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
2024-25
Mindy L. Buchanan-King
University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
PhD Candidate
(Un)Veiling Disease: Women’s Breast Cancer and Concealed Diagnoses
2024-25
Abby Clayton
Indiana University, Bloomington
PhD Candidate
Narrating Abolition: Scissors-and-Paste Reform in the Emerging Anglosphere
2024-25
Hunter Davis Moskowitz
Northeastern University
PhD Candidate
Labor and Race in the Global Textile Industry: Lowell, Concord and Monterrey in the Early 19th Century
2024-25
Amy Earhart
Texas A&M University
Associate Professor of English
The Millican Massacre: Newspaper Transmission and Extension of Reconstruction Racial Violence
2024-25
Wyatt Erchak
Carnegie Mellon University
PhD Candidate
Private Wrongs: A Hidden History of the American Civil War’s First Black Regiment
2024-25
Li-hsin Hsu
National Chengchi University
Professor
Racial and Ecological Intimacies in the Mid-nineteenth-century Atlantic Silk Imagination
2024-25
Jennifer W. Reiss
University of Pennsylvania
PhD Candidate in History
Undone Bodies: Women and Disability in Early America
2024-25
Damien Rousseliere
Institut Agro
Professor
Accounting, Remuneration and Labor Conflicts in 19th American Utopian Communities: A comparison between Northampton Association of Education and Industry and other Communes
2023-24
Helena Yoo Roth
CUNY Graduate Center
PhD Candidate in History
American Timelines: Imperial Communications, Colonial Time-Consciousness, and the Coming of the American Revolution
2023-24
Alexander Chaparro-Silva
University of Texas, Austin
PhD Candidate in History
Writing the Other America: Democracy, Race, and Print Culture in the Americas, 1830-1898