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Endowment creates Ìϲ©ÌåÓý history initiative

History department in College of Liberal Arts receives donation to help amplify history scholarship in Ìϲ©ÌåÓý

Front of Lincoln Hall building

Lincoln Hall where the Department of History is housed on the Ìϲ©ÌåÓý campus

Endowment creates Ìϲ©ÌåÓý history initiative

History department in College of Liberal Arts receives donation to help amplify history scholarship in Ìϲ©ÌåÓý

Lincoln Hall where the Department of History is housed on the Ìϲ©ÌåÓý campus

Front of Lincoln Hall building

Lincoln Hall where the Department of History is housed on the Ìϲ©ÌåÓý campus

The Department of History at the Ìϲ©ÌåÓý recently received a donation from former Ìϲ©ÌåÓý Senator Richard Bryan to establish the Oscar W. Bryan Endowment for the History of Ìϲ©ÌåÓý. The endowment was established in the College of Liberal Arts to support students and faculty studying Ìϲ©ÌåÓý history and to start the Ìϲ©ÌåÓý History Initiative. This initiative will promote the study of Ìϲ©ÌåÓý’s past and foster broader understanding of the ways that history inevitably shapes the future. The initiative will encourage historical study of Ìϲ©ÌåÓý from the 19th into the 21st (and later) centuries.

Other goals of the history initiative are to support faculty and graduate student research on the state’s history, as well as fund an annual prize for undergraduate students who will win the best thesis project on Ìϲ©ÌåÓý history.

“My first goal for implementing the Ìϲ©ÌåÓý History Initiative is to amplify existing interest in and scholarship on our state,” Sarah Keyes, assistant professor of history and coordinator of the Ìϲ©ÌåÓý History Initiative, said.

In addition, the initiative will collaborate with other Ìϲ©ÌåÓý historical organizations to design and present public programs on Ìϲ©ÌåÓý historical topics. Keyes said the project anticipates working with the Ìϲ©ÌåÓý Historical Society and the University of Ìϲ©ÌåÓý, Las Vegas.

“As the land grant institution in the state and with the Ìϲ©ÌåÓý Historical Society on campus, it makes sense for the Department of History and the Ìϲ©ÌåÓý to take the lead on promoting rigorous scholarship centered in our state,” Keyes said. “We expect to also foster connections with fantastic colleagues at UNLV to advance a broad understanding of our state’s history.”

Keyes said the gift could not have come at a more opportune time.

“This gift confirms what historians and historians of Ìϲ©ÌåÓý have long known and it provides us with critical funding to filling a long-standing interest and need for our community,” she said.

The initiative also plans to incorporate K-12 education by offering teachers professional development opportunities and providing opportunities for application of historical knowledge through community engagement activities. One of these activities will be a biennial Ìϲ©ÌåÓý history conference to teach and share Ìϲ©ÌåÓý state research to students, history professionals and historians.

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“Gratitude to the Bryans for this donor gift and excitement about the potential for promoting the history of Ìϲ©ÌåÓý to a broad audience,” Keyes said.

Richard Bryan is the son of Oscar Bryan. The Bryan family has a long-standing affiliation with the Ìϲ©ÌåÓý.

The endowment also included a room dedication, where a room in Lincoln Hall was named this summer as the Oscar W. Bryan Seminar Room.