After growing up in Ludington, Michigan I moved to Grand Rapids and attended Calvin
College, just down the road from Aquinas. Once I had graduated from Calvin, I moved
to the East Coast and began a Ph.D. program in modern British history at . After seven years of grueling historical labor, I received my Ph.D. from Boston
College in May 2009. While I loved living in Boston (all the books and baseball!),
I am thrilled to be back in West Michigan and a member of the faculty at ÂÌñÒùÆÞ.
As a research historian, I specialize in modern British and European intellectual
and religious history. My first book, The Great Church Crisis and the End of English Erastianism, 1898-1906 (Routledge, 2016) studies the political impact of an 1898-1906 anti-Catholic panic
on Church-State relations. You can for only $69.95. My current research examines the ways Victorian Catholic apologists
popularized the latest scientific discoveries.
A major goal of my research and writing activities is to support my undergraduate
teaching. I regularly teach classes on World History (1500-present), Humanities II
(1500-present), History of Christianity, Modern Europe,, , a research seminar on the British Empire, , and Historiography. Years of teaching Aquinas students have led me to appreciate
the way historical skills are applicable in many areas of life. My forthcoming book
Falsehood and Fallacy: How to Think, Read, and Write in the 21st Century (, 2021) shows students how to use what they learn in history class to think and communicate
critically.
In addition to enjoying teaching and other historian stuff, I also enjoy hiking (especially
the !), bird-watching, running, biking, good beer, British detective novels, and hanging
out with my husband Jack and daughters Miriam and Ruth. Oh, and I am seriously really
into cats and volunteer at .