Frank C. Munson Institute of American Maritime History
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The Frank C. Munson Institute of American Maritime History was established at Mystic Seaport in 1955 to provide graduate-level summer courses in maritime history. The name was later changed to the Munson Instiute of Maritime Studies, to include literature and other aspects in the history of maritime affairs. Mrs. Cora Mallory Munson, widow of Frank C. Munson endowed the Institute, named in memory of her husband, who had been president of the Munson Steamship Line and a major figure in the American shipping industry in the first and second World Wars. The curator of Mystic Seaport, Edouard A. Stackpole, originated the idea for the instiute and turned to Professor Robert G. Albion, Gardiner Professor of Oceanic History and Affairs at Harvard University to join with him in creating the Institute and to serve as its first director.
Since its founding, the Munson Institute has been the leading, and oftentimes the sole, center for the teaching of maritime history in the United States. Its faculty has included the leading maritime historians in the United States. In 1996 and in 2006, the National Endowment for the Humanties awarded it grants to run summer institutes to teach maritime history to college and university faculty members in a national effort to further develop this field. In 1998, the Munson Institute's faculty produced the first wide ranging maritime history of the United States, America and The Sea: A Maritime History.
[edit] Directors
- 1955 - 1974 Professor Robert G. Albion
- 1974 - 1996 Professor Benjamin Woods Labaree
- 1996 - 2001 Professor John Hattendorf
- 2001 - Pres. Dr. Eric Roorda and Dr. Glenn Gordinier
[edit] Some Prominent Graduates
Frank Uhlig, Jr., editor, The Naval Review at the U.S. Naval Institute and later, The Naval War College Review
Melvin Jackson, later curator of the maritime collection at The Smithsonian Institution
William S. Wilkinson, director, Mariner's Museum
Rodney S. Johnstone, co-designer of the J-24 and other racing sailboats
Alan Frazer, New Jersey Historical Society
Stuart Frank, Kendall Whaling Museum, later the Kendall Institute of the New Bedford Whaling Museum
Charles R. Schultz, archivist of Texas A&M University
[edit] Literature
Labaree, Benjamin W., 'The Frank C. Munson Institute of American Maritime Studies,' American Neptune, vol. 45 (1945), pp. 441-445.