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
1999-00
Rafia M. Zafar
Washington University in St. Louis
Associate Professor of History
'And Called it Macaroni': Eating, Writing, Becoming American
1999-00
Kate Haulman
Cornell University
PhD Candidate
The Empire's New Clothes: The Politics of Dress in America, 1765-1820
1999-00
Laura Schiavo
George Washington University
PhD Candidate
A Collection of Endless Extent and Beauty: Stereographs, Perception, Taste, and the American Middle Class
1999-00
Colgate University
Professor
David Ruggles: Black Apostle of Freedom
1999-00
Kathryn Mudgett
Northeastern University
PhD Candidate
Dana, Melville, Justice Story, and the Law and Literature of the Sea
1999-00
Temple University
Visiting Assistant Professor
Early American Finance: Revolution, Integration, Expansion
1999-00
Catherine E. Kelly
University of Oklahoma
Assistant Professor
Things Useful and Ornamental: Gender, Culture, and Gentility in the Bourgeois Republic
1999-00
Kariann Akemi Yokota
University of California, Los Angeles
PhD Candidate
A Culture of Insecurity: The Early Republic as a Post-Colonial Nation, 1789-1830
1998-99
Yale University
Assistant Professor
Larding the Lean Earth: Agriculture and the Environment in America, 1800-1850
1998-99
Candy Brown
Harvard University
PhD Candidate
Salt to the World: A Cultural History of Evangelical Reading, Writing, and Publishing Practices in Mid-Nineteenth-Century America