
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
- Litt.D.,
University of Cambridge, 1995
- Ph.D.,
University of Cambridge, 1962
- B.A. (honors,
modern history), University of Toronto, 1958
- 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
- Honorary
Professor of History, University of Birmingham
- Leverhulme
Fellow, in association with the University of Birmingham, 1996-97
- President,
Middle Atlantic States Conference on British Studies, 1994-96
- Coordinator,
Maxwell Undergraduate Teaching Grant ($4,000,000) for courses on "Global
Community" and "Current Issues in the United States," 1992-
- Professor of
International Relations, Syracuse University, 1992-
- Resident Chair,
Syracuse University Program in Florence, 1987 and 1988
- Designer and
Director, Andrew W. Mellon Foundation project ($300,000 grant) for
Integration of Liberal and Professional Education, 1984-86
- Director,
University Honors Program, Syracuse University, 1978-86
- Professor of
History, Syracuse University, 1978-
- Visiting
Professor of Victorian Studies, University of Leicester, 1970
- Chair,
Department of History, Syracuse University, 1968-70
- Associate
Professor of History, Syracuse University, 1967-78
- Visiting Tutor,
University of Sussex, 1966
- Instructor and
Assistant Professor of History, University of Saskatchewan, 1962-67
Selected and
Recent Publications
- Joseph
Chamberlain, Entrepreneur in Politics
(London and New Haven: Yale University Press, 1994), pp. xvii and 725.
- Editor and
Contributor, Contesting the Boundaries of Liberal and Professional
Education (Syracuse: Syracuse University Press, 1988), pp. xii and 275.
- 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.
- Editor and
Contributor, The Conscience of the
Victorian State
(Hassocks, Sussex, and Syracuse: Harvester Press and Syracuse University
Press, 1979), pp. x and 257.
- 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.


|