AHA Award Recipients

Awards for Scholarly Distinction

In 1984 the Council of the American Historical Association established a new award entitled the American Historical Association Award for Scholarly Distinction. Each year, the awards go to senior historians of the highest distinction who have spent the bulk of their professional careers in the United States.

2011

Donald R. Kelley (Rutgers Univ.-New Brunswick)

 

2010

Susan Naquin, Professor of History and East Asian Studies at Princeton Univ.

Peter Stansky, Frances and Charles Field Professor of History at Stanford University

 

2009

Saul Friedländer, professor of history at the University of California, Los Angeles

Leon Litwack, historian and professor of American History emeritus at the University of California Berkeley

 

2008

 

Joseph Harris, Howard University

Michael Kammen, Cornell University

Joan Wallach Scott, Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton

 

2007

Martin Duberman, Distinguished Professor of History Emeritus, Lehman College and the Graduate School, City Univ. of New York

 

Jack P. Greene, Andrew W. Mellon Professor Emeritus, Johns Hopkins Univ.

 

Anne Firor Scott, W. K. Boyd Professor Emerita of History, Duke Univ.

 

2006

David Brion Davis, Yale University

 

Lloyd Gardner, Rutgers University-New Brunswick

 

Fritz Stern, Columbia University


2005

Lawrence W. Levine, University of California at Berkeley

 

Nancy G. Siraisi, Hunter College, City University of New York

 

David Underdown, Yale University


2004

John G. A. Pocock, Harry C. Black Professor Emeritus at The Johns Hopkins University

 

Arthur M. Schlesinger Jr., City University of New York

2003

Thomas D. Clark, University of Kentucy

 

Peter Gay, Yale University

 

Wallace T. MacCaffrey, Harvard University


2002

Elizabeth L. Eisenstein , University of Michigan

 

John Higham, Johns Hopkins University (American culture, political)

 


Richard P. McCormick, emeritus Rutgers University (American political)

2001

Ernest R. May, Harvard University (American foreign policy)

 


Nikki R. Keddie, University of California, Los Angeles (Middle East social, intellectual, and gender)

2000

Ramsay MacMullen, Yale University (Roman Empire)

 

Arno J. Mayer, Princeton University (modern Europe)

 


Robert V. Remini, University of Illinois at Chicago (early America, Andrew Jackson)

1999

Earl Pomeroy, University of Oregon (U.S. West)

 

Eugen Weber, University of California, Los Angeles (modern France)

 


Gerhard Weinberg, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill (Germany)

1998

Tulio Halperin-Donghi, University of California, Berkeley (Latin America and Argentina since the eighteenth century)

 


Robert Paxton, Columbia University (modern France)

1997

Alfred D. Chandler, Jr., Harvard University (American economic and business)

 

August Meier, Kent State University (African American)

 


Benjamin I. Schwartz, Harvard University. (China)

1996

H. Stuart Hughes, University of California, San Diego (modern Europe, intellectual)

 

George L. Mosse, University of Wisconsin, Madison (Europe)

 


Barbara and Stanley Stein, Princeton University (Latin America/Brazil)

1995 Lawrence Stone, Princeton University (Tudor Stuart England, social/comparative)

1994

George F. Kennan, Institute for Advanced Study (U.S. diplomatic)

 

H. Leon Prather, Sr., Tennessee State University (U.S. South, African American)

 


Nicholas V. Riasanovsky, University of California, Berkeley (Russia)

1993

Emma Lou Thornbrough, Butler University (African American)

 


Brian Tierney, Cornell University (Medieval)

1992

Gerda Lerner, University of Wisconsin, Madison (19th c. American social, women’s)

 

Carl E. Schorske, Princeton University (Modern Europe)

 


George R. Woolfolk, Prairie View A&M College (African American)

1991

Gerhart B. Ladner, University of California, Los Angeles (Medieval, Art, Church)

 

Merze Tate, Howard University (U.S. diplomatic, international)

 


Chester G. Starr, University of Michigan (Ancient)

1990

Nettie Lee Benson, University of Texas, Austin (Latin America/Mexico)

 

Margaret Atwood Judson, Douglass College/Rutgers (British constitutional)

 


Kenneth M. Setton, Institute for Advanced Study (Medieval and Renaissance)

1989

Paul Oskar Kristeller, Columbia University (Renaissance)

 

Caroline Robbins, Bryn Mawr College (English political and constitutional)

 


Kenneth M. Stampp, University of California, Berkeley (Civil War and Reconstruction)

1988

Helen G. Edmonds, North Carolina Central University (African American)

 

Sylvia Thrupp Strayer, University of Michigan (medieval England/Europe)

 


Edwin O. Reischauer, Harvard University (Japan)

1987

Angie Debo, Independent Scholar (Native American)

 

John Whitney Hall, Yale University (Japan, Tokugawa Period)

 


Benjamin Quarles, Morgan State University (African American, anti-slavery movement)

1986

Woodrow Borah, University of California, Berkeley (Latin America, colonial Mexico)

 


Edmund S. Morgan, Yale University (American)

1985

Felix Gilbert, Institute for Advanced Study (European, history of political ideas)

Last Updated: March 25, 2013 8:29 PM