Jean h baker biography of rory
Jean H. Baker
American historian (born )
Jean H. Baker | |
---|---|
Born | Jean Hogarth Harvey () February 9, (age91) Baltimore, Maryland, U.S. |
Occupation | Historian |
Education | |
Subjects | American history |
Yearsactive | –present |
Spouse | Ralph Baker (m.) |
Children | 4 |
Jean Hogarth Harvey Baker (born February 9, ) is an American historian and professor emerita at Goucher College, where she was the Bennett-Hartwood Professor of History.
Jean h baker biography of rory and dean Retrieved July 15, The Women's Movement empowered Baker to explore these deficits. Holt, she helped compile the revision of The Civil War and Reconstruction. Download as PDF Printable version.Baker was a National Endowment for the Humanities fellow in
Early life and education
Jean Hogarth Harvey Baker was born in Baltimore, Maryland on February 9, , to Rose Lindsay Hopkins and insurance agent F. Barton Harvey. She received her B.A. from Goucher College in and her M.A. from The Johns Hopkins University in [1] alongside fellow historian David Herbert Donald.[2] She completed her Ph.D.
from The Johns Hopkins University in [1]
Career
Baker was an instructor of history at Notre Dame of Maryland University from to She began her career at Goucher College as an instructor in She worked as an assistant professor at Goucher (–) before becoming an associate professor of history (–). In , she was made a full professor of history until , when she became the Elizabeth Todd Professor of History.
In , she was an editor for the Maryland Historical Magazine, a publication of the Maryland Historical Society.[1] As of , Baker is a professor emerita at Goucher College and the Bennett-Hartwood Professor of History.[3][2] She also taught courses at the Maryland Correctional Institution - Jessup (MCI-J) as part of the Goucher Prison Education Partnership.
Jean h baker biography of rory allen Baker, Jeanette —. Her in-depth approach displays comprehensive research as she discerns cultural and sociological influences to support feminist interpretations of the consequences of a male-dominated order in history. Discover new books on Goodreads. Her telling story of the life of Mary Todd Lincoln is considered a comprehensive, but not wholly definitive, work by critics.Baker was a visiting professor at Harvard College.[2]
Baker is a member of the Organization of American Historians, the American Historical Association, Berkshire Conference of Women Historians, and Phi Beta Kappa.[1]
Her books have received positive reviews.[4]
Baker played an important role in advocating for increased recognition of the role of women in society.
In her experience, women were frequently excluded from historical and academic narratives. The Women's Movement empowered Baker to explore these deficits. She wrote stories on suffragists including Lucy Stone, Susan B. Anthony, Elizabeth Cady Stanton, Alice Paul, and Frances Willard.
The New York Times lauded Baker's work as "wider in scope than previous work and making use of sophisticated feminist historical and sociological scholarship." In anticipation of the hundredth anniversary of the Nineteenth Amendment, Baker was featured in WYPR's Beyond the Ballot program that features "the contributions of extraordinary Maryland women."[5]
Bibliography
Some of her books are:[1]
- Mary Todd Lincoln: A Biography
- James Buchanan (The American Presidents, #15)
- Sisters: The Lives of America's Suffragists
- Margaret Sanger: A Life of Passion
- Votes for Women: The Struggle for Suffrage Revisited
- The Stevensons: A Biography of an American Family
- Affairs Of Party: The Political Culture Of Northern Democrats In The Mid Nineteenth Century
- The Politics Of Continuity: Maryland Political Parties From To
- Ambivalent Americans: The Know-Nothing Party in Maryland
Additional books, publications, and writings:
- Building America: The Life of Benjamin Henry Latrobe
- Lincoln and New York (with Harold Holzer)
- The Lincoln Marriage: Beyond the Battle of Quotations
- Mary and Abraham: A Marriage (In: The Lincoln Enigma: The Changing Faces of an American Icon )
- "Not Much of Me": Abraham Lincoln as a Typical American*
- Parallel Lives: Abraham and Mary Lincoln
- The South Has Been Wronged: James Buchanan and the Secession Crisis (In: James Buchanan and the Coming of the Civil War )
- Women and the U.S.
Constitution,
Awards and honors
In , Baker was elected an American Council of Learned Societies fellow. In , she won a faculty teaching prize at Goucher College. She was a National Endowment for the Humanities fellow in and won the Berkshire Prize in History in for her book Affairs of Party: The Political Culture of Northern Democrats in the Mid-Nineteenth Century.
Baker won the Willie Lee Rose prize in Southern History in She was a Newberry Library fellow.[1]
Personal life
Baker lives in Baltimore.[1] On September 12, , she married Ralph Robinson Baker,[1] a surgeon and professor at Johns Hopkins University.[6] They have four children,[6] Susan Dixon, Robinson Scott, Robert Walker, Jean Harvey.[1] Baker is a Democrat and an Episcopalian, and enjoys playing tennis and swimming.
As a hobby, Baker reads mystery stories.[1]
References
- ^ abcdefghij"Baker, Jean Hogarth Harvey ".
Contemporary Authors, New Revision Series.
Jean h baker biography of rory mcilroy The Seasonal Read Baker, James. Jean H. Baker, Kevin BreenJanuary 1, Archived from the original on April 15, via HighBeam.
- ^ abc"Organization of American Historians: Jean Baker". Organization of American Historians. Retrieved April 15,
- ^"History | Goucher College".
Goucher College.
- Jean h baker biography of rory and ryan
- Jean h baker biography of rory anderson
- Jean h baker biography of rory hamilton
Retrieved April 15,
- ^"Insane, or just difficult?". The New York Times. September 13,
- ^Parks, Sheri (July 12, ). "Jean Baker". WYPR.Jean h baker biography of rory Learn more about citation styles Citation styles Encyclopedia. Baker, Frank S heaffer — Arthur M. Although critics sometimes discount her feminist interpretations as limited in deciphering the complexities of historical personalities, many commend her accomplished prose which recounts the sights and sounds of each era gracefully.
Retrieved July 15,
- ^ abKaplan, Laurie (March 19, ). "Jean Baker, a wealth of historical stories". The Baltimore Sun. Retrieved April 15,