplines

Arts

History

Literature

Opportunity Types

Fellowships

Eligible Countries

International

Host Countries

United States