Peter T. Marsh
Professor of History Emeritus
(Retired-Not Teaching)

145 Eggers Hall / Syracuse University
Syracuse, NY 13244-1020
Tel. 315-443-2210/Fax.
315-443-5876
email:
ptmarsh@powernet.co.uk

Academic Specialization

Modern British history, international political economy.

Education

  1. Litt.D., University of Cambridge, 1995
  2. Ph.D., University of Cambridge, 1962
  3. B.A. (honors, modern history), University of Toronto, 1958
  4. Matriculated from the University of Toronto Schools on scholarship in Greek, Latin, French and English to Trinity College, Toronto, 1954

Teaching, Administrative and Professional Appointments

  1. Honorary Professor of History, University of Birmingham
  2. Leverhulme Fellow, in association with the University of Birmingham, 1996-97
  3. President, Middle Atlantic States Conference on British Studies, 1994-96
  4. Coordinator, Maxwell Undergraduate Teaching Grant ($4,000,000) for courses on "Global Community" and "Current Issues in the United States," 1992-
  5. Professor of International Relations, Syracuse University, 1992-
  6. Resident Chair, Syracuse University Program in Florence, 1987 and 1988
  7. Designer and Director, Andrew W. Mellon Foundation project ($300,000 grant) for Integration of Liberal and Professional Education, 1984-86
  8. Director, University Honors Program, Syracuse University, 1978-86
  9. Professor of History, Syracuse University, 1978-
  10. Visiting Professor of Victorian Studies, University of Leicester, 1970
  11. Chair, Department of History, Syracuse University, 1968-70
  12. Associate Professor of History, Syracuse University, 1967-78
  13. Visiting Tutor, University of Sussex, 1966
  14. Instructor and Assistant Professor of History, University of Saskatchewan, 1962-67

Selected and Recent Publications

  1. Joseph Chamberlain, Entrepreneur in Politics (London and New Haven: Yale University Press, 1994), pp. xvii and 725.
  2. Editor and Contributor, Contesting the Boundaries of Liberal and Professional Education (Syracuse: Syracuse University Press, 1988), pp. xii and 275.
  3. The Discipline of Popular Government: Lord Salisbury's domestic statecraft, 1881-1902 (Hassocks, Sussex, and Atlantic Highlands, NJ: Harvester Press and the Humanities Press, 1978. Republished by Gregg Revivals, 1993), pp. x and 373.
  4. Editor and Contributor, The Conscience of the Victorian State (Hassocks, Sussex, and Syracuse: Harvester Press and Syracuse University Press, 1979), pp. x and 257.
  5. The Victorian Church in Decline: Archbishop Tait and the Church of England, 1868-1882 (London and Pittsburgh: Routledge & Kegan Paul and University of Pittsburgh Press, 1969), pp. x and 344.