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Faculty Awards and Recognitions of NoteDr. Barry Lanman, honored as this year's winner of The Postsecondary Teaching Award of the Oral History Association. "The Award recognizes a distinguished postsecondary educator involved in undergraduate, graduate, continuing, or professional education who has incorporated the practice of oral history in the classroom in an exemplary way." Anne Rubin awarded American Council of Learned Societies Digital Innovation Fellowship for 2008. Dr. Rubin will use the fellowship to work on her book and website project, "Through the Heart of Dixie: Sherman's March and America." Amy Froide appointed UMBC Bearman Family Chair in Entrepreneurship for 2007-2010. The three-year fellowship is awarded to a faculty member studying, teaching, and promoting entrepreneurship. Amy Froide awarded the Helen L. Bing and Fletcher Jones Foundation Fellowship at the Huntington Library for Summer and Fall 2007. The fellowship provides research support for Dr. Froide's current book project, "The Silent Partners of Britain's Financial Revolution: Women as Public Investors 1688-1760. Kriste Lindenmeyer named Kauffman Entrepreneurship Fellow for 2007-2010. The three-year appointment facilitates the promotion of innovative and entrepreneurial thinking in the curriculum at UMBC. Sandra Herbert wins the Geological Society of America's 2006 Mary C. Rabbitt Award, Charles Darwin, Geologist. (Cornell University Press) Winner of the Geological Society of America's 2006 Mary C. Rabbitt Award, “given annually in recognition of outstanding contributions to the understanding of the history of the geological sciences in the United States and abroad.” The book has also won the 2006 Suzanne J. Levinson book award from the History of Science Society, the George L. Mosse Prize from the American Historical Association, and the Albion Book Prize from the North American Conference on British Studies. The Baltimore Sun, featured a story about Dr. Herbert, August 13, 2006 "Darwin Still Lives." Kate Brown featured in Harper's Online, September 22, 2006. The Center for History Education recently received another $1 million grant from the Teaching American History program at the U.S. Department of Education. This is the fifth TAH grant the Center has received since 2000. Howard County Schools is the major partner in the project. This partnership is the latest in a series with Baltimore County, Anne Arundel County, and Baltimore City public schools. Congratulations to Dan Ritschel, Rachel Brubaker, and Sharese Essien who lead the CHE. Anne Rubin wins OAH Avery O. Craven Book Prize. Michelle Scott awarded
Mellon-Wilson Fellowship Warren Cohen receives
Regents' Award Kate Brown awarded Social Science Research Council Grant and the George Louis Beer Prize Professor Kathryn Brown won the American Historical Association's prestigious George Louis Beer Prize , given for outstanding historical writing on any phase of European international history since 1895, for her book A Biography of No Place: From Ethnic Borderland to Soviet Heartland. Previously Professor Brown's book won the Heldt Prize awarded by the American Women for Slavic Studies. Marjoleine Kars awarded
NEH Fellowship James Grubb named UMBC Presidential Research Professor for 2004-07 John Jeffries named OAH Distinguished Lecturer for 2004-2007 Marjoleine Kars Awarded Mellon Fellowship Kriste Lindenmeyer Awarded Fulbright Fellowship Learning from Post-World War II Germany (Rebecca Boehling) UMBC Historian Wins First-Ever e-Lincoln Prize (Anne Rubin) Learning from the Past (James Bailey) UMBC’s Historians Honored with Prestigious Awards UMBC Historian Awarded Top Honor in Field (Warren Cohen) James Grubb - Professor, History - Presidential Research Professor |

