USS Midway Chair in Modern US Military History

https://csucareers.calstate.edu/en-us/job/552698/uss-midway-chair-in-modern-us-military-history

The San Diego State University Department of History seeks to fill the USS Midway Chair in Modern US Military History, an open-rank and endowed position with expertise in modern U.S. military history. Candidates must demonstrate expertise in the period since 1900, with emphasis on 1940 onward. The History Department defines military history very broadly with a focus on American statecraft, the nation’s place in the world, and the impact of US wars on peoples and societies at home and abroad. The Department has established strengths in social, cultural, public, and global history, and seeks candidates whose work complements and engages with one or more these areas of excellence. The faculty appointed to this position is expected to collaborate with the Department’s public history program and the Center for Public and Oral History. The appointed faculty member will teach courses at all levels, from lower-division undergraduate lectures to graduate seminars, with a 2–2 teaching load in the History Department. The USS Midway Chair will also be expected to engage in committee service in the department. Consistent with SDSU’s teacher-scholar faculty model, this position seeks candidates who demonstrate a commitment to excellence in both research and teaching. Successful applicants will be expected to pursue an active research agenda, including the pursuit of external funding and peer-reviewed publications, while also contributing to high-quality instruction, curriculum development, committee participation, and university service. To learn more, please visit the History Department website: ​​https://history.sdsu.edu/.

Apply via Page Up by January 5, 2026.

Assistant Professor of Naval and Military History

Assistant Professor of Naval and Military History

LOCATION:

United States Naval Academy, History Department, Annapolis, Maryland, USA

APPLICATION TIMELINE:

Application review will begin on October 15, 2024 and will continue until the position is filled.

POSITION DESCRIPTION:

The USNA History Department invites applications for a tenure-track, Assistant Professor (Naval and Military History) position to begin as early as July 2025. The position is open to all candidates who have attained a Ph.D. degree in history or a closely related field, as well as advanced doctoral students who expect to be granted their Ph.D. no later than June 2025. Specialization within this subfield is open but the committee welcomes applicants with expertise in 20th-century U.S. Navy and Marine Corps history, broadly defined.  

Charles Dana Gibson Award for the best article on North American Maritime History published in a peer-reviewed journal in 2023.

Charles Dana Gibson Award

For the best article on North American maritime history

published in a peer-reviewed journal in 2023

Honorarium: $1,000

Closing date for entries/nominations: March 1, 2024

Send copy and complete citation for the article to: NASOHGibsonaward@gmail.com

Selection: Articles will be evaluated by a three-person committee of NASOH members

Announcement of award recipient: TBD.

********The Recipient must be present at the NASOH conference to receive the award.********

NASOH presents the Charles Dana Gibson Award annually to the author of the most significant article on any aspect of North American maritime history published in a refereed journal during the previous year.

A longtime and beloved member of NASOH, Gibson was an authority on the history of the American merchant marine and with his wife, Kay, co-author of a unique three-volume history of the U.S. Army’s navy. Mr. Gibson was a World War II veteran of the U.S. Army Transportation Corps, Water Division, and of the U.S. Merchant Marine. After the war, his pro-bono consulting work led to the Department of Defense awarding veteran status and benefits to more than 84,000 civilian seamen who served in the merchant marine between December 7, 1941, and August 15, 1945. He also authored the qualification brief for the civilian seamen of the Army Transportation Corps of World War II, which helped win veteran status for that group as well.

Gibson authored four books, and co-authored four others with his wife, on various aspects of maritime history. Their Assault and Logistics: Union Army Coastal and River Operations, 1861–1866 received the 1996 John Lyman Award for Naval History. Their last book, Over Seas: U.S. Army Maritime Operations, 1898 through the Fall of the Philippines, published in 2002, was selected by the American Library Association as an Outstanding Academic Title. In 2004, Charles Dana Gibson and E. Kay Gibson received the K. Jack Bauer Award for their contributions to maritime history. They are the only husband-and-wife team to have been so honored. For his work on behalf of World War II merchant seamen, Gibson received the Captain K. C. Torrens Award from the Council of American Master Mariners, the Distinguished Service Award from the U. S. Merchant Marine Academy at Kings Point, and the Marconi Memorial Gold Medal of Achievement from the Veteran Wireless Operators Association.

Gibson’s professional affiliations included membership in the Council of American Master Mariners, the Marine Society of the City of New York, the North American Society for Oceanic History, Steamship Historical Society, Army Historical Foundation, and the Council on America’s Military Past.

In retirement, Dana and Kay made numerous months-long cruises in the Bahamas, the Great Lakes, and the river system between Chicago and Mobile in the Hannah II, which he designed. They divided their time ashore between homes in Camden, Maine, and North Hutchinson Island, Florida.