Acclaimed historian Walter Nugent is Emeritus professor of history since 2000 and was the
Andrew V. Tackes Professor of History at the University of Notre Dame, where he has taught
since 1984.
Before that he was Professor of History at Indiana University for twenty-one years.
As a visiting professor he has also taught and lived in England, Israel, Germany,
Poland, and Ireland. He has published 11 books and well over a hundred
essays and reviews on American and comparative history. In 2000 he was awarded the
Caughey prize of Western History Association for best book in Western history for
Into the West: The Story of Its People which has been called
"the most comprehensive and fascinating account to date of the peopling of the American West." and
an "epic social-demographic history."
He lives with his wife, the historian Suellen Hoy, in Highland Park, Illinois.
Demography is destiny, or so it's been for me. My enormous good luck is to have become a historian and to have been a faculty member at two excellent research universities. Good demographic timing helped produce this result, starting with being born in 1935, during the Depression. The birth rate was the lowest ever up to then. Whenever people looked for someone from my small cohort, my chances of being picked were always good.
I was also the fortunate beneficiary of discrimination -- my mother was forced to quit her elementary-teaching job after she became pregnant with me. As a result, her considerable force and talent as a teacher focused on me, so that I was reading, writing, and reckoning at an early age. Two uncles, one a brother of my mother's and the other of my father's, both Catholic priests, also invested in me: one put me through college and saw to it that I learned how to play and sing liturgical music. That let me earn my way through graduate school. The other gave me a spinet piano when I was five and also opened my ears to Beethoven and other great music with his collection of '78s. Benedictine monks, my undergraduate teachers at a small college in Kansas, opened for me a broad universe of history, literature, and philosophy. Most influential were Brendan Downey, a Missourian with an Oxford degree in English; Victor Gellhaus, a Kansas medievalist whose Ph.D. was from Munich; Peter Beckman, a historian of America and the West; and Eugene Dehner, an inspiring zoologist and ornithologist.
In grad school, I thought I would write a dissertation on whether there was a Catholic side to Progressivism. I did such a lousy job on my orals in that field that the faculty member I'd talked to (lengthily) about it said, "forget it." I realized much later that the topic would have been a quagmire; I was extremely lucky to have failed my way out of it. Instead, with some personal knowledge of small farmers on the Great Plains, I decided to see if sources substantiated the then-current idea that the 1890's Populists had been anti-Semites and nativists. I returned to Kansas, and found out that they weren't (though some others were). This produced a dissertation, a book (The Tolerant Populists), and job offers. Again, demography favored me. Baby-boomers were entering college, enrollments were soaring, and the job market for young would-be academics was hotter than ever before or since.
Indiana University became my home for over twenty years. Then and now, it has had
strong international programs. For nine years I had the honor and pleasure of directing
its Overseas Study Programs. Watching the huge changes in hundreds of undergraduates who
went on junior-year programs, from provincials to young cosmopolitans, was probably the
most rewarding work I ever did as an educator. Travels to programs also brought
invitations to lecture in Europe and Israel. In the mid-1980s, just under fifty (a good
age for such invitations), the University of Notre Dame asked me to become dean of its
College of Arts and Letters, which brought with it an endowed chair. I wisely decided that
I'd had enough of administration and declined. But when they offered me the endowed chair
anyway, I accepted and enjoyed a decade and a half of well-supported research and
teaching.
After my book on Populism, the next two were in Gilded-Age economic history. Then, while I was a dean at Indiana, I turned to textbook projects. Some collapsed; others became books (e.g., From Centennial to World War, on the Gilded Age and Progressive Era). A long effort to write a text for the American history survey course fizzled out, but during it I became convinced of the great importance of the demographic substrate of passing events. This led me both to quantitative data and to Braudel. American history, it seemed to me, could be arranged into three plateaus, defined by declining rates of population growth. Just then I was invited to give the 1979 Paley lectures at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, and the three-fold scheme became the lectures, called "The Graying of America," and then a small book, Structures of American Social History (1981).
Next came migration. Still influenced by Braudel, I wrote Crossings: The Great Transatlantic Migrations, 1870-1914 (1991), which treated the Atlantic and the lands around it – Europe, North America, South America – as a unified arena of human motion and action in the "age of steam." During those years I also wrote essays on comparative migration and settlement, the processes that formed the American West. People came there from all points of the compass; the traditional east-to-west Turnerian story did not explain it. The result was Into the West: The Story of Its People (1999). About then, I retired from teaching and indulged myself by writing a family history, pulling together about twenty-five years of sporadic archival research into Making Our Way (2003). My current project is to connect the territorial acquisitions of the United States since 1782 to the process of settlement. The continental acquisitions ended in 1854 and the settlement process in the 1920s, but offshore acquisitions continued past 1945 and global empire-building into our own day. The new book will be called The Habit of Empire.
If my luck continues to hold, I will continue writing history through my eighth decade and beyond, as have exemplars such as Ed Morgan, Bob Remini, Bill McNeill, and Bernie Weisberger. If it doesn't, I can always be thankful for an enormously satisfying (as well as lucky) life as a historian. And I haven't even mentioned my family. That's for another time.
By Walter Nugent
...[I]f, as Braudel demonstrated, the Mediterranean was the brilliant center
of the late sixteenth-century world, surely the Atlantic was the center of the late
nineteenth…. Here… is the demographic mosaic of the transatlantic region from 1870 to
1914.... That region, for present purposes, includes Europe, North America,
South America, and to a slight degree Africa. All of the societies of the region
experienced natural demographic growth, that is, more births than deaths, but at
widely varying rates. They also experienced change through migration, some as donors
of people, others as receivers, and a few as both…. The cumulative picture of movement
is one of a swarming or churning of people back and forth across the Atlantic highway,
fed by growing railroad networks on either side of it. –- Walter Nugent in
"Crossings: The Great Transatlantic Migrations, 1870-1914" (1992)
About Walter Nugent
"Walter Nugent's Into the West is an engaging and important book about "how
the West got its people." It is not really a demographic history, nor is it simply
a history of migration, although Nugent gives at least some account of virtually
every western immigrant group. It is instead an attempt to discern the motives involved
in movement: why people came and why they stayed. And since motives do not translate
directly into results, it tries to discern the actual results of the demographic
churning of the western part of the continent.... Nugent writes compellingly about
homesteading and agrarian settlement, a topic that has largely gone out of fashion....
He points to California with its own distinctive tradition of latifundia as another,
longer lasting version of rural society and agricultural landholding. -–
Richard White in Journal of American History on "Into the West"
Teaching Positions:
University of Notre Dame, Andrew V. Tackes Professor of History, 1984-2000;
emeritus, 2000-present;
Washburn University of Topeka, Instructor in History, 1957-58;
Kansas State University, Temporary Instructor 1961; Assistant Professor of
American History, 1961-63;
Indiana University, Assistant Professor of History 1963-1964;
Associate Professor 1964-68; Professor of History 1968-84. Associate Dean,
College of Arts & Sciences, 1967-71, and in Central Administration, 1972-76;
Director of University Overseas Study Programs, 1967-76; Acting Chair,
Department of Near Eastern Languages and Literatures, 1968-69; Chair,
Department of History, 1974-77.
Columbia University, lecturer, summer 1966;
New York University, lecturer, summer 1967;
Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Fulbright Senior Lecturer, 1978-79;
Paley Lecturer in American Civilization, Feb. 1979; lecturer summer 1982;
Warsaw University, visiting scholar, spring 1979, spring 1982;
Hamburg University, visiting scholar, summer 1980;
Tel Aviv University, Kenneth B. Keating lecturer, Nov. 1987;
University College Dublin, Mary Ball Washington Fulbright chair, 1991-92;
Pacific Lutheran University, Schnackenberg lecturer, 1993;
Huntington Library, Ray Allen Billington lecturer, 1993;
Steinbeck Centennial lecturer, Oct. 2002;
University of Indianapolis, Sutphin lecturer, Oct. 1999;
University of Utah, David E. Miller lecturer, Nov. 1999;
Calvin College, Mellema lecturer, Apr. 2001.
Area of Research:
American West; Gilded Age/Progressive Era; demographic history,
especially migration; comparative history
Education:
St. Benedict's College (Atchison, Kansas), A.B. in history, 1954
Georgetown University, M.A. in European history, 1956
University of Chicago, Ph.D. in American history, 1961
Major Publications:
Editor, Contributor, Joint Author:
Awards:
Newberry Library fellow, summer 1962;
Guggenheim fellow, 1964-65;
St. Benedict's College, D. Litt. honoris causa, 1968;
NEH summer seminars, director, 1979, 1984, 1986;
NEH-Huntington Library fellow, 1979-80;
Indiana Association of Historians, President, 1980-81;
Mead Distinguished Research Fellow, Huntington Library, 1985;
Beinecke Fellow in Western Americana, Yale University, 1990;
Society of American Historians, elected a fellow, 1991;
Warsaw University, Medal of Merit, 1992;
Choice outstanding academic book, for Crossings, 1992;
U.S. Information Agency, Academic Specialist grant to Brazil, 1996;
Immigration History Society, elected to executive board, 1996-99;
Society for Historians of the Gilded Age and Progressive Era, President, 2000-02;
Caughey prize of Western History Association for best book in Western history
(Into the West), 2000;
Western History Association, honorary life member, 1998; President, 2005-06.
Additional Info:
U.S.-Israel Educational Foundation (the Fulbright Program in Israel),
Board of Directors, 1985-89.
Organist, St. Bride's Church, Chicago, 1955-57, 1958-61.
Hadassah Associates (life member).
Contributor to professional journals since 1962
Referee or consultant to various publishers and journals; to universities on
tenure and promotion cases.
Member of peer review panels for Council on International Exchange of Scholars
(the Fulbright Program), National Endowment for the Humanities, Fund for the
Improvement of Post-Secondary Education, the Huntington Library;
Member of various book- and article-prize committees of the Western History
Association, United Chapters of Phi Beta Kappa, Agricultural History Society.
Member, Council on Foreign Relations (New York), 1984-99.