J. William Harris

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Graduate Faculty Mentor Award, 2011

J William Harris

Writing a doctoral dissertation can be a long, lonely process, with years passing between the dissertation's start and its completion. For some graduate students in the UNH History Department, the process is made a little easier by having Bill Harris in their corner. The author of four critically acclaimed books that examine the history of the South, Harris knows well the rigors of crafting a lengthy work, and the difference a good mentor can make to a project's success.

ā€œThe adviser-student relationship has to be a personal one,ā€ Harris says. ā€œWhen you're working with someone on a project of the magnitude of a dissertation or a master's thesis, it's critical to be on the same page with them—in every sense.ā€

Since his arrival at UNH in 1985, Harris has distinguished himself as a devoted and active adviser. Students praise his responsiveness, thoroughness, creativity, and humor. His colleagues are quick to mention his integrity and dedication to his students, his breadth of knowledge, and his impeccable scholarship.

ā€œGraduate students appreciate Bill as an adviser who routinely ā€˜goes the extra mile’on their behalf, coaxing better work from them than they thought possible,ā€ says Associate Professor of History Jeffrey Bolster. ā€œHis genuine respect for each of them as individuals is legendary.ā€

Harris has earned accolades for his own published work. Deep Souths was a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize, and Library Journal named The Hanging of Thomas Jeremiah an ā€œoutstanding book of the year.ā€ And yet he wouldn't consider himself a born historian—the Georgia native attended the Massachusetts Institute of Technology intending to become a biochemist. He switched tracks after several history courses piqued his interest, and to hear him tell it, the two disciplines are not entirely unrelated.

ā€œHistory is somewhat like a science, rooted in evidence and logic, but then overlaid with art, craft, and judgment,ā€ he explains. As he describes quantitative criteria for good historical research, the importance of defining the right questions in ways that can be answered, it is easy to see the intellectual zeal he shares with his students, the truth in the assertion made by his colleague Bolster that, ā€œUNH is a much better institution because Bill Harris works here.ā€

—Kristin Duisberg

About this Award
The Graduate Faculty Mentor award is designed to honor a faculty member whose commitment to excellence in graduate student training has contributed significantly to graduate students’ professional development. Forms only accepted during application period.