NEW YORK, NY.- The New-York Historical Society today announced that Douglas Brinkley will become its first presidential historian. This new role―the first of its kind at the Museum―spearheads the expansion of the Presidency Project, created by New-York Historical earlier this year to educate the public about the role, powers, and responsibilities of American presidents. In addition to the presidential historian, the Presidency Project will now include a Panel of Presidential Historians comprising Annette Gordon-Reed, Jon Meacham, Sean Wilentz, Patricia OToole, and other historians to be named who will evaluate qualities and characteristics of successful and unsuccessful presidencies, provide context for past successes and failures, and develop a system for ranking past presidents in advance of the next presidential campaign season. The initiative will also include an educational program for gifted New York City students, public programs, and a dedicated website focused on presidential history.
It is a distinct honor to name Douglas Brinkley as New-York Historicals presidential historian. His vast knowledge of how American presidents have impacted the nations history will be invaluable as we move forward in expanding our Presidency Project, said Dr. Louise Mirrer, president and CEO of New-York Historical. We are also honored to have outstanding historians such as Annette Gordon-Reed and Jon Meacham, both New-York Historical Trustees, and Sean Wilentz and Patricia OToole lend their expertise to this initiative. At the core of this exciting initiative is our mission to help the public better understand the history of the American presidency and our strong belief that by providing historical context to current events, we can help promote greater civic responsibility and voting. We are grateful to Trustee Ira Lipman for his leadership as chairman of presidential history on behalf of New-York Historicals Board of Trustees, and to Trustee Richard Gilder who will serve as honorary chair on behalf of our Board.
Douglas Brinkley is a professor of history at Rice University, bestselling author, and presidential historian for CNN who has described him as a man who knows more about the presidency than just about any human being alive. He also serves as a contributing editor for Vanity Fair, Washington Post, and the James Madison Council of the Library of Congress. A frequent contributor to the New York Times, Foreign Affairs, the New Yorker, and the Atlantic, he is also a member of the Council on Foreign Relations, the Century Association, and the Society of American Historians. In a recent profile, the Chicago Tribune deemed him Americas new past master.
In this new role, Brinkley will bear the title Presidential Historian at the New-York Historical Society and assist New-York Historical in articulating the mission, goals, and activities of the Presidency Project. He will participate in several public programs annually and convene the Panel of Presidential Historians. In advance of the 2020 presidential election, Brinkley will also lead a one-day symposium at New-York Historical called Elections Matter, featuring a variety of speakers and topics. The symposium will take place every four years, a few months prior to Election Day.
The Presidency Projects website will educate the public about the presidency via articles written by members of the Panel of Presidential Historians and short films created by the Presidency Project team.
A Presidential History Public Programs Seriesfocusing on presidents in conflict, tumultuous elections, wartime powers, and the Constitutionwill be offered throughout the year as part of New-York Historicals robust public programs. The Museums current stellar line-up of lectures and dynamic conversations on history and current affairs include the Bernard and Irene Schwartz series and History with David M. Rubenstein series at New-York Historical. Among the programs scheduled are Gordon S. Wood and Carol Berkin on November 16 discussing how the relationship between Thomas Jefferson and John Adams led to the establishment of Americas first divergent political parties; and academics Jeremi Suri and Sean Wilentz on January 30 charting the presidencys rise from the limited role envisioned by the Founding Fathers to its current status as the most powerful job in the world.
Seminars for highly motivated, high-achieving middle schoolers will be offered each spring as part of the Presidency Project. Presidential Scholars is a four-part series designed to inspire young New Yorkers to become informed and engaged citizens with a critical appreciation of our nations presidential history through direct engagement with renowned scholars. The program will serve a small, selected group of middle school students and is an opportunity for them to learn from and engage with historians while discussing and debating the issues with their peers. The scholars are experts in presidential history and will lead the groups with the expectation of rigorous intellectual discussion. Presidential Scholars will run in spring 2018, four consecutive Saturdays; applications are due in February, and scholarships are available.
New-York Historicals Institute for Constitutional History is a leading national forum for interdisciplinary study of American constitutional history, offering advanced seminars as well as workshops devoted to improving the teaching of constitutional history. Open to doctoral students, junior faculty members, lawyers, and educators from around the world, the seminars and workshops are offered free of charge and take place at the New-York Historical Society, the George Washington University Law School in Washington, D.C., and the Stanford Law School throughout the year.