THE KENDRICK K. KELLEY PROGRAM
IN HISTORICAL STUDIES
The
Kendrick K. Kelley Program in
Historical Studies at
Davidson College, is named after a Davidson alumnus who was killed in
the Vietnam War. Commonly
known as the Kelley Program, this honors program provides a unique
opportunity for outstanding history students to produce a significant
piece of historical research and writing.
Kelley Scholars
are chosen from among juniors who apply each spring to the Department of
History for admission into the program for their senior year.
Once accepted, they participate in a year-long research and
writing seminar which includes weekly group meetings, individual
tutorials, readings in historiography, discussions of current research
in the field, and lectures by department members and visiting
historians.
The program provides financial support for
research and travel to collections for each student, and culminates in
the writing of a substantial senior
thesis of 80 to 100 pages.
Students are enabled to conduct in-depth research on a historical
topic of interest to them and of significance within the wider community
of professional historians. Each
thesis is expected to make a valuable and original contribution to
historical research, based on primary sources and archival manuscript
collections.
Past historical
topics researched by Kelley Scholars as Kelley Theses include:
q
The
Outbreak of the Peloponnesian War;
q
The
British Response to the American Civil War;
q
German
Response to the Armenian Genocide of 1915;
q
Land
Tenancy in North Carolina in the 1930s;
q
American
Responses to Indian Nationalism after World War II.
Kelley Lecturers
in the past have included the following eminent historians:
v
James
McPherson (Princeton University)
v
Patricia
Limerick (University of Colorado)
v
William
Leuchtenberg (University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill)
v
John
Gaddis (Ohio University)
v
Joseph
Ellis (Mount Holyoke College)
v
William
Jordan (Princeton University)
v
Nancy
Hewett (Rutgers University)
The Department of History at Davidson College is
deeply honored by the generosity of the family and friends of Ken
Kelley. The Ken
Kelley Program in Historical Studies stands as a living monument
to a gifted and self-sacrificing man who embodied Davidson values.
The program offers a remarkable opportunity for the very best
students to challenge themselves as apprentices in the demanding and
rewarding craft of historical research and writing.
For further information, contact the Department
of History, Davidson College, Davidson, NC 28036, or
jowertheimer@davidson.edu.