Difference between revisions of "Robert A. McCaughey"
(One intermediate revision by one other user not shown) | |||
Line 5: | Line 5: | ||
'''Robert McCaughey''' is a [[Barnard College|Barnard]] professor who studies the history of Columbia. Oh, and of the sea. | '''Robert McCaughey''' is a [[Barnard College|Barnard]] professor who studies the history of Columbia. Oh, and of the sea. | ||
− | He wrote ''[[Books about Columbia|Stand, Columbia]]'', an interpretive one-volume history of the university written for its [[C250|250th anniversary]]. The book and his projects are an inspiration for much of the material on WikiCU. He's created a number of historic databases in collaboration with [[BEATL]], including a phenomenal resource on the [[1968 Protests]]. | + | He wrote ''[[Books about Columbia|Stand, Columbia]]'', an interpretive one-volume history of the university written for its [[C250|250th anniversary]]. The book and his projects are an inspiration for much of the material on [[WikiCU]]. |
+ | |||
+ | He's created a number of historic databases in collaboration with [[BEATL]], including a phenomenal resource on the [[1968 Protests]]. In [[2013]], he completed his book on the history of [[SEAS]] for the school's 150th anniversary. | ||
== External links == | == External links == |
Latest revision as of 17:28, 30 January 2014
Robert McCaughey is a Barnard professor who studies the history of Columbia. Oh, and of the sea.
He wrote Stand, Columbia, an interpretive one-volume history of the university written for its 250th anniversary. The book and his projects are an inspiration for much of the material on WikiCU.
He's created a number of historic databases in collaboration with BEATL, including a phenomenal resource on the 1968 Protests. In 2013, he completed his book on the history of SEAS for the school's 150th anniversary.
External links
- Robert McCaughey at Barnard History dept faculty website
- Interactive History of Columbia University
- Neptune's Needle: An Interactive Database of Maritime History
- Columbia '68
- Stand, Columbia: The Appendixes