Community Programs
We have three separate heavily-endowed programs that the department has built though our strong relations with the community.
- The Sherman Lecture Series, a University-wide talk and associated week-long programming every October, offered by an "emerging scholar" and aimed at the general public.
- The Block Endowed Professorship in Jewish History, together with the Rhine Endowment for programming, held by Dr. Jarrod Tanny.
- The Neal-McCaffray Research Fund, used to sponsor student research and travel to archives.
Public Engagement
In the 2014-2015 academic year, the history faculty offered or sponsored some 70 public talks all over Eastern North Carolina. An estimated 4-5000 attended, including 300 at one talk on Irish History, 300 at another talk on the Battle of Fort Fisher, and some 300 at the Sherman Lecture on Slavery in the Atlantic World.
We feel strongly that as public employees we have a duty to engage with citizens outside the university and will continue to do so in the future.
Training the Next Generation of Public Historians
We have a strong Public History graduate program here at UNCW, which continually places students within local and national historic sites. In 2014-15, history graduate and undergraduate students interned at six different regional historic sites and institutions last year, including Fort Fisher, the Bellamy Mansion, the Burgwin-Wright House, the Wrightsville Beach Museum, and the Battleship North Carolina.