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Contact Information:

Department of History
414 E. Clark
Vermillion, SD 57069
phone: 605-677-5218
fax: 605-677-5568
history@usd.edu

Last Modified: 10/31/08

faculty and staff

Judith Lynn Sebesta

Judith Lynn Sebesta, Chairperson and Professor
JL.Sebesta
204 East Hall, 605-677-5218
Home Page
Professor and Chair, holds the BA in Classics from the University of Chicago and the PhD in Classics from Stanford University. Since coming to USD in 1972, she has taught Latin and Greek, classical art and archaeology, women in antiquity, ancient literature and comparative civilizations.  Sebesta's publications include Carl Orff Carmina Burana Cantiones Profanae, The World of Roman Costume, which she co-edited, and articles on classical authors and classical themes in art, architecture, and literature. Currently she is working on the On-line Companion  (http://www.cnr.edu/home/sas/araia/companion.html) to The Worlds of Roman Women, a textbook she co-authored in 2005.   Her research interests include women in Roman society and ancient costume.

Steven J. Bucklin

Steven J. Bucklin, Professor
US Diplomatic History, Soviet Union, Modern Britain, Contemporary American
Steven.Bucklin     
205 East Hall. 677-5575
Home Page
Professor, holds his BA and MA from The University of South Dakota and his PhD from the University of Iowa. He teaches courses in US Diplomatic and Contemporary American history as well as historical methods. Bucklin's recent publications include  "Those in Reserve Also Serve," South Dakota History (Spring 2001), "To Preserve These Rights: The Constitution and National Emergencies," South Dakota Law Review, Vol. 47, Issue 1 (Spring 2002), “We were all mustered in Uncle Sam’s Army”: The Journal of Thomas H. Briggs in the Philippines, 1898-1899” South Dakota History (Fall 2004), Realism and American Foreign Policy (Praeger, 2000), and From Cold War to Gulf War, The South Dakota National Guard 1945 to the Millennium (Coyote History, 2004).  Dr. Bucklin has presented invited papers and lectures at several European universities as well as at various history conferences. Dr. Bucklin is the Past President of the USD Chapter of the Council on Higher Education and a board member of the South Dakota Humanities Council.

Kurt Hackemer

Kurt Hackemer, Professor
19th Century US, Military/Naval History, Civil War
Kurt.Hackemer
208 East Hall, 677-5571
Home Page
Professor, holds his BA from the University of Chicago and his MA and PhD from Texas A&M University.   Hackemer specializes in American military and naval history as well as nineteenth-century US history. His publications include The U.S. Navy and the Origins of the Military-Industrial Complex, 1847-1883 (Naval Institute Press, 2001), “To Rescue My Native Land”: The Civil War Letters of William T. Shepherd, First Illinois Light Artillery (University of Tennessee Press, 2005), journal articles in Civil War History, The Historian, The Journal of Political and Military Sociology, Military History of the West, The American Asian Review, and the Naval War College Review, and book chapters in Das Militär und der Aufbruch in die Moderne 1860 bis 1890: Armeen, Marinen und der Wandel von Politik, Gesellschaft und Wirtschaft in Europa, den USA sowie Japan (R. Oldenbourg Verlag, 2003) and Mobile Learning: A Handbook for Educators and Trainers (RoutledgeFalmer, 2005).  His current research focuses on the Civil War in Dakota Territory.  Hackemer sits on the Governing Council of the Society for Military History.

Robert Hilderbrand

Robert Hilderbrand, Professor
Diplomatic History, 20th Century US
Robert.Hilderbrand
203 East Hall, 677-5569
Home Page
Professor, holds his degrees from the University of Iowa, where he received his PhD in 1977, when he first came to USD. A specialist in twentieth century U.S. political and diplomatic history, Professor Hilderbrand's publications include Power and the People: Executive Management of Public Opinion in Foreign Affairs, 1897-1921 (1981); The Complete Press Conferences of Woodrow Wilson, 1913-1921 (1985); and Dumbarton Oaks: The Origins of the United Nations and the Search for Postwar Security (1990). His current research interest is the Johnson Administration and the Vietnam War.

Clayton Lehmann

Clayton Lehmann, Professor
Ancient History, Medieval History, Early Modern History
Clayton.Lehmann
210 East Hall, 677-5573
Home Page
Professor, holds a BA from Augustana College (Sioux Falls), an MA from the University of Maryland, and his PhD from the University of Chicago. He has taught at USD since 1988. Lehmann teaches Western Civilization, ancient and medieval history, and the history of the Renaissance and Reformation. His research includes archaeological excavation at Caesarea in Israel. He has published book reviews and articles about Greek history, Roman and late Roman epigraphy, and archaeology at Caesarea, and has co-authored the corpus of inscriptions from Caesarea. Lehmann organizes the annual Student History Conference.


/history/images/Breuninger.jpg

Scott Breuninger, Assistant Professor
European Intellectual, Early Modern,
Modern British, Irish and Atlantic
 
Scott.Breuninger
201 East Hall, 677-5572
Home Page
Assistant Professor, holds his BA from Bucknell University and his MA and PhD from the University of Wisconsin.  His research specializes on the British Empire and Ireland, with broader interests in eighteenth-century Europe,  intellectual history, and the Atlantic World.  He has published book reviews and articles concerning George Berkeley, Irish identity, and ideas of luxury and empire.  Currently, he is revising his dissertation on Berkeley for publication and is beginning a new project focusing on the influence of classical ideas on empire upon eighteenth-century Britain.

/history/images/Dave.jpg

David Burrow, Assistant Professor
European History, Russian History,
20th Century Europe
David.Burrow
206 East Hall, 677-5387
Home Page
David I. Burrow, Assistant Professor, earned his BA at Carleton College (Northfield, MN), and his MA and PhD from the University of Wisconsin-Madison.  Professor Burrow specializes in nineteenth-century Russian social and intellectual history.  His research interests focus on social identity in Imperial Russia, particularly that of the intelligentsia, and the public in Imperial Russia.  His interests within Russian history also include the question, "was there a Renaissance in Russia?," women in Imperial Russia, noble sociability, and prison tattoos.  He has lectured and given conference papers on these and other topics, and is currently revising his dissertation for publication.  At USD, he teaches Western Civilization, Russian history, and courses on modern European history, including the Holocaust.  Professor Burrow is co-chair of the History Club.
/history/images/Schneiders.jpg Robert K. Schneiders, Assistant Professor
Agricultural History and Rural Studies, Specialization in Native American History
Robert.Schneiders
211 East Hall, 677-5574
Robert Schneiders, Assistant Professor, earned his BA, MA and PhD from Iowa State University.  His research interests include the history of the Missouri River, Upper Missouri territory, and more specifically South Dakota.  Schneiders first book, Unruly River: Two Centuries of Change Along the Missouri, examines the social, economic, and environmental changes that resulted from the advance of Euro-American settlers into the Lower Missouri Valley in the nineteenth century and the subsequent damming of the upper river by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers in the twentieth century. 

Ann Tryon, Instructor, University Center in Sioux Falls, SD
Ann.Tryon@usdsu.org
Ann received her B.S. and M.A. in history at USD.  She has taught over twenty-five years of college teaching experience at Yankton College, DSU, Sioux Falls college, Augustana College, and USD, and is founding member of the Canton Historical Society.

Stephen Miller, Instructor
Stephen.Miller
Home Page
Stephen Miller holds his M.Div. from Pacific School of Religion, Berkeley, California and his BS from Springfield College, Springfield, Massachusetts.  Miller teaches World Religions, Death Grief and Growth, and New Testament.

Mary Nielsen

Mary Nielsen, Department Secretary
Mary.Nielsen
207 East Hall, 677-5218
Mary was named Career Service Employee of the Month for March 2002. She was honored during a ceremony on March 4th when USD Acting President Don Dahlin presented her with a plaque and a check. Mary was nominated by Judith Sebesta and Steven Bucklin.

Dr. Herbert T. Hoover, Professor Emeritus
hhoover@usd.edu
www.usd.edu/nplhist

Dr. Donald Pryce, Professor Emeritus

Teaching Assistants for History Department Fall 2008
You may contact the TA's by calling 677- 5574.

 

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