Jim (in his first year at UWEC, 1983)

 

Jim at a Roma market in Transylvania, 2005.

 

Links to Jim’s current interests & projects

Jim’s article just published in Prologue: Journal of the National Archives

Jim’s recent bookA Nation of Statesmen:  The Political Culture of the Stockbridge-Munsee Mohicans, 1815-1974 (Norman: University of Oklahoma Press, 2005)

Inter-University Consortium for Social and Political Research (ICPSR)  [as Sabbatical Fellow, 2002 and Summer Program Instructor, 2003-04, 2006-07 and elected member of the Council, 2003-2007] 

American Indian Studies at UWEC (as member of the Executive Committee, 1995—onward)

Department of History at UWEC (as member, 1983 and onward)

Center for Population Economics, University of Chicago

UWEC students at CPE with Prof. Robert Fogel, January 2007, to present their research on malaria and dysentery in the Union Army at the Vicksburg (1863) campaign.

Integrated Public Use Microdata Series (IPUMS)

 

  

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

James Oberly

Department of History                       
University of Wisconsin-Eau Claire

                       

Office Location and mailing address:

713 Hibbard Hall
Department of History                                  
University of Wisconsin-Eau Claire
Eau Claire, WI  54701       USA

Office

Hours

 

Office Phone:

MWF 11-11:50;  WF 3-5 and by appointment

 

 

(715) 836-4599 or (715) 836-5501

E-mail Address:

joberly@uwec.edu

Class Schedule Spring 2008:

--American Indian Studies / History 482/682 “Wisconsin Indian History,” MWF Noon-12:50 p.m. in HHH 303

 

-- History 201-001 “U.S. History to 1877,” MWF 2:00-2:50 p.m. in HHH 103

 

--History 489 “Senior Seminar” W 6-7:50 in HHH 705 

 

image003

Jim in Presov, Slovakia, 2005 (wearing UWEC Phi Alpha Theta t-shirt)

 

 

 

                              Jim and UW-in-Scotland students climb Arthur’s Seat in Edinburgh

 

                                 

                      

 

 

                          Link to WHS Sites Retreat Presentation:  “Doing Eau Claire History in the

Digital Era—Opportunities and Problems”