Four historians, all alumnae of BGSU’s Department of History, made presentations and renewed collegial ties earlier this month at a conference organized by the Society for the History of Children and Youth (SHCY) and hosted by the University of Guelph in southern Ontario.
As a remembrance of our colleague Professor Emeritus Don Rowney, who recently passed away, we share below Dr. Doug Forsyth’s eulogy with minor edits for brevity. We thank Dr. Forsyth for sharing the text.
As
early as my on-campus job interview at Bowling Green, in spring 1996, it became
clear to me that Don Rowney was the faculty member at the university who was
most interested in having me as a colleague.
My wife, Mercedes, and I drove out to northwest Ohio in early summer of
1996, as I looked for a place to live.
Don and Susan invited us over for dinner, and I paid my first visit to
the Old West End Historical District in Toledo, where Don and Susan were
living, where Susan is still living, and where I would go on to live for
twenty-four years and counting. I still
remember vividly that dinner, on the porch behind Don and Susan’s house, and in
particular one detail. Don asked
Mercedes, who was and is a professor at Brown University in Providence, Rhode
Island, why she had accompanied me on the long drive out to the Midwest as I
looked for a place to live. ‘Do you
think I’m going to leave my husband back here, without making sure it’s a
decent place?’ she quipped. Don looked
at her with this peculiar expression of delight he sometimes had, when someone
said something unexpected, and in his view particularly amusing—it was the
first, but not the last time I saw that expression on his face. And that sealed it—he and Mercedes became
friends for life. Mercedes and I made life-long friends in the Old West End,
and in many cases they were already friends of Don and Susan. I think I owe not just the continuation of my
career to Don, but also a good deal of the happiness I’ve derived from living
in this part of the world, over the past quarter century.
It is with great sadness that we learned that Dr. Ron Seavoy, emeritus professor of the Department of History, passed on March 25th. Ron retired in the early 1990s but was an active presence in our department until very recently. It was common to see Dr. Seavoy biking down the streets of Bowling Green to his retiree office in Williams Hall.
At its September 20th conference at the U.S. Naval Academy, the Naval Historical Foundation awarded Dr. David Curtis Skaggs, professor emeritus of history at Bowling Green State University, its Commodore Dudley W. Knox Award for his significant contributions to naval history. Continue reading →
Dr. Gary Hess’ new book, Vietnam: Explaining America’s Lost War, is being published to coincide with the fiftieth anniversary of the escalation of troops in Vietnam. The BGSU News published an article detailing the book and Dr. Hess’ interest and approach.
Dr. Gary Hess is the Distinguished Research Professor Emeritus in the Department of History at Bowling Green State University. For more on his research, please visit his faculty page.
The Undergraduate Curriculum Committee of the Department of History will host a Teaching Forum on “Mastering the Art of Teaching and Developing Strategies for a Productive Classroom Experience” on Wednesday, February 11th at 12:30 in the History Conference Room (Williams 141). The session will feature Dr. Stephanie Gearhart from the Department of English and Professor Emeritus Ed Danziger from the BGSU History Department. All are welcome to attend; light refreshments will be served.
Dr. Gary Hess, distinguished emeritus professor in the Department of History at BGSU, recently commemorated the 50th anniversary of his first day of teaching. At 11 a.m. Sept. 23, 1964, in 107 Hayes Hall, Dr. Gary Hess stepped in front of his first class, U.S. History 205. Hess was accompanied by his wife, Rose, and they entered the classroom at 11 a.m. The couple met in Williams Hall, when she was a graduate assistant in history and he an instructor.
He went on to become one of the University’s longest serving and most highly regarded faculty members, retiring in 2009 as an Emeritus Distinguished Research Professor of history.
Professor Emeritus Patrick Alston passed away on June 3 at his home in Gettysburg, PA, at the age of 87. He had served as professor of history at BGSU from 1971 through 1992, after previously teaching at the University of Iowa.