EDUCATION: Curriculum Vitae BRIAN D. CARROLL Associate Professor, Department of History Central Washington University, 400 E. University Way, Ellensburg, WA 98926 Office: (509) 963-2344, Fax: (509) 963-1654, Email: carroll@cwu.edu Ph.D., UNIVERSITY OF CONNECTICUT 2009 Dissertation: From Warrior to Soldier: New England Indians in the Colonial Military, 1675-1763. Committee: Richard D. Brown (chair), Nancy Shoemaker, Cornelia Dayton, Christopher Clark, Kevin McBride Fields: Early America, Modern U.S., Native American History M.A., UNIVERSITY OF CONNECTICUT 1997 Field: American History B.A., KEENE STATE COLLEGE (N.H.) 1993 Field: History PROFESSIONAL EXPERIENCE: (select) CENTRAL WASHINGTON UNIVERSITY Associate Professor, Department of History 2016-present Assistant Professor, Department of History 2012-2016 Faculty, American Indian Studies 2012-present Visiting Assistant Professor, Department of History 2010-2012 UNIVERSITY OF CONNECTICUT Lecturer, Department of History 2009-2010 Teaching/Research Assistant, Department of History 1996-2003 SALEM STATE UNIVERSITY Visiting Assistant Professor, Department of History 2009-2010 Lecturer, Department of History 2003-2009 NORTH SHORE COMMUNITY COLLEGE Adjunct Professor, Department of History, Geography & Economics 2008-2009 LANDMARK SCHOOL Instructor of History and Economics, Preparatory Program 2001-2007 Campus Coordinator, Residential Program 2001-2003 PRIMARYRESEARCH.ORG Project Director, digitization of 18 th century town records, Beverly, MA 2005-2007 OLD STURBRIDGE VILLAGE MUSEUM Interpretation and Education Department 1996-1997
STRAWBERY BANKE MUSEUM Education Department, Living History Program 1993-1995 TEACHING EXPERIENCE: Teaching Interests and Specialties: Colonial, Revolutionary, & Early National-period North America; Atlantic World; history of medicine; Native Americans; gender & masculinity; cultural history; maritime history; U.S. Constitution Teaching and Training Awards, Grants & Honors: Online Curriculum Development Grant, Depart. of Undergraduate Studies, CWU, 2011 Hybrid / On-Line Course Development, Center for Teaching Innovation, Salem State University, 2009 Burke Award [for curriculum development], Landmark School, 2004 Current Graduate Faculty Status: Associate member Service on twelve Master s Degree committees, directed three theses Courses Taught: Survey Courses: o American History I (to 1865) o American History II (from 1865) o World History I (to 1500) o World History II (since 1500) o Western Civilizations (to 1500) o Western Civilizations (since 1500) o American Indian Studies [interdisciplinary] Service Courses: o Introduction to Historical Methods o Understanding History (senior thesis) Upper-Division Undergraduate: o Colonial North America o The American Revolution o The Constitution & the New Republic o Native American History (to 1800) o Environmental History of the United States o Introduction to Public History o Medicine & Culture in America [in development] o U.S. Military History o Antebellum Social Reform Movements o American Manhood in Historical Perspective Graduate Seminars: o Culture and Medicine in America (to 1885) o Maritime Atlantic in the Age of Sail o The History of Information & Knowledge o The Fur Trade & North American Indigenous Slavery, 1650-1870 SCHOLARLY ACTIVITY: Interest & Specialties Colonial and Revolutionary America; Native Americans; Early National period U.S.; Atlantic World; the history of masculinity; history of medicine; war and society studies; maritime history; poverty and the development of early welfare systems; folklore and history of New England 2
Current Projects: Monograph: o From Warrior to Soldier: New England Indians in the Colonial Military [in revision] o Burning the Hearts of the Dead: Medicine, Migration, and Vampire Belief in Early National New England [in progress] o Oxford First Source (co-editor / contributor - 42 entries), Oxford University Press, 2014 [Online primary source reader www.oxfordfirstsource.com] Publications: Journal Articles: o The Effect of Military Service on Indian Communities in Southern New England, 1740-1763. Early American Studies: An Interdisciplinary Journal 14, no. 3 (Summer 2016): 506-536. o A Mean Business : Wartime Security, Sovereignty and Southern New England Indians, 1689-1713. Connecticut History Review 54, no. 2 (Fall 2015): 217-242. o Savages in the Service of Empire: Native American Soldiers in Gorham s Rangers, 1744-1762. New England Quarterly 85, no. 3 (September 2012): 383-439. o I indulged my desire too freely : Sexuality, Spirituality, and the Sin of Self-Pollution in the Diary of Joseph Moody, 1720-1724. William & Mary Quarterly 3d ser., 60, no. 1 (January 2003): 155-170. Book Chapters / Conference Proceedings / Online Publications: o Wampanoag Martial Custom in the Late 17th and Early 18th Centuries: Benjamin Church s Indians Reconsidered. Battlefields of the Pequot War. January, 2016. http://pequotwar.org/. o Loaded to the Water Line : Coasters, Coal Schooners, and the Marshall Store in York, 1865-1918. Clipper Ships to Coal Schooners: Maritime Culture and Economy in York, Maine. Edited by Thomas B. Johnson. Old York Historical Society, 1995. Book Reviews: o Review of Native Apostles: Black and Indian Missionaries in the British Atlantic World, by Edward E. Andrews. Historical Journal of Massachusetts [forthcoming 2016-2017] o Tales of Two Indians: William Apess and Eleazer Williams Confront Jacksonian Removal. Review of The Life of William Apess, Pequot, by Philip F. Gura, and Professional Indian: The American Odyssey of Eleazer Williams, by Michael Leroy Oberg. Journal of American Ethnic History [forthcoming 2016] o Review of Living with Whales: Documents and Oral Histories of Native New England Whaling History, edited by Nancy Shoemaker. Ethnohistory 63, no. 1 (January 2016): 175-176. 3
o Love and the Last Refuge: Emotion, Patriotism, and War in 1812. Review of 1812: War and the Passions of Patriotism, by Nicole Eustace. Huntington Library Quarterly 76, no. 2 (Summer 2013): 317-323. o Review of The Unkechaug Indians of Eastern Long Island: A History, by John A. Strong. Ethnohistory 60, no. 1 (Winter 2013): 142-144. o Review of Making War and Minting Christians: Masculinity, Religion and Colonialism in Early New England, by R. Todd Romero. Ethnohistory 59, no. 2 (Spring 2012): 418-419. o Review of Tribe, Race, History: Native Americans in Southern New England, 1780-1880, by Daniel R. Mandell. New England Quarterly 84, no. 2 (June 2011): 363-365. Conference Papers and Presentations (select): o The Introduction of Medical Vampire Belief to New England. Invited Speaker. American Antiquarian Society Regional Seminar. Clark University, Worcester, Massachusetts, December 2015. o Hessians and the Medicalization of Vampire Belief in Early National New England. Invited Speaker. College of Liberal Arts and Social Sciences, History of Medicine Initiative. Cleveland State University, Cleveland, Ohio, October 2015. o Medicine, Migration, and Vampire Belief during the Early Republic. Invited Speaker. Museum of Culture and Environment. Central Washington University, Ellensburg, Wash., October 2014. o Burning the Hearts of the Dead: Historicizing Vampire Belief in Nineteenth-Century New England. CWU History Club Lecture Series. Central Washington University, Ellensburg, Wash., February 2014. o Moderator for panel War and Ties that Bind. 17 th Century Warfare, Diplomacy, & Society in the American Northeast conference. Mashantucket Pequot Museum and Research Center, Mashantucket, Conn., October 2013. o Wampanoag Men, the Colonial Army, and Native Martial Culture. 17 th Century Warfare, Diplomacy, & Society in the American Northeast conference. Mashantucket Pequot Museum and Research Center, Mashantucket, Conn., October 2013. o Native Oral Tradition and Colonial History: The Sou West Nova Métis and the Problem of Race. College of Arts and Humanities Speaker Series. Central Washington University, Ellensburg, Wash., November 2013. o The Real Hawkeye Was a Mohegan: Joseph Johnson, Sr., Fort William Henry, and Cooper s Last of the Mohicans. Annual Meeting, American Society for Ethnohistory. Missouri State University, Springfield, Missouri, November 2012. 4
o Restricted to Their Villages While Defending the Frontier: Security, Sovereignty, and Southern New England Indians, 1689-1726. Invited speaker, Early Americanists of the Pacific Northwest Group. Seattle, Wash., November 2012. o From Warrior to Soldier: New England Indians in the Colonial Military. Summer Brownbag Seminar Series, The Huntington Library. San Marino, Calif., July 2012. o Student Veteran s Colloquium, chair and organizer. Central Washington University, Ellensburg, Wash., February 2011. o Pick d Indians and other men fit for ranging the woods : Race, Violence, and the Evolution of Gorham s Indian Rangers, 1744-1762. Society of Early Americanists. Early American Borderlands conference, Saint Augustine, Flor., May 2010. o Empire, Race and the Experience of New England s Native American Soldiers during the Seven Years War. University of Connecticut Humanities Institute. Storrs, Conn., April, 2009. o In ye Province Service as a Soldier on Frontiers & at other places : The Experiences of Peter Dogamus a Native American Soldier in the Colonial Wars, 1710-1756. Invited speaker, History Lecture Series. Pomfret School, Pomfret, Conn., October 2008. o Native American Masculinity in the Provincial Militaries of Massachusetts and Connecticut, 1689-1763. Annual Conference, Omohundro Institute of Early American History and Culture. Suffolk University, Boston, Mass., June 2008. o I indulged my desire too freely : Sexuality, Spirituality, and the Sin of Self-Pollution in the Diary of Joseph Moody, 1720-1724. Sexuality in Early America conference, McNeil Center of Early American Studies. Philadelphia, Penn., June 2000. Creative Work Public History, Outreach and Exhibits (Select): o Famous 1 st Amendment Trial Reenactments, organizer and director, First Amendment Festival. Central Washington University, Ellensburg, Washington, April 6-8, 2013. o Skulls, Angels & Urns: Graveyards and Gravestone Art in Early American Culture, workshop/presentation for Landmark School s Anthropology Interdisciplinary Event, 2006. o Sailing the Deep Blue Sea: An Education Board Game of International Trade during the Age of Sail, 1783-1815, interactive multimedia game for Landmark School s Maritime History Interdisciplinary Event, 2004. Grants and Fellowships Received: Amer. Society for Eighteenth-Century Studies Fellowship, American Antiquarian Society, 2015-2016 Countway Library Fellowship in the History of Medicine, Harvard University, 2015-2016 Faculty Research Appointment (Autumn 2015), School of Graduate Studies & Research, Central Washington Univ., 2015 Faculty Travel Grant, College of Arts & Humanities, Central Washington Univ., 2012, 2013, 2015 International Small Grant, Office of International Studies & Programs, Central Washington Univ., 2013 Summer Research and Creativity Grant, College of Arts & Humanities, Central Washington Univ., 2013 5
Robert L. Middlekauff / Mayers Fellowship, The Huntington Library, 2012 Charles H. Watts Memorial / JCB Library Fellowship, The John Carter Brown Library, 2012 [declined] Online Curriculum Development Grant, Undergraduate Studies, Central Washington Univ., 2011 Dissertation Fellowship University of Connecticut Humanities Institute, 2008-2009 Kate B. and Hall J. Peterson Fellowship, American Antiquarian Society, 2008 Dissertation Fellowship Graduate School, University of Connecticut, 2007 Pre-doctoral Fellowships, Department of History, University of Connecticut, 1998-2001 Elizabeth Perkins Research Fellowship Old York Historical Society, 1995 Honors and Awards: Outstanding Faculty Research Award, College of Arts and Humanities, Central Washington Univ., 2013 Van Dusen Fellowship (outstanding graduate student in history), University of Connecticut, 2000 UNIVERSITY SERVICE: Advisory Committee, American Indian Studies Minor, CWU 2016-present Faculty Senate Budget and Planning Committee, CWU, 2015-present Chair, Recruitment & Retention Committee, Department of History, CWU, 2014-present Undergraduate Director, Department of History, CWU, 2013-present Faculty Advisor, History Club & Phi Alpha Theta Honors Society, CWU, 2013-present Judge, CAH Outstanding Graduate Student Award & Raymond A. Smith Award, CWU, 2012-2014 Member, African Historian Search Committee, CWU, 2012-2013 Dean s Scholars Committee, College of Arts and Humanities, CWU, 2012-2015 Webmaster, History Department, CWU, 2012-present Graduate Faculty and Advisor, History Department, CWU, 2010-present PROFESSIONAL SERVICE: Editorial Positions, Peer-Reviewed Journals: Article Reviewer, The Historian, 2011-present Article Reviewer & Book Review Editorial Board, Historical Journal of Massachusetts, 2011-present Article Reviewer, New England Quarterly, 2013-present Membership in Professional Organizations: Phi Alpha Theta, Pacific Northwest Region, Conference Prize Committee (judge), 2014-2015 American Historical Association Organization of American Historians American Society for Ethnohistory Society of Early Americanists Society of Historians of the Early Republic New England Historical & Genealogical Society American Society for Eighteenth-Century Studies 6
COMMUNITY SERVICE: Union Steward, United Faculty of Central, Ellensburg, WA (2015-preasent) Vice-President (2010-present), Board of Directors, Thorp Mill Historical Society, Thorp WA Chair, grant-writing committee (2012-present) principal or co-investigator on nine successful grant proposals, totaling $42,200.00 Chair, Planning Committee, Annual Thorp Mill Antiques Show & Appraisal Fair, Thorp, WA, 2015-2016 Kittitas County (WA) History Roundtable, participant and member (2013-present) Coach, Youth Basketball, 6 th -8 th Grade Girls (2010-2012), Ellensburg Parks & Rec., Ellensburg, WA 7