Previous Hayes Chair Recipients




SIOBHAN SENIER
Associate Professor of English

James H. Hayes and Claire Short Hayes Professor of the Humanities  2010
 

“Native people--in particular, the Abenaki people who have always made New Hampshire part of their homeland--have taught me to rethink the very idea of New Hampshire.” 




CYNTHIA VAN ZANDT
Associate Professor of History

James H. Hayes and Claire Short Hayes Professor of the Humanities  2011

Northern New England played a much more important role in early colonial American history than scholars have realized. To fully understand how and why that is so, much more work remains to be done on colonial New Hampshire.” 

Siobhan Senier’s year as the Hayes Chair will provide the opportunity to conduct extensive research on the Abenaki people who have always made New Hampshire part of their homeland. “Abenaki territory extends down into western Massachusetts, across Vermont and up into Canada; Abenaki people today maintain connections and do their tribal and cultural work across those borders," Senier says.  "Teaching and writing about Native New Hampshire therefore involves thinking about how New Hampshire’s identity is intertwined with broader regional and ethnic identities.”  Her research will become part of an anthology of writings by local Native American authors and, potentially, a new course for UNH undergraduates.  Read More. . . During her year as Hayes Chair in 2011, Cynthia Van Zandt will continue to investigate how the early history of New Hampshire connects with her current book project. That research explores the unsubstantiated fears of seventeenth-century Protestants about a world-wide Catholic conspiracy.  Van Zandt’s goals are to understand how those fears among New Hampshire Protestant colonists impacted tensions with the Catholic and French settlers to their north and east.  She will also compare and contrast the attitudes of New Hampshire colonists with those of other New England Protestants in the 1680s.    Read More. . .

 

Hayes Chair recipients

 

 

Hayes Chair recipients (pictured left to right): W. Jeffrey Bolster, Associate Professor of History, 2002-2007; Nina Glick Schiller, Professor of Anthropology, 2007-2009; David H. Watters, Professor of English, 1997-2002; Charles E. Clark, Professor of History Emeritus, 1993-1997


 

Nina Glick Schiller
Professor of Anthropology
James H. Hayes and Claire Short Hayes Professor of the Humanities
2007-2009

Until her retirement from UNH in 2009, Nina Glick Schiller, one of the foremost scholars of international migration in the United States, used her tenure as Hayes Chair to conduct ethnographic studies of refugee incorporation in New Hampshire. She also engaged students in her research work and mentored them as they organized a non-profit student group to aid refugees in the state. She states, "Much in the New Hampshire immigrant experience of settlement and transnational connection challenges commonly held ideas about both immigration and New Hampshire." During the summer of 2009, Glick Schiller published a groundbreaking study of refugee resettlement in New Hampshire. Read the study.


W. Jeffrey Bolster
Associate Professor of History
James H. Hayes and Claire Short Hayes Professor of the Humanities
2002-2007

During his five years as Hayes Chair, most of Jeff Bolster's work focused on the social and environmental history of coastal New England, including the coast of New Hampshire. He researched and wrote a book entitled, Changes in the Sea:  New England Fishermen and Coastal Ecology in the Age of Sail. Through the Chair, Bolster was able to initiate a series of collaborative endeavors and public outreach projects that attracted additional grants from outside agencies, funding numerous graduate teaching and research assistants. "My signature collaboration," Bolster says, "was part of the interdisciplinary group at UNH in marine environmental history. Partnering with Professor Andy Rosenberg, Professor of Natural Resources in the Institute for the Study of Earth, Oceans and Space (EOS), we assembled a team of historians, ecologists, and biostatisticians to reconstruct aspects of past Marine ecosystems affected by humans." Bolster also redesigned a history of New Hampshire class into a writing-intensive, place-based inquiry course. 


David H. Watters
Professor of English
James H. Hayes and Claire Short Hayes Professor of the Humanities
1997-2002

As Hayes Chair, David Watters researched New Hampshire literature and culture and was co-editor of the Encyclopedia of New England (Yale University Press, 2005), one of the largest interdisciplinary projects in the country. “Without the support of the Hayes Chair,” says Watters, “the ENE could not have been completed.” Watters’ accomplishments as Hayes Chair include sponsoring a series of teacher workshops and conferences on topics such as Native Americans in New England and Robert Frost. He worked with StoryLines America to create a nationally syndicated book discussion series on New England authors. The series ran on New Hampshire Public Radio over a 13-week period. Watters also developed new courses in New Hampshire literature and in New England culture. “The Hayes Chair transformed my career at UNH by supporting work on regional culture. It continues to lead me to new research and teaching on New Hampshire, such as my publications on Harriet Wilson and the creation of the annual Black New England Conference.”


Charles E. Clark
Professor of History Emeritus
James H. Hayes and Claire Short Hayes Professor of Humanities
1993-1997

Charles Clark was the first appointee to the Hayes Chair; his appointment was suggested by Jim Hayes himself. Reflecting upon his appointment, Clark explains, “I took it as my first responsibility, in accordance with the language of the Hayes grant, to further develop and embellish the New Hampshire history course for undergraduates that I had already been teaching from time to time.” While serving as the Hayes Chair, Clark began research on the transitional period in New Hampshire from pre- to post-Revolution for his book From Province to State. He also began and finished The Meetinghouse Tragedy: An Episode in the Life of a New England Town (University Press of New England, 1998), a story that the journal Historical New Hampshire called “a personal and vibrant insight into the everyday lives of New Hampshire residents at the time of the American Revolution.” Clark also contributed quite heavily to the Encyclopedia of New England, wrote several other encyclopedia articles on New Hampshire, and made quite a few contributions both to the New National Biography and the American National Biography.

Clark says, “The Chair was a tremendous honor, since at that time it was the first and only endowed chair in the College of Liberal Arts, and it shaped most of what was and is left of my scholarly career. In other words, it still influences what I am trying to do more than a decade after my retirement, and I am proud to be able to carry the name of that chair as part of my emeritus title.”

 




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