Norman_K._Risjord

Norman K. Risjord

Norman K. Risjord

American historian (1931–2019)


Norman K. Risjord (November 25, 1931 – January 31, 2019) was an American professor, historian and author of early American history and the early history of the northern Midwest states. Risjord was a teacher at the University of Wisconsin for more than 30 years. Most of his research and writing was devoted to early American history involving the birth and development of political parties that emerged after the American Revolution to which he committed six separate volumes. His works also include Thomas Jefferson, Jeffersonian political thought, its influence in government, and the political parties before and during War of 1812. He has also written extensively on these topics in various historical journals. Several of Risjord's works are widely considered as the standard authority on the early American history of the U.S. party system. Risjord was twice awarded the Fulbright Lectureship, an international award given to distinguished professors.

Quick Facts Born, Died ...

Early life and education

Risjord was born in Manitowoc, Wisconsin on November 25, 1931, and was raised in Kansas City. In Virginia he attended the College of William and Mary from 1949 to 1953, where he was elected to the Phi Beta Kappa society[lower-alpha 1] in his junior year. He was also a three-year letterman on the university's swimming team. Risjord served in the Counterintelligence Corps in Berlin, 1954 to 1956. Thereafter he resumed his education at the University of Virginia where he earned his History Ph.D. in 1960. He then pursued a career as an author, lecturer, a host on Wisconsin NPR educational radio, and popular educator. His first scholarly focus produced many works in the early history of American government.[1][2][3]

Career

Mosse Building Courtyard used by History faculty
Mosse Humanities Building
U. Wisconsin-Madison

Risjord first began teaching at DePauw University in Greencastle, Indiana. In 1964, he became a member of the history faculty at the University of Wisconsin–Madison, and was soon appointed a professor of history. There he lectured in the George L. Mosse Humanities Building, where his lectures won him the Kiekhofer Award as "best teacher" for his first year on campus. Subsequently, his tenure spanned more than thirty years.[2][4]

In 1966 Risjord was a visiting professor at Columbia University. Then, following the "Wisconsin Idea", in 1967 he began broadcasting his classroom lectures over NPR Wisconsin Public Radio, furthering the university's commitment to contribute to the education of every household in the state of Wisconsin. These continued periodically until 1989.[2][4][3]

Risjord was awarded a Fulbright Lectureship at the university in Uppsala, Sweden in 1967–1968, an international academic award given to distinguished professors.[5][lower-alpha 2] He returned to teach American history at the University of Wisconsin–Madison until four years later, when he became a visiting lecturer at Dundee, Scotland, 1973 to 1974.[2] Risjord served on the committee of the Southern Historical Association in 1974–1975, which oversaw the association's programs and new developments.[7]

In 1978 Risjord wrote his second research book, Chesapeake Politics, 1780-1800, a study of the evolution of political parties in Maryland, Virginia, and North Carolina. In 1979, Risjord wrote a textbook on American History for use in secondary schools. In 1984 he wrote a college-level textbook titled America: A History of the United States published by Prentice Hall.[2]

For the next decade, Risjord remained lecturing at the Madison campus, until he was again the recipient of a Fulbright Scholar Lectureship, this time to Singapore in 1983–1984.[8] On his return to Wisconsin, Risjord taught for five consecutive years until a year spent as visiting lecturer as a professor of history at the U.S. Naval Academy between 1989 and 1990.[2][4] During much of his tenure at Wisconsin University he was a member its department of history.[9] He taught a final three years on the Madison campus to finish out his 30-year career before retiring from university lecturing.[2] Risjord retired from Wisconsin University in 1993, with the title Professor Emeritus of History.[10] In retirement, Risjord continued to write history, while applying his teaching and academic skills to volunteer work under PLATO (Participatory Learning and Teaching Organization). He continued in that role for more than two decades, until several months before his death. His teaching career lasted more than 60 years.[11][12][3]

Academia

Risjord’s Lectureships:
Uppsala U., Sweden (here)
National U. of Singapore
Risjord as visiting lecturer:
USNA (here), Columbia U.
& University of Dundee

Risjord's studies into on the early American party system were extensive and his subsequent works are often noted. Historian Donald R. Hickey notes that his writings about the Republicans in Early American political history are considered standard works on the subject. Risjord's works in this area include, The Old Republicans (1965), also considered a standard work on the early Republicans,[13] Southern Conservatism in the Age of Jefferson (1965); The Virginia Federalists (1967);[14] Early American Party System (1969); The Evolution of Political Parties in Virginia, 1782-1800 (1974).[15] Hickey maintains that the best study of the 1812 United States presidential election is Risjord's "Election of 1812."[13][16][17]

Risjord's writings over the years have appeared in several major historical journals, including the American Historical Review, Political Science Quarterly, the William and Mary Quarterly and the Journal of American History.[18][19]

Post university life

Risjord's teaching career lasted a total of 60 years. Upon his retirement he began writing books on US history for general readers. His first works were biographical studies that grew out of a course he taught at the university, "Representative Americans". The work evolved into six volumes, covering the biographies from the Colonial Period to the twentieth century. After that, he took an interest in the history of the upper Midwest, publishing the histories of Wisconsin, Minnesota, the Dakotas, and Lake Superior. Risjord had written over twenty books on American History before he died on January 31, 2019.[11]

After his retirement in 1993, Risjord taught as a volunteer instructor for Wisconsin University-affiliated PLATO (Participatory Learning and Teaching Organization), part of the Division of Continuing Studies of the University of Wisconsin–Madison, and is dedicated to promote self-directed learning for Madison residents nearing retirement. His first classes were in a classroom holding 20 students, then he attracted more students to fill the lecture hall at Madison Senior Center, Capitol Lakes, and finally he filled the 200-seat Oakwood Village West auditorium.[20]

Risjord was survived by his wife, Connie, his brother, John and his son, Mark.[11]

Works

During his academic career Risjord had written over 26 books, numerous essays in historical journals, along with many reviews of books by notable historians in American history. (Listed below)

Historical focus and views

In Risjord's 1812: Conservatives, War Hawks, and the Nation's Honor, he maintains that the issues leading up to the declaration of war in 1812 were "primarily concerned with the honor and integrity of the nation", than with issues concerning economics or the Canadian border.[21]

Several works are devoted to Virginia's role during the years leading up to the ratification of the Constitution in 1789, including, "Virginians and the Constitution: A Multivariant Analysis", and, "Chesapeake Politics", and, "The Evolution of Political Parties in Virginia". Risjord asserts the general theme that differences between Federalists and Republicans were not over matters of class and wealth, that sectionalism and partisanship played a major role. He also places emphasis on the influence of the enormous post war debts, foreign and domestic, owed by the United States. Risjord maintains that this was a national issue that weighed on both parties equally, and was the subject of three Congressional role calls in 1783–1784.[22][23]

More information List of works (Monographs) ...

See also

Notes

  1. Founded in 1776, Phi Beta Kappa is the oldest academic honor society in the United States.
  2. The Fulbright Lectureship is sponsored by the Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs of the U.S. Department of State and receives funding from the United States Congress via annual appropriation bills.[6]
  3. - Reviewed in the William and Mary Quarterly, Jan 1961 Vol 18, No 2. By W.C. Eccles, p. 95.
    - Cited, Indiana Magazine of History, vol. 75, No.March 1, 1979, p.70 by Donald R. Hickey; referenced in Journal of the Early Republic, Vol 5, No. 4 Winter 1985, p. 441 by Steven Edwin Siry.
  4. - Journal article of the same title in the William and Mary Quarterly, April 1961 Vol 12, No 1. By Norman K. Risjord, p. 176.[lower-alpha 3]
  5. reviewed in the Virginia Magazine of History and Biography, Winter 1999 Vol 107, No 1. By James D. Kornwolf, p. 99; in the William and Mary Quarterly, Oct 1998 Vol 55, No 4. By David J. Jordan, p. 627; in the Journal of Southern History, May 1999 Vol 65, No 2. By Elaine G. Breslaw, p. 382.
  6. Reviewed in:     William and Mary Quarterly, Jul 1966 Vol 23, No 3. by Marvin Meyers, p. 487;     Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science, May 1966 Vol 365, No 4. by J. Leonard Bates, p. 208;      Virginia Magazine of History and Biography, Apr 1966 Vol 74, No 2. by Harry Ammon, p. 222;     Journal of Southern History, Feb 1966 Vol 32, No 1. by Paul Goodman, p. 99;     Indiana Magazine of History, Sep 1966 Vol 62, No 3. by Norman S. Cohen, p. 265; American Historical Review, Apr 1966 Vol 71, No 3. by Noble E. Cunningham, Jr., p. 1062;     North Carolina Historical Review, Apr 1966 Vol 43, No 2. by Daniel M. McFarland, p. 1062;     Catholic Historical Review, Oct 1968 Vol 54, No 3. By Sister Laurita Gibson, p. 533;     Southwest Social Science Quarterly, Sep 1966 Vol 47, No 2. by Don Higginbotham, p. 207;     Southwest Social Science Quarterly, Sep 1966 Vol 47, No 2. by Bertil L. Hanson, p. 210;     History, 1967 Vol 52, No 175. by Geoffrey Seed, p. 247;     English Historical Review, Jan 1968 Vol 83, No 326. by J.R. Pole, p. 201;     The Historian, Aug 1966 Vol 28, No 4. by J.R. Pole, p. 677.
  7. reviewed in:     Journal of American History, Dec 1974 Vol 61, No 3. by Robert McColley, p. 772;     The History Teacher, Nov 1973 Vol 7, No 1. by Jacob L. Susskind, p. 122.
  8. Reviewed in:     Reviews in American History, Dec 1979 Vol 7, No 4. By Lance Banning, p. 499;     American Historical Review, Oct 1979 Vol 84, No 4. By Richard Buel, Jr., p. 1147;     Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography, Jul 1979 Vol 103, No 3. By Richard J. Cox, p. 499;     North Carolina Historical Review, Apr 1980 Vol 57, No 2. By John A. Munroe, p. 231;     Journal of Southern History, Aug 1979 Vol 45, No 3. By Frank A. Cassell, p. 431;     Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science, May 1979 Vol 443, by W.T. Generous, Jr, p. 175;     William and Mary Quarterly, Apr 1980 Vol 37, No 2. By David A. Bohmer, p. 328;     Virginia Magazine of History and Biography, Oct 1979 Vol 87, No 4. by George Green Shackelford, p. 231;     Journal of Economic History, Mar 1980 Vol 40, No 1, The Tasks of Economic History., by Allan Kulikoff, p. 207;     Journal of American History, Mar 1980 Vol 66, No 4, by James H. Broussard, p. 915.
  9. Reviewed in:     Journal of Southern History, Nov 1995 Vol 61, No 4. by Norman G. Ralford, p. 791;     Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography, Jul 1995 Vol 119, No 3. by Eugene R. Sheridan, Willard Sterne Randall, p. 266;     Virginia Magazine of History and Biography, Jul 1995 Vol 103, No 3. by Constance B. Schulz, p. 379;     American Historical Review, Oct 1995 Vol 103, No 4. by Lance Banning, p. 1293;     North Carolina Historical Review, Jan 1995 Vol 72, No 1. by Ronald Schultz, p. 107;     Journal of the Early Republic, Winter 1994 Vol 72, No 1. by Mary Young, p. 567;     Journal of American History, Winter 1994 Vol 72, No 1. by Willard Sterne Randall, p. 215.
  10. Reviewed in the Journal of the Early Republic, Spring 1992 Vol 18, No 2. By Steven Watts, p. 95; and the Journal of Southern History, Nov 1993 Vol 59, No 4. By Joseph J. Ellis, p. 743.
  11. reviewed in the Georgia Historical Quarterly, Spring 1997 Vol 81, No 1. by Leslie J. Gordon, p. 194.
  12. reviewed in the History magazine, Oct 2003 Vol 88, No 4. by Ben Marsh, p. 639
  13. reviewed in the History magazine, Oct 2002 Vol 87, No 288. by Keith Mason, p. 562; in The History Teacher, Nov 1981 Vol 15, No 1. by Raymond C. Bailey, p. 151; in the Georgia Historical Quarterly, Spring 1982 Vol 66, No 1. by Milton L. Ready, p. 73.
  14. reviewed in The History Teacher, Feb 1987 Vol 20, No 2. by Fred M. Dahm, p. 303.
  15. Reviewed in the Great Plains Quarterly, Summer 2014 Vol 34, No 3. by Kimberly K. Porter, p. 283.

Citations

Bibliography


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