Alice Paul Institute Facilitator Positions

The Alice Paul Institute (Mount Laurel, NJ), a non-profit organization dedicated to educating the public about the life and work of suffragist Alice Stokes Paul, is seeking part-time facilitators for a variety of history and girls’ leadership educational programs.  If you are interested in any of these facilitator positions, please forward your resume to Kris Myers, Director of Programs. To learn more about the Alice Paul Institute and our programs, please visit our website at www.alicepaul.org

INFORMATION ABOUT THE POSITIONS WILL BE FOUND IN THE INTERNSHIP/EMPLOYMENT FOLDER IN THE HISTORY DEPARTMENT MAILBOX OF DR. GOLDEN

Paid Archival Internship

The Archives and Special Collections Department of the Princeton Theological Seminary Library, in Princeton, New Jersey, is offering a paid internship position for 14-15 hours per week beginning in late January or early February 2016. Our internship offers an opportunity to learn about the many functions an archivist is called upon to fill in a small academic archives and rare books department. The activities include reference and patron assistance, acquisition and record-keeping procedures, preparation of exhibits, and the processing of collections—inventory, arrangement and description, the development of finding-aids, etc. There may also be some opportunity for basic preservation work, such as the construction of phase boxes.

The major requirements are current enrollment in an information science or library science or history graduate program and a faculty member at the student’s institution willing to act as a liaison contact. A background or interest in religious or theological studies and a basic course already completed or being taken concurrently in archival theory and practice are preferred. The internship would not have to earn any academic credit, though this could be arranged should the student wish to pursue that with their sponsoring institution.

Interested persons should contact Kenneth Henke, Curator of Special Collections and Archivist, Princeton Theological Seminary Library, 25 Library Place, Princeton, NJ 08540 (or kenneth.henke@ptsem.edu) with a brief resume and indication of relevant coursework or experience.

Oral History Job for a Graduate Student

The Center for Puerto Rican Studies at Hunter College-CUNY is looking to hire a graduate student to conduct research in Philadelphia with members of the Puerto Rican community.  

Information about the position, requirements, salary, and application will be available in a folder in history department office. 

 

Call for Papers: Pennsylvania Historical Association

Pennsylvania Historical Association 2016 Annual Meeting

 The Pennsylvania Historical Association invites proposals for its 2016 Annual Meeting to be hosted by Shippensburg University, October 6-8, 2016.                                        

 The theme will be “Technology, Business, and the Environment.” The program committee welcomes proposals on all aspects of Pennsylvania and Mid-Atlantic history. In addition to sessions focused on traditional scholarship, the committee encourages panels that feature pedagogy, public history, or material culture. Roundtable discussions are welcome. Full session proposals are strongly preferred, but the committee will consider individual papers. Graduate students are encouraged to submit proposals.
All program participants must be PHA members at the time of the annual meeting. Proposals must be submitted electronically by February 15, 2016 to: https://sites.google.com/site/pha2016meeting/
For further information, please contact Beverly Tomek, Assistant Professor of History, University of Houston-Victoria: tomekb@uhv.edu.

Summer History Fellowships in New York

William Randolph Hearst Fellowship 2016 May 31-July 29, 2016

The Mount Vernon Hotel Museum and Garden (MVHMG) offers two summer Fellowships for undergraduate or graduate students interested in U.S. history, museum studies, museum education, material culture or other related fields. Fellows participate directly in the daily operations of a historic site. Fellows complete original research projects on antebellum NYC that become interpretation resources, conduct tours, and participate in programs for children and adults. Now in its thirty-second year, the full-time Fellowship, funded by the William Randolph Hearst Foundation, consists of nine weeks with a $2,750 stipend. Hours are 9AM-5PM Monday-Friday, with occasional evenings for special events.  Fellows are responsible for their own housing and transportation.

Further information and application forms will be available in the history department office.