Top Banner
1 | Hendricks WANDA A. HENDRICKS EDUCATION August 1990 Ph.D. History, Purdue University, West Lafayette, Indiana May 1984 M.A. History, Wake Forest University, Winston-Salem, North Carolina May 1976 B.A. History, Limestone College, Gaffney, South Carolina ACADEMIC APPOINTMENTS 2018 Distinguished Professor Emerita, University of South Carolina 2016-2018 Professor, Department of History, University of South Carolina 2005-2015 Associate Professor, Department of History 2001-2005 Associate Professor, Women’s Studies Program and Department of History, University of South Carolina 1998-2001 Associate Professor of History, Arizona State University 1992-1998 Assistant Professor of History, Arizona State University 1990-1992 Assistant Professor of History, University of North Carolina at Charlotte 1989-1990 Instructor, Afro-American History, Purdue University 1987-1988 Instructor, Afro-American History, Purdue University 1989 Summer Graduate Assistant, Humanities, Social Science and Education Library, Purdue University-Reference 1988 Spring Guest Lecturer, Women in America, Purdue North Central, Westville, Indiana 1987 Fall Graduate Assistant, Humanities, Social Science and Education Library, Purdue University-Government Documents 1985 Graduate Assistant, Afro-American Studies Center, Purdue University 1984-1987 Graduate Teaching Assistant, American History, Purdue University ADMINISTRATIVE EXPERIENCE 2006-2008 Initiated the creation of and raised $52,000 endowment funds for the Darlene Clark Hine Award In African American Women’s & Gender History to institutionalize black women’s history in the Organization of American Historians (OAH); The annual prize range is $1,000 and $2,000 and the first was awarded in 2010 2001-2005 Graduate Director, Women’s Studies Program, University of South Carolina, 2001-
14

WANDA A. HENDRICKS...WANDA A. HENDRICKS EDUCATION August 1990 Ph.D. History, Purdue University, West Lafayette, Indiana May 1984 M.A. History, Wake Forest University, Winston-Salem,

Jul 09, 2020

Download

Documents

dariahiddleston
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: WANDA A. HENDRICKS...WANDA A. HENDRICKS EDUCATION August 1990 Ph.D. History, Purdue University, West Lafayette, Indiana May 1984 M.A. History, Wake Forest University, Winston-Salem,

1 | Hendricks

WANDA A. HENDRICKS

EDUCATION

August 1990 Ph.D. History, Purdue University, West Lafayette, Indiana

May 1984 M.A. History, Wake Forest University, Winston-Salem, North Carolina

May 1976 B.A. History, Limestone College, Gaffney, South Carolina

ACADEMIC APPOINTMENTS

2018 Distinguished Professor Emerita, University of South Carolina

2016-2018 Professor, Department of History, University of South Carolina

2005-2015 Associate Professor, Department of History

2001-2005 Associate Professor, Women’s Studies Program and Department of History,

University of South Carolina

1998-2001 Associate Professor of History, Arizona State University

1992-1998 Assistant Professor of History, Arizona State University

1990-1992 Assistant Professor of History, University of North Carolina at Charlotte

1989-1990 Instructor, Afro-American History, Purdue University

1987-1988 Instructor, Afro-American History, Purdue University

1989 Summer Graduate Assistant, Humanities, Social Science and Education Library, Purdue

University-Reference

1988 Spring Guest Lecturer, Women in America, Purdue North Central, Westville, Indiana

1987 Fall Graduate Assistant, Humanities, Social Science and Education Library, Purdue

University-Government Documents

1985 Graduate Assistant, Afro-American Studies Center, Purdue University

1984-1987 Graduate Teaching Assistant, American History, Purdue University

ADMINISTRATIVE EXPERIENCE

2006-2008 Initiated the creation of and raised $52,000 endowment funds for the Darlene Clark

Hine Award In African American Women’s & Gender History to institutionalize

black women’s history in the Organization of American Historians (OAH); The

annual prize range is $1,000 and $2,000 and the first was awarded in 2010

2001-2005 Graduate Director, Women’s Studies Program, University of South Carolina, 2001-

Page 2: WANDA A. HENDRICKS...WANDA A. HENDRICKS EDUCATION August 1990 Ph.D. History, Purdue University, West Lafayette, Indiana May 1984 M.A. History, Wake Forest University, Winston-Salem,

2 | Hendricks

2005

CONSULTANT

May-June 2016 Z. Smith Reynolds Library Annual Open Online Course, Wake Forest University,

Winston-Salem, NC

OTHER EMPLOYMENT EXPERIENCE

1987 Summer Teacher, Charlotte-Mecklenburg School System, Charlotte, NC

1988

1985 Summer Library Assistant, Indiana Historical Society Library, Indianapolis, IN

1984 Summer Researcher, Charlotte Historic Properties Commission, Charlotte, NC

1986

1976-1984 Teacher, Charlotte-Mecklenburg School System, Charlotte, NC

HONORS and AWARDS

2014 Letitia Woods Brown Book Award, Association of Black Women Historians

2012 Associate Professor Professional Development Award, College of Arts and Sciences,

University of South Carolina

2007 Outstanding Achievement in Historic Preservation, Lucy Craft Laney Museum of

Black History, Augusta, Georgia

2003-2006 Distinguished Lecturer, Organization of American Historians (OAH) Distinguished

Lectureship Series

2001 Outstanding Achievement & Contribution Award, Commission On The Status Of

Women, Arizona State University

1999-2000 Excellence in Historical Writing Award for Best Article Published in Journal of

Illinois History

1995-1996 Outstanding Black Faculty, Black & African Coalition, Arizona State University

1995 Zebulon Pearce Dean’s Quality Teaching Award for Faculty, College of Liberal Arts

and Sciences, Arizona State University

1995 Summer Research Award, Women's Studies Program, Arizona State University

1994 Mini Grant, Women's Studies Program, Arizona State University

1994 Mini Grant, College of Liberal Arts and Sciences Research Award, Arizona State

University

1993-1994 Council for Research and Creative Activities Grant, Arizona State University

1992 Faculty Research Grant, UNC-Charlotte (forfeited-moved to Arizona State

Page 3: WANDA A. HENDRICKS...WANDA A. HENDRICKS EDUCATION August 1990 Ph.D. History, Purdue University, West Lafayette, Indiana May 1984 M.A. History, Wake Forest University, Winston-Salem,

3 | Hendricks

University)

1991 Faculty Research Grant, UNC-Charlotte

1991 Duke Power Company Foundation Grant, Charlotte-Mecklenburg Coalition of

African American Research Associates

1991 Faculty Exchange Program, Kingston Polytechnic, Kingston upon Thames, Surrey,

England

1988-1989 American Association of University Women Educational Foundation Fellow

1988-1989 David Ross Doctoral Research Fellow, Purdue University

RESEARCH AND SCHOLARSHIP

In Progress:

Book Manuscript: “Madie Hall Xuma: A Transnational Biography of Jim Crow and Apartheid”

Essay: “A Geography of Black Women’s History,” submitted spring 2016

Editor:

Series Editor, Women, Gender, and Sexuality in American History Series (formerly Women In American

History Series), University of Illinois Press (2013-present)

Senior Editor, Black Women in America: Second Edition. 3 Vols. New York: Oxford University Press,

2005.

Books Published:

Fannie Barrier Williams: Crossing The Borders of Region and Race. Urbana, Illinois: University of

Illinois Press, 2014.

• Letitia Woods Brown Book Award for best book by a senior scholar in African American

Women’s History, Association of Black Women Historians

Gender, Race and Politics in the Midwest: Black Club Women in Illinois. Bloomington, Indiana: Indiana

University Press, 1998.

Articles and Essays Published:

Digital:

“Fannie Barrier Williams: At The Intersections of Region, Race And Reform,” Women and Social

Movements in the United States 18, no. 2 (September 2014) (Database). Virginia: Alexander Street Press,

2014.

Print:

“On The Margins: Creating Space and Place in The Academy.” In Telling Histories: Black Women In The

Ivory Tower, edited by Deborah Gray White, 146-157. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press,

2008.

Page 4: WANDA A. HENDRICKS...WANDA A. HENDRICKS EDUCATION August 1990 Ph.D. History, Purdue University, West Lafayette, Indiana May 1984 M.A. History, Wake Forest University, Winston-Salem,

4 | Hendricks

(With Elaine F. S. Qadeem) “Eva C. Monroe: Social Welfare Reformer and Advocate for Children.”

Illinois History Teacher, 10(2003): 13-22.

“Child Welfare and Black Female Agency in Springfield: Eva Monroe and The Lincoln Colored Home.”

Journal of Illinois History, 3(Summer 2000): 86-104.

• Excellence in Historical Writing Award for Best Article Published 1999-2000

“African American Women As Political Constituents In Chicago Illinois, 1913-1915.” In “We Have

Come to Stay”: American Women And Political Parties, 1880-1960, edited by Melanie Gustafson, Kristie

Miller and Elizabeth Israels Perry, 55-64. New Mexico: University of New Mexico Press, 1999.

“Fannie Barrier Williams.” In African American Orators: A Bio-Critical Sourcebook, edited by Richard

W. Leeman, 393-399. Westport, Connecticut: Greenwood Press, 1996.

(With Paulette Pennington Jones and Careda Taylor) “Ida Wells-Barnett Confronts Race and Gender

Discrimination.” Illinois History Teacher 3(1996): 30-37.

“Ida B. Wells-Barnett and The Alpha Suffrage Club.” In One Woman, One Vote: Rediscovering The

Woman Suffrage Movement, edited by Marjorie S. Wheeler, 263-275. Troutdale, Oregon: NewSage Press,

1995.

“‘Vote for the advantage of ourselves and our race’: The Election Of The First Black Alderman In

Chicago.” Illinois Historical Journal, 87(Autumn 1994): 171-184

Encyclopedia Entries Published:

“Political Parties,” Black Women in America: Second Edition, (New York: Oxford University Press,

2005), 521-526; Reprint in Oxford African American Studies Center Online Database.

“Alpha Suffrage Club,” The Encyclopedia of Chicago (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2004), 17.

“Alpha Suffrage Club,” Black Women in America: An Historical Encyclopedia (New York: Carlson

Publishing, Inc., 1993), 25-26. Reprinted in Facts on File Encyclopedia of Black Women in America:

Social Activism vol. 10 (New York: Facts on File, Inc., 1997), 29-31.

“Elizabeth Lindsay Davis,” Black Women in America: An Historical Encyclopedia, pp. 306-307.

Reprinted in Facts on File Encyclopedia of Black Women in America: Religion and Community vol. 7

(New York: Facts on File, Inc., 1997), 75-76; Modified and Reprinted as “Scribe of The Club Movement”

in Black Women In America: Second Edition vol. 2 (New York: Oxford University Press, 2005), 431.

“Ida B. Wells-Barnett,” Black Women in America: An Historical Encyclopedia, pp. 1242-1246. Reprinted

in Facts on File Encyclopedia of Black Women in America: Social Activism vol. 10 (New York: Facts on

File, Inc.), 1997, 183-188; Modified and Reprinted in Black Women In America: Second Edition vol. 3

(New York: Oxford University Press, 2005), 337-340; Reprint in Oxford African American Studies

Center Online Database.

“Fannie Barrier Williams,” Black Women in America: An Historical Encyclopedia, pp. 1259-1261.

Reprinted in Facts on File Encyclopedia of Black Women in America: Religion and Community vol. 7

(New York: Facts on File, Inc., 1997), 214-216; Modified and Reprinted in Black Women In America:

Second Edition vol. 3 (New York: Oxford University Press, 2005), 352-354; Reprint in Oxford African

American Studies Center Online Database.

Page 5: WANDA A. HENDRICKS...WANDA A. HENDRICKS EDUCATION August 1990 Ph.D. History, Purdue University, West Lafayette, Indiana May 1984 M.A. History, Wake Forest University, Winston-Salem,

5 | Hendricks

“World's Columbian Exposition of 1893,” Black Women in America: An Historical Encyclopedia, 1293-

1294. Reprinted in Facts on File Encyclopedia of Black Women in America: The Early Years 1617-1899

vol. 1 (New York: Facts on File, Inc., 1997), 194-195.

“Hallie Quinn Brown,” African American Women: A Biographical Dictionary edited by Dorothy C.

Salem (New York: Garland Publishing, 1993), 69.

“Nancy Prosser,” African American Women: A Biographical Dictionary, 410-411.

“Ida B. Wells-Barnett,” African American Women: A Biographical Dictionary, 552-553.

“Charlotte, North Carolina, Sit-in,” Encyclopedia of African-American Civil Rights from Emancipation to

the Present edited by Charles D. Lowery and John F. Manszalek (Connecticut: Greenwood Press, 1992),

95. Reprinted in The Greenwood Encyclopedia of African American Civil Rights From Emancipation to

the Twenty-First Century vol. 1, 2003, 95.

“High Point, North Carolina, Sit-in,” Encyclopedia of African-American Civil Rights from Emancipation

to the Present, 256-257. Reprinted in The Greenwood Encyclopedia of African American Civil Rights

From Emancipation to the Twenty-First Century vol. 1, 2003, 246-247.

Contributor:

Darlene Clark Hine, William C. Hine, and Stanley Harrold, The African-American Odyssey vol. 2 (New

Jersey: Prentice Hall, 2000)

Introduction:

An African American Album: The Black Experience in Charlotte and Mecklenburg County, edited by

Elizabeth Randolph. Charlotte, N. C.: The Charlotte-Mecklenburg Public Library, 1992.

• Winner of The Publication Award by the White House Conference on Library and

Information Services Task Force, 30 July 1993

Book Reviews Published:

American Historical Review, (June 2007): 875-876

Journal of Southern History, 71 (2005): 152-153

H-SHGAPE, www.h-net.msu.edu/reviews (March 2002); Reprint Black History Bulletin 66 (2003): 56-57

Journal of American History, 82 (1995): 314

Gender And History, 6 (1994): 150-151

Civil War History, 39 (1993): 90-92

The Maryland Historian, 21 (1990): 45-47

Southern Historian, 11 (1990): 84

Southern Historian, 10 (1989): 89-90, 123-124

Keynote Speaker Presentations:

“Love, Labor and Brockport: Incorporating Fannie Barrier Williams in American History,” Fannie Barrier

Williams Women of Courage Biennial Celebration and Awards Ceremony, College at Brockport, State

University of NY, 1 April 2016

“Gender, Race & Politics: Club Women in Illinois,” Timuel D. Black Research Fellowship Lecture and

Reception, Vivian G. Harsh Society, Inc., Carter G. Woodson Regional Library, Chicago, IL, 21

September 2014

Page 6: WANDA A. HENDRICKS...WANDA A. HENDRICKS EDUCATION August 1990 Ph.D. History, Purdue University, West Lafayette, Indiana May 1984 M.A. History, Wake Forest University, Winston-Salem,

6 | Hendricks

“Political Equals and Contested Spaces: Race and the Suffrage Movement,” Women’s Center, University

of Louisville, 9 November 2006

“Context and History: Reflections On The African American Struggle For Equality,” 2003 Southern

Association for Women Historians Visiting Lecturer, Converse College, Spartanburg, SC, 20 January

2003

“Black Womanhood, Fannie Barrier Williams, and the Woman’s Age,” Conference On Illinois History,

Springfield, IL, 4 October 2001

National Endowment For The Humanities Institute Presentations:

Presenting Scholar, NEH-funded Summer Institute, Freedom for One, Freedom for All?: Abolition and

Woman Suffrage, 1830s-1920s, Brooklyn Historical Society and Museum of the City of New York, New

York, NY 24-25, 27 July 2018

Presenting Scholar, NEH-funded Summer Institute, Freedom for One, Freedom for All?: Abolition and

Woman Suffrage, 1830s-1920s, Brooklyn Historical Society and Museum of the City of New York, New

York, NY 26-27 July 2016

Invited Presentations:

“Madie Beatrice Hall Xuma, The YWCA USA and the World YWCA,” YWCA World Service Council

98th Annual Meeting, Colony Club, New York City, NY, 25 October 2018

Plenary Panelist, Hinesight: A Symposium On The Work Of Darlene Clark Hine, Northwestern

University, Evanston, IL, 12-13 May 2017

“Mapping Education, Labor and Social Policy: Black Women, Reform and Jim Crow,” League of

Women Voters of the Columbia Area, Lourie Center, Columbia, SC, 19 February 2015

“In Search Of One Of ‘The Greatest Thinkers Of The Black Race’: Writing The Biography of Fannie

Barrier Williams,” Black Atlantic Seminar Speakers Series, Black Women’s Lives, Rutgers Center for

Historical Analysis & Center for Race and Ethnicity, Rutgers University, New Brunswick, NJ, 3 April

2014

“Madie Hall Xuma: The Globalization of Black Women’s Activism,” History Center, Department of

History, University of South Carolina, 27 February 2014

“Black Women and The Politics of Suffrage,” Organization of American Historians (OAH) Distinguished

Lecture, Norfolk State University, Norfolk, VA, 23 February 2006

“African American Clubwomen In The Late 19th and Early 20th Centuries,” OAH Distinguished Lecture,

Richmond County Board of Education, Augusta, GA, 13 February 2006

“African American Women, Race Consciousness, and Political Activism,” OAH Distinguished Lecture,

Park University, Parkville, MI, 7 February 2005

“The Woman’s Age: African American Clubwomen in the Late 19th and early 20th Centuries,” OAH

Distinguished Lecture, Emory and Henry College, Emory, VA, 5 February 2004

Page 7: WANDA A. HENDRICKS...WANDA A. HENDRICKS EDUCATION August 1990 Ph.D. History, Purdue University, West Lafayette, Indiana May 1984 M.A. History, Wake Forest University, Winston-Salem,

7 | Hendricks

“Race, Gender, and Identity: Black Women’s Auto/Biography,” African and African-American Studies

Department, University of North Carolina at Charlotte, 4 April 2002

“Race, Rights & the Woman’s Age: Black Women During the Progressive Era,” Women’s Studies

Research Series, Women’s Studies Program, University of South Carolina, 19 September 2001

“The Complexities of Race, Class and Gender,” Faculty Women’s Association Women’s History Month

Luncheon, Arizona State University, Tempe, AZ 21 March 2001

“Privilege and Race: Fannie Barrier Williams and The Construction of Black Female Political Identity,”

African American Studies Program, University of Florida, Gainesville, 5 December 2000

“The Intersection of Race, Gender and Politics,” African Americans In The Land of Lincoln: Community

Building and Resistance Conference, Southern Illinois University at Edwardsville, Edwardsville, IL, 16-

17 April 1997

“African American Women As Political Beings: Ida B. Wells-Barnett and Suffrage,” Brown Bag Lecture,

Women's Studies Program, Arizona State University, 15 February 1996

“Perspectives on Applying for Faculty Positions in Academia,” The Association For The Study of Afro-

American Life And History Conference, Philadelphia, PA 6 October 1995(An Association of Black

Women Historians session)

“Race, Gender and Suffrage,” Women's Suffrage and Equality Week, University of Missouri-Kansas

City, Kansas City, MI, 21 September 1995

“The Politicization of Black Women, 1890-1920,” Brown Bag Lecture Series, University of North

Carolina at Charlotte, Charlotte, NC, 12 February 1991

Conference Presentations:

“A Geography of Black Women’s History,” Cross-Generational Dialogues in Black Women’s History: A

Comparative Black History Symposium, Michigan State University, East Lansing, MI, 19-21 March 2015

“Elements of Continuity: Reflections on Fannie Barrier Williams and Being a Black Woman in The

Academy,” Black Women Academics in the Ivory Tower Research and Praxis, Rutgers University, New

Brunswick, NJ, 5-6 March, 2009

“Telling Histories: Black Women Historians in the Ivory Tower,” Organization of American Historians

Conference, Seattle, WA, 27 March 2009

“Graduate Student Brownbag” The Association For The Study of African-American Life And History

(ASALH) Conference, Pittsburgh, PA, 2 October 2004

“Permanently Replaced: The Black Female Social Reformer vs. The Trained Social Worker,” ASALH

Conference, Washington, DC, 30 September 2000

“African American Women As Electorates In Local Politics,” Organization of American Historians,

Indianapolis, IN, 3 April 1998

“African American Female Political Action Prior To The Great Migration To Chicago, 1913-1915,” The

Page 8: WANDA A. HENDRICKS...WANDA A. HENDRICKS EDUCATION August 1990 Ph.D. History, Purdue University, West Lafayette, Indiana May 1984 M.A. History, Wake Forest University, Winston-Salem,

8 | Hendricks

Berkshire Conference On The History Of Women, Chapel Hill, NC, 8 June 1996

“Voting for the Advantage of Ourselves and Our Race,” ASALH Conference, Atlanta, GA, 13 October

1994

“Race, Class and Gender in the Age of Accommodation,” ASALH Conference, Kansas City, MI, 9

October 1992

“Politicization and Mobilization: African Americans and The Civil Rights Movement in Charlotte, North

Carolina, 1960-1964,” The Southern Historical Association Conference, Fort Worth, TX, 16 November

1991

“Reform, Social Equality and An African American Woman,” Joint Conference of The Southeastern

Women's Studies Association and UNCC Annual Conference On Women In The Arts And Sciences, 13

April 1991

“‘To Be A Colored Woman’: Fannie Barrier Williams In The Age Of Accommodation,” The Association

of Social and Behavioral Scientists, Inc. Conference, Nashville, TN, 22 March 1991

“‘For The Future Benefit of My Whole Race’: Politics and the Illinois Federation of Colored Women's

Clubs, 1900-1915,” Missouri Valley History Conference, Omaha, NE, 8 March 1990

“The Politics of Black Women: Electing the First Black Alderman of Chicago, 1915,” Southern

Association for Women Historians, Spartanburg, SC, 11 June 1988

Conference Moderator/Chair/Comments:

“Race, Place, Space, And The Construction Of Black Womanhood,” Association For The Study of

African American History And Life Conference, Richmond, VA, 8 October 2016 (chair)

“Opening Plenary: Digital Blackness Studies,” Digital Blackness Conference, Zimmerli Art Museum,

Rutgers University, New Brunswick, NJ, 22 April 2016 (moderator)

“Session: Digital Blackness and Identity,” Digital Blackness Conference, Zimmerli Art Museum, Rutgers

University, New Brunswick, NJ, 23 April 2016 (moderator)

“African Americans and Their Contributions in the 20th Century: At Home and Abroad,” South Carolina

Historical Association Conference, Columbia, SC, 3 March 2012 (chair)

“Edgefield District and Reconstruction,” British American Nineteenth Century Historians (BrANCH),

Edgefield, SC, 19 March 2005 (chair)

“Emerging Scholars: A Brown Bag Lunch for Graduate Students and Junior Faculty,” The Association

For the Study of African American Life and History Conference, Pittsburgh, PA, October 2004

(comments)

“Future Directions in African American Women’s History: A Roundtable,” Southern Historical

Association Conference (SHA), Houston, TX, 7 November 2003 (chair)

“Region and Race Work: Black Leaders and the Fight for Freedom in Twentieth-Century America,”

Organization of American Historians Conference, Memphis, TN, 3 April 2003 (chair)

Page 9: WANDA A. HENDRICKS...WANDA A. HENDRICKS EDUCATION August 1990 Ph.D. History, Purdue University, West Lafayette, Indiana May 1984 M.A. History, Wake Forest University, Winston-Salem,

9 | Hendricks

“The Urban Civil Rights Experience”, SHA Conference, Baltimore, MD, 8 November 2002 (comments)

“Remembering: Deafening Silences...Empowering Voices”, A Symposium to Commemorate The 1997

Million Woman March, Michigan State University, East Lansing, MI, 23 October 1998 (chair)

Association For The Study Of Afro-American Life And History (ASALH) Conference, Los Angeles, CA,

3 October 1997 (chair and comments)

ASALH Conference, Charleston, SC, 2-6 October 1996 (comments)

American Historical Association Pacific Coast Branch Conference, San Francisco State University, San

Francisco, CA, 8-11 August 1996 (chair)

Berkshire Conference on the History of Women, Vassar College, Poughkeepsie, NY, 11-13 June 1993

(chair)

Southern Association for Women Historians Conference, Chapel Hill, NC, 8 June 1991 (comments)

PROFESSIONAL SERVICE

National:

2015 Member, 2015 Letitia Woods Brown Article Prize Committee, Association of Black

Women Historians (ABWH)

2009-2010 Chair, Darlene Clark Hine Award Committee, Organization of American Historians

(OAH)

2006-2008 Member, 2008 Program Committee, OAH

2005-2007 Member, 2007 Program Committee, Southern Historical Association (SHA)

2006 Member, Julia Cherry Spruill Book Prize, Southern Association for Women

Historians (SAWH)

2003-2005 National Director (President), ABWH

2003-2006 Member, Executive Council, SAWH

2003-present Member, Editorial Advisory Board, Civil Rights and the Struggle for Black Equality

in the Twentieth Century edited by Steven F. Lawson and Cynthia Griggs Fleming.

University Press of Kentucky

2002-2014 Member, Editorial Advisory Board, Journal of Illinois History

2003-2004 Chair, OAH Committee on the Status of African American, Latino/a, Asian

American and Native American Historians (ALANA) and ALANA History

(Formerly Committee on the Status of Minority Historians and Minority History)

2001-2004 Member, OAH Committee on the Status of African American, Latino/a, Asian

American and Native American (ALANA)

Page 10: WANDA A. HENDRICKS...WANDA A. HENDRICKS EDUCATION August 1990 Ph.D. History, Purdue University, West Lafayette, Indiana May 1984 M.A. History, Wake Forest University, Winston-Salem,

10 | Hendricks

2001-2003 Treasurer, ABWH

2001-2002 Member, Ad Hoc Committee On The Status Of Women In The Profession, SAWH

2000-2002 Member, H. L. Mitchell Award Committee, SHA

1999-2001 Western Regional Director, ABWH

1996-1999 Council Member, The Society For Historians of the Gilded Age and Progressive Era

(SHGAPE)

1993-1994 Member, Committee on Women, SHA

1992 and 2000 Panelist, National Endowment For The Humanities

1991 and 2000 Member, Program Committee, SAWH

Manuscript Reviewer: Princeton University Press, Rowan and Littlefield Publishers, Pearson Education,

Inc. (Pearson Prentice Hall); Harcourt School Publishers; University of Illinois Press; Journal of The

Illinois State Historical Society; University Press of Colorado; The Historian; The Oryx Press

University:

2008-2014 Member, University of South Carolina Press Committee

2008-2010 Member, Faculty Senate, University of South Carolina

2006 Member, Graduate School Outstanding Teaching Assistant Award Committee

2004-2006 Member, Graduate School Faculty Fellowship Committee

2001 Member, Committee on Law and the Social Sciences (COLASS), Arizona State

University

1999-2001 Chair, Committee on African and African American Research (CAAAR) Lecture

Series, Arizona State University

1999-2001 Member, CAAAR

1995-1997 Faculty Advisor, Graduate College Academic Support Program (GCASP), Arizona

State University

1993-1998 Member, University Committee on African and African American Studies

(UCAAAS), Arizona State University

1995 Chair, Review Committee, Mini Grants, UCAAAS, Arizona State University

1992-1993 Member, Curriculum Sub-Committee, UCAAAS, Arizona State University

1991-1992 Member, Affirmative Action Committee, UNC-Charlotte

Page 11: WANDA A. HENDRICKS...WANDA A. HENDRICKS EDUCATION August 1990 Ph.D. History, Purdue University, West Lafayette, Indiana May 1984 M.A. History, Wake Forest University, Winston-Salem,

11 | Hendricks

1989 Member, Screening and Review Committee, Assistant Director of Black Cultural

Center, Purdue University

1988 Member, Selection Advisory Committee, Dean of Libraries, Purdue University

1986-1987 Member, Humanities, Social Science and Education Dean Search Committee, Purdue

University

College:

2002-2018 Faculty Affiliate, African-American Studies Program, University of South Carolina

1996-2001 Faculty Affiliate, African American Studies Department, Arizona State University

1994-2001 Faculty Affiliate, Women's Studies Program, Arizona State University

Department/Programs:

2016-2018 Member, Tenure and Promotion Committee, Department of History, University of

South Carolina

2017-2018 Member, Graduate Committee, Department of History, University of South

Carolina

2015-2017 Member, Undergraduate Committee, Department of History, University of South

Carolina

2008-2013 Member, Undergraduate Committee, Department of History, University of South

Carolina

2005-2007 Member, Executive Committee, Department of History, University of South Carolina

2004-2005 Chair, Search Committee, Race, Gender, Class and Sexuality, Women’s Studies

Program and Open Department

2003-2005 Member, Tenure and Promotion Committee, Department of History, University of

South Carolina

2002-2005 Chair, Ad Hoc Committee on M. A. in Women’s Studies, Women’s Studies Program,

University of South Carolina

2002-2005 Member, Teaching Awards Committee, Women’s Studies Program, University of

South Carolina

2001-2005 Chair, Graduate Committee, Women’s Studies Program, University of South

Carolina

2001-2003 Member, Graduate Committee, Department of History, University of South

Carolina

Page 12: WANDA A. HENDRICKS...WANDA A. HENDRICKS EDUCATION August 1990 Ph.D. History, Purdue University, West Lafayette, Indiana May 1984 M.A. History, Wake Forest University, Winston-Salem,

12 | Hendricks

2001 Co-Chair, Search Committee, African American or Latina Women’s History,

Women’s Studies Program and Department of History

2001-2004 Member, Women’s Studies Advisory Committee, University of South Carolina

2000-2001 Member, 2010 Committee, Department of History, Arizona State University

1995-1996 Member, Cultural Diversity Committee, Department of History, Arizona State

University

1995-1996 Member, Ad Hoc Committee on B. A. and M. A. in Education for History Degree,

Arizona State University

1995 Member, Appeals Committee, Department of History, Arizona State University

1993-1994 Member, Personnel and Advisory Committee (PAC), Department of History,

1995-1997 Arizona State University

1992-1993 Member, Ad Hoc Committee to Investigate Promotion and Tenure Decisions and

Probationary Reviews, Department of History, Arizona State University

1990 Member, Curriculum Committee, Department of History, UNCC

1989-1990 Member, Library Committee, Department of History, Purdue University

1988-1989 Member, Search Committee Afro-American Historian, Department of History,

Purdue University

1987-1988 Member, Curriculum Committee, Department of History, Purdue University

1985-1987 Member, Graduate Committee, Department of History, Purdue University

Community:

2010 Moderator, South Carolina Women’s History Session, South Carolina Book Festival

2005-present Collections and Interpretation Committee, Historic Columbia Foundation, Columbia,

South Carolina

2007 Consultant, Charlotte Museum of History, Charlotte, North Carolina

1999 United States Postal Service 2000 Diversity Education Kit, Partners In Brainstorms

Incorporated, Phoenix, Arizona

1991-1992 Board of Directors, Museum of the New South, Charlotte, North Carolina

1991-1992 Project Coordinator, Charlotte-Mecklenburg Coalition of African American Research

Associates, Charlotte, North Carolina

1990 Charlotte-Mecklenburg History Museum Planning Committee

Page 13: WANDA A. HENDRICKS...WANDA A. HENDRICKS EDUCATION August 1990 Ph.D. History, Purdue University, West Lafayette, Indiana May 1984 M.A. History, Wake Forest University, Winston-Salem,

13 | Hendricks

TEACHING

Courses Taught:

Graduate:

African American Women in the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries

American Women’s History

Directed Reading & Research

Issues & Methods in Women’s Studies Research

Late Nineteenth Century and Twentieth Century African American History

Race, Gender & Identity: Black Women’s Auto/Biography

Raced Women: Black Women In American History Reading Seminar

Reading Seminar in American History Since 1876

Undergraduate:

Historians Craft

African American History Before 1865

African American History After 1865

American Women’s History Seminar

Constructing Identity: African American Women in United States History Seminar

History of the Civil Rights Movement

History of African American Women

Rise of Industrial America: Gilded Age and Progressive Era

United States History Since 1865 (also taught as a separate Honors College course 501)

United States Since 1945

Women in United States History, 1880-1980

Graduate Students at University of South Carolina:

Alexandria Russell, Ph.D., December 2018

Sarah Conlon, M.A., August 2012

Mary Mac Ogden, Ph.D., May 2011

Michele Coffey, Ph.D., August 2010

Undergraduate Honors College Students at University of South Carolina

Courtney Todd, SCHC 390Z, Fall 2013 and SCHC 499 Spring 2014

Madeline C. Wood, SCHC 390Z, Fall 2011

Graduate Students at Arizona State University:

Karen Vanae Carson, M.A., Spring 2000

Matthew C. Whitaker, M.A., Spring 1997(Co-Chair)

Graduate Advisor at Arizona State University

Laura Munoz, HIS 700 Introduction To College Teaching, Faculty Mentor and Advisor, Fall 1999

Undergraduate Honors College Student at Arizona State University:

Jacqueline Lanni, Honors Thesis, Spring 2001

PROFESSIONAL AFFILIATIONS

Association of Black Women Historians

Association for the Study of African-American Life and History

Berkshire Conference of Women Historians

Organization of American Historians

Page 14: WANDA A. HENDRICKS...WANDA A. HENDRICKS EDUCATION August 1990 Ph.D. History, Purdue University, West Lafayette, Indiana May 1984 M.A. History, Wake Forest University, Winston-Salem,

14 | Hendricks

Southern Association for Women Historians

Southern Historical Association