|
[Back ] The Alice P. Kenney Memorial Award
1938 - 1985 Alice P. Kenney, associate professor of history at Cedar Crest College, Allentown, Pennsylvania, was one of the early scholars who were keenly interested in the Dutch-American experience. A descendant of seventeenth-century Dutch settlers, among them the colorful Anneke Jans, she grew up in Albany, New York. She received her B.A. from Middlebury College and her M.A. and Ph.D. from Columbia University. Her books include The Gansevoorts of Albany and Stubborn for Liberty. She also wrote a bicentennial history of the Revolution in Albany, a survey of Dutch artifacts in Hudson Valley museums, and many journal articles. Her premature death meant a great loss to the world of historical scholarship.
For Contributions to Understanding the Dutch Colonial Experience in North America. The New Netherland Institute is the recipient of an annual grant from the Alice P. Kenney Memorial Trust Fund. This grant now enables the Institute to award an annual prize of $1,000 to an individual or group which has made a significant contribution to colonial Dutch studies and/or has encouraged understanding of the significance of the Dutch colonial experience in North America by research, teaching, writing, speaking, or in other ways. Reasonable travel expenses will be reimbursed. Persons or groups to be considered for this award can be involved in any pursuit of any aspect of Dutch colonial life in North America. Emphasis is on those activities which reach a broad, popular audience in the same way that Alice P. Kenney's activities did. Criteria for Nominations:
Selection Criteria:
Send nominations by April 1, 2010 to: The Alice P. Kenney Award Selection Committee
|
|
The Alice P. Kenney Award is presented each year at a suitable event in connection with the New Netherland Project and the New Netherland Institute. The 2006 Award was presented at a banquet on the occasion of the joint AANS/NNI two-day Conference in June 2006, at the Hampton Inn, Albany, New York. The Award recipient and keynote speaker was Russell Shorto, author of The Island at the Center of the World: The Epic Story of Dutch Manhattan & the Forgotten Colony that Shaped America (New York: Doubleday, 2004).
Kenney Award Recipients
|