2007-2008 PEAES Fellows

 

Resident Post-doctoral Fellows

 

Dr. Jonathan Chu, Department of History, University of Massachusetts-Boston: Where’s Mine? The Legal and Economic Impact of the American Revolution

 

Dr. Michelle Craig McDonald, Department of Atlantic History, Stockton College: Regional Reliance: Coffee, the Caribbean, and the Early American Economy, 1765-1825

 

Resident Dissertation Fellow

 

Jeffrey Kaja, Ph.D. Candidate in History, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor: Economic Development and the Evolution of Transportation Systems in Early Pennsylvania, 1675-1800

 

Short-Term Fellows

 

Joanna Cohen, Ph.D. Candidate in History, University of Pennsylvania: “Millions of Luxurious Citizens." Consumption and Citizenship in New York and Philadelphia, 1815-1876

 

Joe Conway, Ph.D. Candidate in English & American Literature/American Culture Studies, Washington University at St. Louis: The Hard Value of U.S. Fiction in an Age of Domestic Panic: 1837-1857

 

Dr. Max Edling, Department of History, Uppsala University: Financing the Mexican War

 

Michelle Mormul, Ph.D. Candidate in History, University of Delaware: Philadelphia's Linen Merchants, 1765 to 1815

 

Brian Phillips Murphy, Ph.D. Candidate in History, University of Virginia: The Politics Corporations Make: Interests, Institutions, and the Formation of States and Parties in New York, 1783-1850