University of Arkansas Department of History

University of Arkansas Department of History The UARK HIST page highlights news about our fabulous alumni and publicizes important events for our current students. Two, J. Another, Martin R. Marine Corps.

The Department of History at the University of Arkansas has been host to many a first. Phi Alpha Theta, the largest college honor society devoted to a single discipline with 820 chapters in the U.S. and three other countries, was founded on the University of Arkansas campus on March 17, 1921. In addition, department alumni are to be found in most every remunerative profession, at least all the res

pectable ones. Many teach history at the college or high school level. Some, like Elizabeth Jacoway, Nan Woodruff, Ralph Turner, Bobby Lovett, C. Calvin Smith, and Charles King, are well-known and widely published scholars. Many others have distinguished themselves in fields outside academe. William Fulbright (BA 1925) and Mark Pryor (BA 1985), have represented Arkansas in the United State Senate, Senator Pryor telling us “I use the education I received at the University of Arkansas Department of History every day.” A considerable number are attorneys. A few became judges, including Henry Woods, Steele Hays, and Morris Arnold. Steele (BA 1974), has served his country as a top-ranking general in the U.S. We also count as proud products of our department bankers, medical doctors, librarians, journalists, museum directors, poets, park rangers, software entrepreneurs, helicopter pilots, cheerleaders, the mayor of Fort Smith, and a gadfly whose letters to the editor are unusually well-informed.

Check out this great video from the American Historical Association! Historians at Work: Career Pathways for History PhD...
05/05/2026

Check out this great video from the American Historical Association!

Historians at Work: Career Pathways for History PhDs

2 likes. "Historians at Work: Career Pathways for History PhDs"

TODAY!
04/24/2026

TODAY!

04/17/2026
04/17/2026

History Awards Cookout TODAY FROM 3-5pm. Find a duck (not the big one) win a prize!

TODAY!!! We hope to see you there!
04/17/2026

TODAY!!! We hope to see you there!

Amanda Scott (Penn State) will be giving a lecture TOMORROW titled Making a Sixteenth-Century Murderer: Disability, Crim...
04/16/2026

Amanda Scott (Penn State) will be giving a lecture TOMORROW titled Making a Sixteenth-Century Murderer: Disability, Crime, and Mobility in Early Modern Spain.

Date: Friday, April 17
Time: 2:00 PM
Place: CORD 324.

Summary: Making of a Sixteenth-Century Murder is a microhistory of the tragedy of Bernart de Urt, a French teenager with intellectual and physical disabilities who was arrested in northern Spain in 1585 and charged with assault, robbery, and multiple homicide. The story itself is a dramatic mystery—involving mistaken identity, pilgrimage, close saves, dedicated attorneys, and oddly, even Canada—but it should also leave us unsettled about our modern abilities to provide legal care and representation to people with special needs. Paired with select other case studies of other poor travelers and pilgrims with disabilities who were viewed with suspicion by the communities they passed through, this talk considers how courts imagined criminals into existence, and how crime, disability, and poverty were thought of as intertwined identities during this period.

04/13/2026
Like Dracula? Like History of Medicine and Science? Then this lecture is for you! This lecture is free, it will be lives...
04/10/2026

Like Dracula? Like History of Medicine and Science? Then this lecture is for you! This lecture is free, it will be livestreamed, but you do need to RSVP.

Join us for the annual History of Medicine and Science Lecture! This year, we’re excited to welcome Dacre Stoker — great-grandnephew of Bram Stoker — as our guest speaker. A Canadian author, he has co-written best-sellers Dracula the Un-dead and Dracul, continuing the legacy of the iconic gothic classic. Discover the medical connections behind Dracula. This free event is open to all.

Register here: https://medicine.uams.edu/neurosurgery/events/history-of-medicine/

HIST's Dr. Jared Phillips was quoted in this NYTimes article. Check it out!
04/09/2026

HIST's Dr. Jared Phillips was quoted in this NYTimes article. Check it out!

Homesteading, for all its bucolic imagery, taps into the desire to escape from the disquiet of modern America, where anything can happen.

There are many projects that you can support today, but if you want your donation to go directly to the History Departme...
04/09/2026

There are many projects that you can support today, but if you want your donation to go directly to the History Department, select "Other: Area of Support Not Listed" in the field where it says "Select or Type Project Name." Then click the red plus sign to type in "Department of History."

Your donation helps to further the studies of current and future historians, and every dollar is appreciated.
Every year, we give out over $50,000 in scholarships with donations.
Let's make it at least $60,000 next year!

Join me and make a gift to One Day, One U of A

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University Of
Fayetteville, AR
72701

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