Kate B. and Hall J. Peterson Fellowships are for research on any topic supported by the collections. Stipends derive from the income on an endowment provided by the late Hall J. Peterson and his wife, Kate B. Peterson. This fellowship is awarded to individuals engaged in scholarly research and writing - - including doctoral dissertations - - in any field of American history and culture through 1876.
Application Deadline
January 15, 2025 - 12:00pm
Date
Name
Affiliation
Position
2004-05
Peter Leavenworth
University of New Hampshire
PhD Candidate
"Confrontations of Taste: American vs. European Standards of Music Aesthetics in the Early Republic"
2004-05
David Gellman
DePauw University
Assistant Professor
"Liberty's Legacy: The Jay Family and the Problems of American Freedom"
2004-05
Vicki Hsueh
Western Washington University
Assistant Professor
Hybrid Constitutionalism: Negotiating Constitutions and Cultures in the Proprietary Colonies, 1625-1690
2004-05
Angela Pulley Hudson
Yale University
PhD Candidate
Indians, Slaves, and Surveyors on the Federal Road, 1790s-1840s
2004-05
Ilyon Woo
Columbia University
PhD Candidate
"Mother against Mother"
2003-04
Jill Anderson
Thomas Jefferson Foundation
Assistant Editor
"Nothing Done!": The Poet in Early Nineteenth-Century American Culture
2003-04
Matthew Pursell
Brown University
PhD Candidate
English Liberty, American Bondage: Servitude in the British Atlantic, 1630-1780
2003-04
Ellen Gilbert
Rutgers University
Independent Scholar
St. Wulstan Society Papers
2003-04
Scott Miltenberger
University of California, Davis
PhD Candidate
All Gotham's Creatures: Animals and the Middle Class in New York City, 1783-1898
2003-04
Rebecca McNulty
University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign
PhD Candidate
Education for Empire: Manual Labor, Civilization, and the Family in Nineteenth-Century American Missionary Education