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Stephenson Distinguished Professor - U.S. Civil War Professor
University of North Carolina (Department of History)
Application
Details
Posted: 05-Nov-25
Location: Chapel Hill, North Carolina
Type: Full Time
Salary: $150,000 - $200,000
Categories:
Civil War/Reconstruction
Salary Details:
Salary is dependent on qualifications and experience
Preferred Education:
Doctorate
The Department of History at the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill invites applications for a tenure-track position as Stephenson Distinguished Professor. The standard teaching load is 2/2. Responsibilities include the teaching of one survey course on U.S. Civil War history and courses related to your fields of expertise. We welcome applications from candidates whose work aligns with our departmental mission of historical research, teaching, and public service as described on our website (https://history.unc.edu/about-us/) and complements our existing strengths.
The review of applications will begin on November 8, 2025, and continue until the position is filled. UNC-Chapel Hill HR Applicant Tracking :: Posting Print Preview https://unc.peopleadmin.com/hr/postings/308258/print_preview 1/5 position is filled.
Please direct questions to the chair of the search committee, W. Fitz Brundage (brundage@email.unc.edu).
Areas of teaching responsibility include introductory, upper division, and graduate classes. UNC-Chapel Hill’s Department of History remains committed to rigorous archival research and publishing. Additionally, we have undertaken a few initiatives intended to increase the range of perspectives and experiences within our unit and the larger field. These include recruitment and mentoring programs for prospective graduate students, building new programs to train current graduate students for multiple career paths, including public facing scholarship. Applicants must demonstrate evidence of excellence in teaching and research. Candidates who have experience working with a diverse range of people, and who can contribute to a climate of inclusivity, are especially welcome. Applicants must have a Ph.D. in history or a related field by the start date.
Applicants must have completed a Ph.D. in history or a related field by July 1, 2026.
Applications should include: 1) a cover letter that summarizes the applicant’s interests and experience in research, teaching, and service; and 2) a current CV that includes names and contact information for four references.
About University of North Carolina (Department of History)
Although historians can study anything that has transpired in the past, in practice we choose topics, eras, people, and events that reveal insights about the present and offer inspiration for the future. History illuminates the breadth of human possibility, keeping alive and interpreting for our own time the tribulations and triumphs of women and men both renowned and otherwise forgotten.
People across time and space have pondered the meaning of the past. Here at UNC, the study of history has been a cornerstone of the curriculum since the University’s founding, although, appropriately, the Department’s areas of focus, underlying values, and educational strategies have changed over time. Regularly ranked among the top history departments in the country, we combine prolific, cutting-edge research with dedicated, creative teaching and a commitment to diversity and inclusion.
The skills of analysis, problem-solving, research, and communication that are honed by studying history open up a world of possibilities. History courses at UNC-Chapel Hill equip students for careers in law, journalism, education, business, public service, museums, and international relations—just some o...f the innumerable occupations in which the ability to analyze conflicting information and viewpoints, write clearly and communicate complex ideas, find reliable evidence for judgments about human actions and motives, and place events in a wider context are essential. Our innovative doctoral program not only provides outstanding training in graduate students’ research fields, but also equips them for an evolving job market within and beyond educational institutions. More generally, we strive to help students and the wider public appreciate the responsibilities of citizenship in a democratic society and the challenging ambiguities that everyone encounters in their relations with others—no matter what they do or where they travel in the world.