Schedule of Events
History Department Poster Session, Dinner, and Phi Alpha Theta Induction
Wednesday, April 27, 2022
5:00 pm - 9:00 pm
Ullman Commons 100/101
The first hour will be a student poster session highlighting the very best work of the year and conference presentations. It will be followed by dinner and the Phi Alpha Theta Honors Society Induction. The first hour is open to the public. The 6:00 p.m. dinner is by invitation only.
Student Abstracts
Exploring Diversity in World War I
Student(s):
Thomas Bambrick
Faculty Mentor:
Michaela Reeves
Taking a Stand: Ethnic Diversity in the Civil War
Student(s):
Trevor Burnett
Faculty Mentor:
Michaela Reaves
Women of Eastern Europe: A Revolutionary Powerhouse
This project seeks to shed light on the women who faced the censure of the government fighting for the lives of their sons in the military, beginning with an overview of the 20th century through primary sources and artifacts, and then elaborating on the mothers’ response to the Soviet-Afghan War. Soviet/Eastern European mothers fought propagandized versions of themselves and rose up in every Soviet-bloc nation. Observing the ultimate failed experiment of the Soviet Union and highlighting through CIA documents the contribution Soviet mothers made to ending not only the Soviet- Afghan War, but the Soviet Union, opens new paths to explore the power of women and mothers.
Student(s):
Katherine Costanzo
Faculty Mentor:
Michaela Reaves
“Irishmen, to Arms!” – The Raising of the Tyneside Irish Brigade, 1914-1915
This exhibition answers that question with a case study of one British city’s recruitment efforts. In October 1914, Horatio Kitchener – Field Marshal of the British Army – commissioned the city of Newcastle upon Tyne to raise a battalion of volunteer soldiers. The Lord Mayor of Newcastle – Sir Johnstone Wallace – was then recognized by the War Office as the official raiser of the new Tyneside Brigades. Soon, thousands of Irish and Scottish men in Newcastle joined the new battalions. In this exhibition, the story of the Tyneside Irish’s raising is told through a collection of Sir Johnstone Wallace’s personal effects, as well as other curios from the First World War.
Student(s):
Nicholas Dilley
Faculty Mentor:
Michaela C. Reaves, Ph. D.
Sun Yat-Sen and the Making of Modern China
The purpose of this research was to determine the role Sun Yat-Sen’s political career played in shaping the direction of China in the twentieth century. Research consisted of analysis of both contemporary sources from the period of Chinese history which corresponded with Sun Yat Sen’s political career, alongside subsequent secondary literature written after his death. Based on these sources of evidence, it was concluded that Sun Yat-Sen fundamentally transformed the direction of Chinese history in the twentieth century in the way that his leadership of the nationalist movement served to facilitate the end of Qing rule of China, while also directly enabling the internal and ideological conflicts which would eventually culminate in the Chinese Civil War.
Student(s):
Sebastian Fernandez
Faculty Mentor:
David Nelson
The Spanish Conquest and Governance of New Spain
Student(s):
Stefan Henning
Faculty Mentor:
Michaela Reaves
The Failures of Russian Military Leadship
Student(s):
Anna Hunter
Faculty Mentor:
Dr Michaela Reaves
Recognized in Defense of Our Nation
Student(s):
Clara Lum
Faculty Mentor:
Dr. Michaela Reaves
Oh! The Places You'll Go: Y. Pestis
Student(s):
Karlee Quinn
Faculty Mentor:
Michaela Reaves
Western Perceptions of Chinese Law and the Push for Extraterritoriality
Student(s):
Chase Reichenbach
Faculty Mentor:
Dr. Michaela Reaves
Women In Post-Revolution France and Their Impact on 21st Century Rights
Student(s):
Kamiki Soulyalangsy
Faculty Mentor:
David Nelson
The Shifts of Warrior Culture and the Rise of the Merchant Class
Student(s):
Cole Weiderman
Faculty Mentor:
David Nelson