Shane Bell holds a
bachelor’s degree in history and a Master of Arts in Liberal Studies from
Clayton State University. He worked for NARA as a graduate student
employee beginning in 2007 and joined the agency full time in 2011. Shane
has extensive experience with records from NASA, the Atomic Energy Commission,
and 19th century federal courts. He has compiled finding aids
for holdings related to The War of 1812, the 19th century illegal
slave trade, the Civil War, and 20th century science and
technology. In addition to his archival work he also teaches Modern and
Pre-Modern World history at Clayton State.
1. How
and/or when did you get you hooked on history?
I took advanced and then AP history in grades 10 & 11 in high
school. I always found it interesting and seemed to remember facts and
concepts easily. For some reason my natural proclivity for history and
reading didn't translate to majoring in history when I went to college.
When I went back to college in my late 20s, however, I was bitten by the history
bug and changed my major. There wasn't a single book or author that
hooked me. I became interested in exploring many different time periods
and approaches to history. A well written historical story, of course, is
always interesting and makes a good catalyst for further investigation.
2. What
role does history play or has it played in your personal life?
I'm an avid reader of history and I've got a long list of books I'll
probably never get to. I read with what free time I have.
3. How
is/How was history a part of your professional life/career?
I get to "do" history nearly every day at work. We interact
with documents from the late 18th century to the late 20th century often.
Having a history background helps put these documents in their historical
context and underscores their value. It also makes understanding them a
bit easier.
4. Why
is studying/knowing history important?
The importance of history is understanding how we got where we are.
History won't necessarily allow humanity to avoid the mistakes of the past, but
then again it might - in some situations. For example, one can't
understand the current conflict in the Middle East without understanding its
modern beginnings during World War I. Knowing that makes us more informed
citizens. Perhaps then we can make better decisions in the future.
5. What
is your favorite period or aspect of history to learn about and why?
I've always liked the era of the early republic in the U.S. The ideas
and decisions that turned this country from a loose confederation of newly
independent British colonies to a major world power were sowed in the first few
decades of our existence. The Medieval Era has also always fascinated
me. Western Europe dealing with the end of the Roman Empire,
the ascension of a relatively new religion, and the clash of various
Germanic tribes along with former Roman citizenry made for an interesting time
in human history. I also like the post-war era. This is probably
because my parents came of age in the mid-20th century and I have memories of
family members describing events that you now only read about in history
books. It’s a little more personal than the earlier eras mentioned above.
6. What
led you to become an archivist and how did you prepare for your profession?
I was originally on a path to academia as I entered graduate school.
Ultimately, the prospect of a job in archives opened up and I decided to pursue
that route instead, ending my formal education with a Master's Degree.
Once I began work I had to catch up. I read archival journals and studied
some of the things that grad students in archival studies would be
reading. I also embarked on a series of site visits to other archival
facilities. I asked a lot of questions and tried to take in as much as I
could about how other institutions go about their work.
7. What
are some challenges and rewards of being an archivist?
Probably the greatest reward is unearthing a hidden gem in the
records. This could be a photo, an unknown signature of a famous
historical figure, a map, a letter, or a handwritten note quickly dashed off
with little thought as to its relevance to posterity. Finding these
little time capsules gives us a glimpse into the past. It breaks through
some of the haze and allows us to view one more piece of the past. This
can also be a challenge - we only possess certain pieces of the puzzle.
More frequently than not, our pieces lead to still more questions and more
conjecture about the full puzzle.
Wednesday, January 20, 2016
Wednesday, January 6, 2016
7 Questions With Claudio Saunt, Author of West of the Revolution
Claudio Saunt is the chair of the history department at the
University of Georgia, the Co-Director of the Center for Virtual History
(http://www.ehistory.org/ ), and Associate Director of the Institute of NativeAmerican Studies . He
teaches and writes about early American and Native American history at the
University of Georgia and am currently at work on a book about Indian Removal.
His most recent publication is West of the Revolution: An Uncommon History of
1776.
1. How and/or when did you get you hooked on history?
I was not hooked until college, when I took a class with James Shenton at Columbia University. He was a legendary teacher, who could keep a room full of kids on the edge of their seats with his gripping lectures. Yet I never focused narrowly on history and still don’t. I like to read science journalism and am interested in cartography and population genetics, among other subjects.
2. What role does history play or has it played in your personal life?
Perhaps it is more interesting to ask what role my personal life has played in the history I have written. In some ways, all history is autobiographical. In my case, I grew up in San Francisco and developed an interest in the people and places who rarely appear in traditional accounts of early America, which focus so narrowly on the thirteen British colonies, and often even more tightly on a handful of founding fathers.
3. How is/How was history a part of your professional life/career?
I am the chair of the history department at the University of Georgia as well as a teacher and author, and I keep busy both as an administrator and as a scholar.
4. Why is studying/knowing history important?
History students learn to analyze, to sustain an argument, and to write, all qualities that employers value and that are useful in a wide range of pursuits. They also learn that the world is more diverse and complex than appears from our own small corner of globe. I’m also a firm believer that good history makes for good citizens and that it is difficult to carry on an informed public conversation without some knowledge of historical context. Without an understanding of slavery, Reconstruction, and Jim Crow, for example, it is impossible to have an intelligent discussion about race in the United States.
5. What is your favorite period or aspect of history to learn about and why?
I am interested in early America, a place and time full of diverse people and places, with stories that continue to amaze me, even after twenty-five years of studying the era.
6. Tell us about your book West of the Revolution?
In 1776, Thomas Paine published Common Sense, the Continental Congress declared independence, and Washington crossed the Delaware. We are familiar with those famous moments in American history but know little about the extraordinary events occurring that same year far beyond the British colonies. West of the Revolution explores the rest of the continent not covered by the thirteen colonies then in rebellion against Great Britain. In 1776, the Spanish established the first European colony in San Francisco and set off a cataclysm for the region’s native residents. The Russians pushed into Alaska in search of valuable sea otters, devastating local Aleut communities. And the British extended their fur trade from Hudson Bay deep into the continent, sparking an environmental revolution that transformed America’s boreal forests. I tell these stories and more in West of the Revolution.
7. What surprising things will readers learn from your book?
There are so many because we teach so little about early America in our US history classes. For starters, it will probably come as a surprise that the thirteen colonies that declared their independence from Britain in 1776 covered not even 4% of the North America. All kinds of formative events were occurring elsewhere. The Sioux Indians, for example, exploring the Great Plains, “discovered” the Black Hills in 1776. The mountain uplift has since become their sacred homeland. The Osage Indians were building their own empire in the heart of the continent in the 1770s. “The truth is,” Jefferson would admit in 1804, the Osages “are the great nation South of the Missouri.” The Kumeyaay Indians, in the vicinity of present-day San Diego, launched their own war for independence a few months after the “shot heard round the world” in distant Massachusetts marked the beginning of the American Revolution. More generally, the book opens up vistas that we rarely get to see survey in traditional narratives of the period.
1. How and/or when did you get you hooked on history?
I was not hooked until college, when I took a class with James Shenton at Columbia University. He was a legendary teacher, who could keep a room full of kids on the edge of their seats with his gripping lectures. Yet I never focused narrowly on history and still don’t. I like to read science journalism and am interested in cartography and population genetics, among other subjects.
2. What role does history play or has it played in your personal life?
Perhaps it is more interesting to ask what role my personal life has played in the history I have written. In some ways, all history is autobiographical. In my case, I grew up in San Francisco and developed an interest in the people and places who rarely appear in traditional accounts of early America, which focus so narrowly on the thirteen British colonies, and often even more tightly on a handful of founding fathers.
3. How is/How was history a part of your professional life/career?
I am the chair of the history department at the University of Georgia as well as a teacher and author, and I keep busy both as an administrator and as a scholar.
4. Why is studying/knowing history important?
History students learn to analyze, to sustain an argument, and to write, all qualities that employers value and that are useful in a wide range of pursuits. They also learn that the world is more diverse and complex than appears from our own small corner of globe. I’m also a firm believer that good history makes for good citizens and that it is difficult to carry on an informed public conversation without some knowledge of historical context. Without an understanding of slavery, Reconstruction, and Jim Crow, for example, it is impossible to have an intelligent discussion about race in the United States.
5. What is your favorite period or aspect of history to learn about and why?
I am interested in early America, a place and time full of diverse people and places, with stories that continue to amaze me, even after twenty-five years of studying the era.
6. Tell us about your book West of the Revolution?
In 1776, Thomas Paine published Common Sense, the Continental Congress declared independence, and Washington crossed the Delaware. We are familiar with those famous moments in American history but know little about the extraordinary events occurring that same year far beyond the British colonies. West of the Revolution explores the rest of the continent not covered by the thirteen colonies then in rebellion against Great Britain. In 1776, the Spanish established the first European colony in San Francisco and set off a cataclysm for the region’s native residents. The Russians pushed into Alaska in search of valuable sea otters, devastating local Aleut communities. And the British extended their fur trade from Hudson Bay deep into the continent, sparking an environmental revolution that transformed America’s boreal forests. I tell these stories and more in West of the Revolution.
7. What surprising things will readers learn from your book?
There are so many because we teach so little about early America in our US history classes. For starters, it will probably come as a surprise that the thirteen colonies that declared their independence from Britain in 1776 covered not even 4% of the North America. All kinds of formative events were occurring elsewhere. The Sioux Indians, for example, exploring the Great Plains, “discovered” the Black Hills in 1776. The mountain uplift has since become their sacred homeland. The Osage Indians were building their own empire in the heart of the continent in the 1770s. “The truth is,” Jefferson would admit in 1804, the Osages “are the great nation South of the Missouri.” The Kumeyaay Indians, in the vicinity of present-day San Diego, launched their own war for independence a few months after the “shot heard round the world” in distant Massachusetts marked the beginning of the American Revolution. More generally, the book opens up vistas that we rarely get to see survey in traditional narratives of the period.