Association of Washington Historians
About AWH
The Association of Washington Historians (AWH) is an informal group of historians in the State of Washington who meet annually to mingle, enjoy a history lecture, and discuss issues of common interest. There are no dues or registration fees. The only costs are for the meal, as our keynote speakers--university history professors from our state's institutions--generously deliver their presentations at no charge to the organization. At the annual meeting, a voluntary collection is taken up to support "History Day," a national program that promotes history in the elementary and secondary schools.
The Board of Directors urges all historians in Washington state to attend. In the past the annual gathering of university and community college instructors has been a good way to exchange ideas and to inform ourselves of each other’s problems. At the same time we have long felt a need to expand the scope of our cooperation in order to promote the study of history and to increase historical awareness within the state. Therefore, we are extending an especially warm invitation to high school teachers of history, to archivists, and to the staff of historical societies/museums. I
If you know of others who have not received our letter, please share this information with them and invite them to join us. We also encourage university professors to invite their graduate students.
Previous Meetings:
2016 Meeting: Washington State University, Vancouver
Thanks to the generosity of the WSU-Vancouver history department, we met on on Saturday, April 30, 2016, to hear our keynote speaker
Dr. Tom Taylor, Chair of the History Department at Seattle University and President of the Northwest World History Association, lecture on “Big History: It’s Certainly Big but is it History?” Dr. Taylor’s talk examined the field of
Big History that has been drawing a lot of interest as well as its share of controversy of the last several years. He discussed the central tenets that are defining the study of Big History and explored some of the teaching opportunities and challenges that it offers History teachers. His talk stimulated a lot of great discussion.
Afterwards we had our annual luncheon followed by a short business meeting.
2015 Meeting: Shoreline Community College
Thanks to the generosity of the Shoreline Community College history department, we met on Saturday, April 25, 2015 to listen to our Keynote speaker,
UW history professor Robin Stacey, talk about "Reacting to Reacting to the Past.”
Reacting to the Past is an innovative history curriculum pioneered by Barnard professor Mark C. Carnes in the late 1990s that has now been adopted in college classrooms across the country. In RTTP classes, students assume the identity of historical characters and enter into role-playing games designed around a particular historical event or series of events. In this talk, medieval historian Robin Stacey described her experiences writing and playing RTTP games in her UW classroom.
Afterwards we had our annual luncheon followed by a short business meeting.
2014 Meeting: Central Washington University
Thanks to the generosity of the Central Washington University history department, we met at Dean Hall on the campus of CWU and listened to our Keynote speaker, WWU history professor Johann Neem, the author of
Creating a Nation of Joiners, talk about "Making Sense of Higher Education Reform." Professor Neem’s presentation focused on competing ideals for higher education and offered some frameworks for understanding the national conversation over the purposes of higher education today.
Afterwards we had our annual luncheon followed by a short business meeting.
2013 Meeting: University of Washington
Thanks
to the generosity of the University of Washington History Department, this
year’s meeting took place at the UW Waterfront Activities Center,
located behind Husky Stadium on Lake Washington.
We gathered for coffee and doughnuts at 9:30 a.m. in the meeting room on the upper
level. At 11:00am our Keynote speaker, WSU Professor
Jesse Spohnholz, presented his thought-provoking lecture, “Forgetting Plurality and
Re-inventing the History of the Reformation: A Tragedy in Four Acts."
Prof.
Spohnholz discussed a 450-year old mystery from Reformation-era Europe and
the way that historians and archivists from the 17th to the 20th
century who were engaged in debates in their own day recorded evidence and
retold events in ways that replicated errors that continue to haunt 21st-century
historians. The talk described the process of forgetting and re-inventing in
four sets of actions involving source preservation, the organization of
archives, the production of historical narratives, and the identification of
historical significance.
Afterwards, we had our annual luncheon followed by a short business meeting.
2012 Meeting: Eastern Washington University
Thanks to the generosity of the Eastern Washington University history department, the annual spring meeting of the Association of
Washington Historians will took place at the EWU Cheney campus on Saturday,
April 28, 2012. We gathered for coffee and doughnuts at 9:30 a.m. At 11:00am
our keynote speakers, Professors John Findlay and Bruce Hevly of the University
of Washington, talked about reactions to their new book, “Atomic
Frontier Days: Hanford and the American West.” At 12:30pm we had our annual luncheon followed by a brief
business meeting.
2011 Meeting: Bellevue College