Masters Alumni 1954-69
The Department of History at 鶹ý honors its alumni. If you are listed on an alumni page, please contact us with career updates.
1969
Neil N. Browne
Scott Gibson
William K. Hachmann
Marilyn J. Hughes
James C. King
Dr. King earned his Ph.D from the University of Missouri where he continued to be employed as an assistant professor. He left in 1992 for the University of Wyoming where he currently works as a professor in the Department of Political Science.
Ph.D., Political Science, University of Missouri, Columbia (1983)
M.A., Political Science, 鶹ý (1977)
B.A., Social Science Teaching, Michigan State University (1974)
Ronald A. Refior
John F. Riddick
Dr. Riddick served as a Professor of Library at Central Michigan University from 1979 until his retirement in 2004. He was the founding president of the in 1985. In 2006, he published . His earlier works include Glimpses of India: An Annotated Bibliography of Personal Writings by Englishmen, 1583-1947 (1989), Guide to Indian Manuscripts (1993), and Who Was Who in British India (1998).
M.A., History 鶹ý (1966)
B.A. History, 鶹ý (1964)
Dr. Daniel J. Yakes
From 1966 through 2008, Dr. Yakes taught courses in United States History, Michigan History, Physical Anthropology and Cultural Anthropology at Muskegon Community College. He also served as Social Science Department Chairman for many years. Dr. Yakes authored several publications including Logging the White: The White Lake Lumber Industry, 1937-1900 (2010) with Steven S. Demos, and A New Home in Michigan: The Mexican-American Experience in Muskegon (2010) with Connie Navarro . He is now retired.
Ph.D., University of Kansas (1990)
M.A., 鶹ý (1969)
B.A., 鶹ý (1964)
1968
Janice L. Brill
Jung K. Choi
Paul Joseph Collins
James P. Edmiston
Janice Fariborz
Dr. Sylvia D. Hoffert
Dr. Sylvia Hoffert retired as a Professor at Texas A&M University specializing in the history of women and gender. She is currently the lead researcher and interviewer on the Collective Memory Project "The First Lady and the East Wing." at Southern Methodist University. After earning her M.A at 鶹ý Hoffert earned her Ph.D in 1984 from Indiana University-Bloomington. She went on to publish Private Matters: American Attitudes Toward Childbearing and Infant Nurture in the Urban North, 1800-1860 (1989), When Hen's Crow: The Woman's Rights Movement in Antebellum America (1995), A History of Gender in America (2003), and Jane Grey Swisshelm: An Unconventional Life (2004) as well as numerous articles in peer-reviewed journals.
Ph.D., History, Indiana University-Bloomington (1984)
M.A., History, 鶹ý (1968)
B.A., History, Indiana University-Bloomington (1965)
John Patrick Kelly
Robert W. Ryan
1967
John Archart
Dr. Ellsworth H. Brown
Dr. Brown began a career in public history as Director of the Dacotah Prairie Museum in Aberdeen, South Dakota. Since the 1970s he has held the position of Director and/or President at four prestigious museums, libraries and archives, including the Tennessee State Museum, the Chicago Historical Society, the Carnegie Museums and Libraries of Pittsburgh, and the Wisconsin State Historical Society as of 2004. He has also served in leadership roles in over thirty museums and related institutions throughout the U.S., including the American Association of Museums and the Smithsonian Institute of Washington, D.C. In 2004 he received the WMU Alumni Achievement Award in History.
Ph.D, American and Canadian History, Michigan State University (1975)
M.A, History, 鶹ý (1967)
B.A., History; English, Hillsdale College (1965)
Edgar J. Fredericks
Susan Sandra Huston
Dr. Tom Malloy
Ed.D., University of Massachusetts (1982)
M.A., History, 鶹ý (1967)
B.S., Education, Fitchburg State College (1965)
1966
Edward Gorn
Dr. Adolph Grundman
Dr. Grundman retired in June 2011 after nearly thirty-five years at Metropolitan State University of Denver. During his tenure there, he headed the college's Honors Program, created the Interdisciplinary Legal Studies Minor, and organized several travel-abroad 鶹ý for 鶹ýs. During his years at MSU Denver he won several awards including the Distinguished Service Award in 2003 and the Golden Key Research Award in 2006.
Dr. Lynn Lindeman
Dr. Lindeman served in administrative positions including at the Oklahoma University, as the Academic Vice-President of the University of Guam, and as Dean at Bay de Noc Community College, Escanaba, MI before retiring and moving to Florida.
Ph.D., Ed.D., University of Oklahoma (1973)
M.A., History, 鶹ý (1966)
William R. Mitchell
John W. Nott
Edward H. Schneerer
Ojars Andris Smits
Matthew Tomasiewicz
Mr. Tomasiewicz worked as a Public Education Teacher School Administrator until 1974. He then served as Administrator Lobbyist for the Ottawa Area Intermediate School District until 1992. He currently serves as the President and Consultant at Anchor Associates Inc. and has been a Trustee at Grand Valley State University since January 2011.
M.A., History, 鶹ý (1966)
B.A., 鶹ý (1964)
1965
Ruth Allen
Carol Zainfeld Becker
E. Gilman
Charles John Goodall
Dr. Michael H. Parsons
Dr. Parsons began his service to higher education in 1965 as an administrator at Oakland Community College, after various posts at other universities. Dr. Parsons served as a dean at Hagerstown Community College between 1972 and 2000. He was then appointed and served as Professor of Social Science until 2010 when he became an adjunct professor in the Community College Leadership Doctoral Program at Morgan State University. In 2011, he received the WMU Alumni Achievement Award in History.
Ph.D., Education, 鶹ý (1971)
M.A., History, 鶹ý (1965)
B.A., English, 鶹ý (1963)
A.A., General Studies, Oakland Community College (1968)
A.A., Liberal Arts, Muskegon Community College (1962)
James M Rigterink
(Deceased January 2013)
In Suk Ro
George W. Shipman
Donald Stroup
William J. German
James A. Tolhuizen
Ruth G. Tydeman
1964
Dr. Patrick K. Bidelman
Dr. Bidelman enrolled at WMU in 1958 in order to play baseball, served as the History Department's first graduate assistant from 1962 to 1964, and then received an appointment to the faculty from 1964 to 1968. John Yzenbard, Dale Pattison, and Patrick were the department's first three "expansion" appointments. He stopped teaching in 2008 after fifteen years as an adjunct at the University of South Florida and the Ringling College or Art and Design. This hiatus came about as the result of a micro-business that he founded to produce small runs of his patented invention, sold as .
Ph.D., Michigan State University (1975)
Early Modern and Modern French History, Modern British Social and Diplomatic History, and Continental European History since 1500. Doctoral Dissertation: The Feminist Movement in France: The Formative Years, 1858-1889.
M.A., 鶹ý (1964)
European, Russian, and American History. Master’s Thesis: The Russian Revolution of 1905 as depicted by Contemporary American Reports, with Special Emphasis on the “Bloody Sunday” Incident of January 22, 1905.
B.S., 鶹ý (1962). European and American History, Social and Political Science, and Physical Education.
Viola Gross
Robert A. Hageman
Tyrell Hughes
Ronald Eugene Kuiper
Keith Ross Speiran
Grace B. Walz
1963
James C. Duram
Phyllis Korzilius
Wayne C. Mann
After receiving his M.A., Mr. Mann was employed at 鶹ý’s archives for over thirty years and retired in 1995. His worked tirelessly to add significant materials to the archives and made a lasting impact by donating his personal collection which consisted of materials dated as early as 1838. Early in his career, he was active in many organizations and was one of the founding members of the Kalamazoo Valley Genealogical Society. He went on to teach in public schools for eight years, six of them in Kalamazoo. Mann became professionally affiliated with WMU when he began serving in 1963 as an appointed, grant-based field representative for the Archives and Regional History Collections. The University appointed him head of both of those units just five years later. Over the years, he was a resource for many publications, including as a consultant for Leland Thorton's When Gallantry Was Commonplace (1986). He received many acknowledgements from authors for his contributions.
M.A., History, 鶹ý (1963)
B.A., History/Social Science, 鶹ý (1954)
(Deceased March 19, 2014)
1962
Dr. Cornelius Eringaard
After earning his Ph.D., Dr. Eringaard worked for Grand Rapids Community College from 1975 to 1993 serving as Administrative Assistant to the President and the Executive Vice President of Academic Affairs. In 2010, he was awarded with GRCC’s for his service to higher education.
Ph.D., Ball State University (1972)
M.A., History, 鶹ý (1962)
1961
Donald E. Black
Robert C. Harris
William E. Lombari
Grace Rogers Mauzy
English Radicalism and Political Reform in the Nineteenth Century: A Study in Applied Philosophy (1961)
(Deceased January 1999)
1960
Kenneth John Van Dellen
Mr. Dellen retired in 1999 after forty years of teaching in Michigan and Illinois schools and, as of 2002, was the Director of Development at Lansing Christian and Illiana Christian Schools.
1959
Gerald L. Reagan
1958
Si Miller
1954
Fletcher Cooper