Bishop Hall
 

APPLICATION INSTRUCTIONS

Applications for admission to the graduate program may be obtained by writing or calling the Graduate School at (662) 915-7474, or through its website at http://www.olemiss.edu/gradschool/ . Applicants must submit a completed application form, Graduate Record Exam scores, and official transcripts of post-secondary study to the Graduate School. In addition, applicants should submit three letters of recommendation from people who can speak with authority about their potential as a graduate student in History, a statement of purpose that describes their intellectual background and future goals, and a sample of their written work directly to the Department of History. The department's Graduate Advisory Committee makes it decision regarding each application after assessing all of the application materials together, and not by applying any rigid standard or mathematical formula.

CONTACT INFORMATION

Professor Lester L. Field, Jr.
Department of History
310 Bishop Hall
PO Box 1848

University, MS 38677-1848

hsfield@olemiss.edu

662-915-5667

 

Our Faculty

The faculty of the Department of History offers programs of study leading to the
B. A., M. A. and Ph. D. degrees. The faculty has achieved distinction in research and teaching. Members of the faculty have been awarded the Bancroft Prize, the Lillian Smith Prize, and the British Council Prize for their publications and four members of the faculty have received distinguished teaching awards. The curriculum covers nearly all the major areas of historical study. Students may select from a wide range of courses dealing with American, European, Latin American, African and East Asian history. At the graduate level the Department emphasizes American history, especially the history of the American South, European and Latin American history.

The Department is deeply involved in the activities of the Center for the Study of Southern Culture, the Croft Institute for International Studies, the McDonnell-Barksdale Honors College, the Sarah Isom Center for Women’s Studies and the Program in Afro-American Studies. The Director of the Center for the Study of Southern Culture and two faculty members have joint-appointments with the Department, the Executive Director of the Croft Institute for International Studies and three faculty members have appointments in the Department and the international studies program offered by the Croft Institute. Three members of the faculty have joint-appointments with the Program in Afro-American Studies. The Interim Director of the McDonnell-Barksdale Honors College and the Interim Director of the Trent Lott Leadership Institute are from the Department of History.

Symposium

The Department of History sponsors the annual Porter L. Fortune Symposium on History each fall. The Symposium brings to the campus well-known scholars for a three-day conference dealing with various aspects of southern history. Recent topics have included religion in the South, gender and politics in the South, the Civil Rights movement and the South in the Caribbean.

Resources

Within the University, the Department of History relies on the John Davis Williams Library which contains nearly 1 million volumes. Of particular interest to graduate students are the Mississippi Collection of books and manuscripts pertaining to the state, the Blues Archive and the depository of federal government documents.
The Department has approximately one hundred-fifty undergraduate history majors and approximately fifty graduate students pursuing graduate degrees.