Allen Nevins Dissertation Award
3 June 2008 at 2:36 pm Peter G. Klein 1 comment
| Peter Klein |
I received an email the other day from the Economic History Association soliciting nominations for its dissertation prizes, the Allan Nevins Prize for best dissertation in U.S. or Canadian economic history and the Alexander Gerschenkron Prize for the best dissertation in the economic history of, you know, what our textbooks call ROW (the Rest of the World). This brought to mind a couple of personal connections:
1. Last year’s Nevins prize went to a University of Missouri student, Mark Geiger, who wrote on grassroots financing of the US Civil War.
2. My dad got his PhD in history at Columbia in the 1950s and, while teaching there as a lecturer, worked in Nevins’ office. Dad told an interviewer:
Allan Nevins had retired, but I was allowed by him to use a desk in his office. He had an office twice the size as this, which was filled with books from ceiling to floor and piled high. And if you were at Columbia you were immediately well known, you know. A newspaper or journal would call me up or a publisher, “Would you review this book for us?” And I wouldn’t know anything about it, “Yes Sir,” and I’d look on Nevins’ shelf and find three books on the subject. (Laughter)
Being at Columbia and around Nevins at that time was a great launching pad for an academic career. Dad, holding the rank of lecturer (lower than assistant professor), was invited to interview for the department head position at Long Island University, which he was offered and accepted. The job came with tenure and the rank of full professor. Dad’s the only person I’ve known to be a tenured full professor without ever having been an assistant or associate prof.!
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1.
David Gordon | 3 June 2008 at 11:03 pm
Nevins had more graduate students than anyone else in the Columbia History Department because he was extremely easy. He would make sure his students passed the orals and then would often write a lot of the dissertation himself.