
The U.S. History faculty at Michigan State University enjoys a national and international reputation for research, teaching, outreach, and leadership in humanities technology and computing. The U.S. History program thus continues a rich tradition established by such distinguished scholars as Darlene Clark Hine, Norman Pollack, Fred Williams, and Ralph and Katherine Brown, while expanding and innovating within the changing environment of higher education in the 21st century.
The size and scholarly activity of the U.S. faculty at Michigan State creates a unique intellectual environment. The U.S. field includes 17 tenure-stream faculty with diverse research and teaching interests. The U.S. faculty offers undergraduate and graduate programs in four broad areas: political history; social history; intellectual, cultural, and religious history; and race and ethnicity. The program has particular strength in late-19th and early-20th century social and political history; African American and Comparative Black history; Civil War & Reconstruction; Native American history; urban history; gender; Jewish and Latino/a history; intellectual and religious history; labor and rural history. Other areas covered include diplomatic, environmental, colonial, transnational, and public history.
Recent books are representative of the new and exciting contributions that the U.S. faculty are making to the field. These include:
The U.S. faculty includes the director of H-Net and Matrix, placing the department at the forefront of humanities technology. U.S. historians also play a critical role in several interdisciplinary programs at Michigan State University, including American Studies, Labor Studies, Jewish Studies, Native American Studies, and Latin American Studies. Adjunct professor Roger Rosentreter is editor of Michigan History.
U.S. historians have earned outstanding reputations as teachers in both departmental courses and integrative studies, Michigan State’s general education core curriculum. Several have been recognized for teaching excellence, most recently Thomas Summerhill and Daina Ramey Berry, the recipient of the university’s prestigious 2004-5 Teacher-Scholar Award. Likewise, the graduate program has been successful at placing recent Ph.D. students in tenure-stream positions at colleges and universities nationwide. In both undergraduate and graduate settings, MSU students benefit from an open and accessible faculty.
Faculty maintain a high profile in the profession. Positions held by U.S. historians in recent years include the president of the Organization of American Historians, the founding editor of the Journal of the Gilded Age and Progressive Era, national treasurer of the Association of Black Women Historians, and board of directors of the Institute for the Study of Christianity and Culture, in addition to other service to professional organizations.
Faculty members are actively involved in outreach and consulting activities that form a major part of Michigan State University's mission as a public university. U.S. historians have completed two major grant projects in the past two years: a secondary teacher training program in partnership with the Battle Creek School District and the Michigan Agricultural Heritage Project, a grant from the Michigan Department of Transportation to identify historically significant rural sites for preservation. Faculty regularly undertake consulting work with government and private agencies.
Return to topState, Society, and Politics
David Bailey, Robert Bonner, Kirsten Fermaglich, Lisa Fine, Maureen Flanagan, Mark Kornbluh, Peter Knupfer, Sayuri Shimizu, Susan Sleeper-Smith, Thomas Summerhill, Samuel Thomas
Race, Ethnicity and Migration
Daina Ramey-Berry, Pero Dagbovie, Kirsten Fermaglich, J. Javier Pescador, Susan Sleeper-Smith, Richard Thomas, Dionicio Valdes
Intellectual, Cultural, and Religious
David Bailey, Robert Bonner, Peter Knupfer, J. Javier Pescador, Samuel Thomas
Labor, Industry, and Agriculture
James Anderson, Daina Ramey-Berry, Lisa Fine, Thomas Summerhill, Dionicio Valdes
The Great Lakes in National and Transnational Context
David Bailey, Lisa Fine, Maureen Flanagan, Susan Sleeper-Smith, Thomas Summerhill, Dionicio Valdes
International Relations
Return to topUndergraduate offerings in U.S. History focus on the major chronological periods in the nation's development, with particular emphasis on providing students with breadth of knowledge. Within this framework, individual professors provide a mixture of political, social, cultural, gender, race, ethnicity, labor, religious, environmental, and diplomatic history. The goal of the undergraduate program is to help students develop skills in critical thinking, research, analytical writing, and an understanding of the key forces that have shaped the nation's history.
For beginning students, and especially majors, the 201 seminar is designed to introduce them to the skills, methods, theories, and writing of history. The course entails intensive reading and writing, and includes a major research paper. Individual instructors offer unique topics that can be found on the main departmental website. 201 seminars give freshmen and sophomores the advantage of working closely with faculty early in their careers at Michigan State University.
The 202 and 203 surveys, which cover U.S. history before and after 1877, are large lecture courses with readings sections that introduce students to the major themes, events, documents, and people that have shaped the nation. They are also designed to introduce students to the study of history via primary and secondary readings.
The 300-level lecture courses provide students with the opportunity to study these themes in greater depth, and include more intensive reading and writing requirements to help students hone their skills. Among the most popular offerings at this level are HST 304, The American Civil War; HST 318, United States Constitutional History; HST 320, Michigan History; and HST 324, The History of Sports in America.
The department offers an exciting range of courses in race and ethnicity:
Experimental courses, such as “America’s Rural Past” and “Catholics in Modern America” are taught as HST 454 at the discretion of the instructor.
For advanced students, the 480 seminars are deigned to help them develop expertise in particular areas of interest while polishing their analytical, research, and writing skills. All history majors are expected to take two 480 seminars. The courses are designed to prepare students for careers in history, secondary education, and related fields, many of which require graduate training.
In addition to history majors, many of our students are from Teacher Education, the Honors College, James Madison College, Journalism, and Criminal Justice. U.S. history courses have heavy enrollments because of the popularity of the topics and the instructors, but faculty take special care to be available to students and make their classroom experience personally rewarding.
Return to topThe graduate program in U.S. History at Michigan State offers prospective students a unique opportunity to study either discreet periods, key issues and themes in the nation's history, or transnational history with a U.S. focus. The U.S. faculty has had a traditional strength in African American History, with intradepartmental connections to the Comparative Black History program and African History. Members of the faculty are also closely involved in the new African-American and African Studies program. The U.S. field is equally strong in political and social history, with special strength in the Antebellum period, the Civil War & Reconstruction, the Gilded Age, and the Progressive Era. The faculty are also currently building a program in Great Lakes history in national and international context, viewing the region as a borderland throughout its history. The department also has growing strength in race and ethnicity--including African American, Latina/o, Jewish, or Native American studies. For students interested in other aspects of U.S. history, the size of the faculty will enable them to pursue careers in urban, labor, intellectual, religious, diplomatic, rural, environmental, and diplomatic history, and there are students currently working in each of these areas. Last, U.S. History and American Studies have a close working relationship that allows graduate students from each program to work closely with faculty in the other.
Graduate students in U.S. History can receive financial support either through recruitment fellowships, completion grants, research assistantships, or teaching assistantships within the Department of History or the Center for Integrative Studies in the Arts and Humanities. Financial aid is based on merit and need.
Current Ph.D. students working with U.S. faculty on U.S. History and American Studies dissertations have earned prestigious external fellowships and awards as well. These include Newberry Fellowships, the Albert J. Beveridge Grant of the American Historical Association, the graduate fellowship at the National Museum of American History, Smithsonian Institution, and other national and regional fellowships.
Return to topThe MSU Library has an outstanding collection of both old and recent volumes in U.S. history. In particular, the library houses concentrations in African American, agriculture, American radicalism, American Studies, the Civil War and Reconstruction, foreign relations, government documents, Michigan history, Native Americans, and the West. As a member of the CIC, the library has ready access to Interlibrary Loan materials from other Big Ten universities and the University of Chicago. As well, the library has partnered with the Library of Michigan in downtown Lansing to make volumes from the state library available on campus to MSU researchers.
MSU also houses important archival resources in U.S. history. MSU Library Special Collections includes the Russell B. Nye Popular Culture Collection, the American Radicalism Collection, the Ethnic Studies Collection, the Comic Book Collection, the Changing Men Collection, and the Lesbian, Gay, Bi-sexual and Transgender Collection. The University Archives contain a substantial number of collections relating to the history of the university, agriculture, and the social and political history of Michigan.
MSU is located within easy driving distance of major libraries and archives in the Midwest, providing graduate students with ample resources for dissertational research in a variety of subfields, particularly in the social, economic, and political history of the Great Lakes Region. For more information on collections follow the links below.
Michigan libraries and archives with strong U.S. and regional collections:
A sample of research libraries and archives in Illinois, Indiana, Ohio, and Wisconsin: