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Department of History
Department of History | School of Arts and Sciences - Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey

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Department of History

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Faculty Publications

  • Negotiated Power: The State, Elites, and Loval Governance in Twelfth-to Fourteenth-Century China

In Memoriam

  • Samuel L. Baily
  • Professor Emeritus
  • Specialty: Comparative Migration, Twentieth-Century Latin American Social History
  • Ann D. Gordon
  • Ann D. Gordon
  • Research Professor Emerita, Stanton and Anthony Papers Project
  • Degree: PhD University of Wisconsin, Madison

 

ANN DEXTER GORDON – 1944-2025                            Gordon Ann photo2

            by Barry V. Qualls

 

Ann Dexter Gordon, a distinguished historian of women’s history and editor of the six-volume edition of the Selected Papers of Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Susan B. Anthony, died on March 19, 2025, of a heart attack at her home in New Brunswick, NJ.  She was 80.

A research professor in the Department of History at Rutgers University, Ann Gordon was widely recognized for her pioneering work on women’s suffrage and the debates around it.  She was also the chief editor of African American Women and the Vote 1837-1965 (1997), which charted the tensions over race in the suffrage movement and showed how African American women’s struggle for suffrage pre-dated and indeed encouraged the struggles of white women.  She gave numerous talks throughout the nation on women’s history and the suffrage movement.  In 2012, she won the Turning Point Suffragist Memorial Association’s Silent Sentinel Award for her work on voting equality.  Professor Gordon worked with the American Association for State and Local History on preserving historical records at the state and local level.  She was a strong spokesperson for documentary editing. She served as Director of the Historical Documents Study, a project of the American Council of Learned Societies in cooperation with the National Historical Publications and Records Commission.  In 2009-10, she served as chair of the Butterfield Award Committee of the Association for Documentary Editing.  Equally important to her was her leadership activity in anti- Vietnam war demonstrations and her lifelong championing of labor issues at universities, especially those involving teaching assistants and non-tenure track faculty.

Ann Gordon was born on May 24, 1944, in Providence, Rhode Island, one of four children of Patricia Gordon (nee Jencks) and Edward Joseph Gordon, both teachers, her father at Yale and her mother at various high schools in Connecticut and Philadelphia.  She attended the Germantown Friends School in Philadelphia and graduated from the North Haven (Connecticut) High School in 1962.  She earned a BA in History from Smith College in 1966 (her mother had also graduated from Smith) and MA and PhD degrees in American History from the University of Wisconsin in 1975.  Stanley Katz served as her mentor.  In Madison she first began studying women’s history, working closely with Ellen DuBois and Mari Jo Buhle, who also became distinguished scholars of American women’s history.  While a graduate student, she was an active member of the Students for a Democratic Society (a group she first joined at Smith) and co-edited Madison’s first “underground” newspaper, Connections, as well as writing for the Radical America magazine.

In summer 1976 she served as an intern at the Institute for the editing of Historical Document.  The position determined her career path.  Joining the Department of Education at Northwestern University in 1971 as an Assistant Professor, she moved to the Jane Addams Papers as Associate Editor in 1975, then to the Woodrow Wilson Papers as Assistant Editor in 1977.  During this period she held positions as a Lecturer in History and in Women’s Studies at the University of Wisconsin, and then as an adjunct assistant professor of History at the University of Massachusetts at Amherst, where she began working as co-editor with Patricia Holland on creating the microfilm edition of all the known Stanton-Anthony papers.  In 1979 she married James Marketti, a union organizer that she had met in Madison when she was organizing a Teaching Assistants strike.  Their son Daniel Edward Marketti was born in 1982.  They later divorced.

Professor Gordon relocated to New Brunswick when her husband became a union representative for the Rutgers AAUP, the faculty union.  She brought the Stanton-Anthony papers to Rutgers and served as its editor through the publication of the sixth and final volume in 2013.  During this period she became a research professor in the Rutgers History Department, where she taught historical editing and women’s history.  She held this position until her retirement in 2012.  She also was a leader in championing non-tenure track faculty.  Beginning in 2007, she served as a member of the Rutgers President’s Non-Tenure Track Faculty Task Force.  For the Rutgers chapter of the AAUP, she spoke vigorously about the need for better pay and better working conditions for these faculty.  She continued this work after her retirement.

Professor Gordon was predeceased by her parents and her brothers Peter Lane Gordon and David Jewel Gordon. Her sister Sarah Herbert Gordon and her son Daniel Marketti and grandson Yuri survive.

Note:  This obituary has been prepared using earlier obituaries written by Sarah H. Gordon and by Ellen DuBois for the American Historical Association.  I am especially grateful to Daniel Marketti for his help.

 

Publications

The Selected Papers of Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Susan B. Anthony, Volume 5 The Selected Papers of Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Susan B. Anthony, Volume 5

Rutgers University Press, 2009

African American Women and the Vote, 1837–1965 African American Women and the Vote, 1837–1965

University of Massachusetts Press, 1997

  • Susan R. Schrepfer
  • Susan R. Schrepfer
  • Professor Emerita of History

 

 

 

 

Susan Rita Schrepfer passed away on March 3, 2014. She joined the Department of History at Rutgers University as a professor in 1974. Memorial services were held on March 7, 2014, at Crabiel Parkwest Funeral Chapel in New Brunswick, New Jersey.

For more information, please see:

Susan Rita Schrepfer obituary

  • Phyllis Mack
  • Phyllis Mack
  • Professor Emerita of History
  • Degree: Ph.D., Cornell
  • Rutgers : At Rutgers from 1972-2015

 

Emerita Professor Phyllis Mack passed away on May 5, 2025. Click HERE for an official obituary.

 

Additional Degrees

M.A., San Francisco State College

B.A., Barnard College

RESEARCH INTERESTS

Women's history, history of religion, early modern European history. Completing a book on 18th century popular religion in England, focusing on gender, selfhood, and spirituality.

COURSES REGULARLY TAUGHT

Undergraduate

  • 510:253 Witchcraft and Magic
  • 988:350 (cross-listed) Gender and Spirituality
  • 506:373 History of Jewish Women
  • 510:350 The Enlightenment

Graduate

  • PDR
  • 510:549, 550 Seminar in Women's History
  • 510:539 Colloquium in Women's History

PUBLICATIONS

 Heart Religion in the British Enlightenment:  Gender and Emotion in Early Methodism Heart Religion in the British Enlightenment: Gender and Emotion in Early Methodism

Cambridge University Press, 2008

  • *Visionary Women: Ecstatic Prophecy in 17th Century England*
  • *In God's Name: Genocide and Religion in the 20th Century* co-edited with Omer Bartov

AWARDS

  • Warren Susmann Teaching Award
  • Berkshire Prize: best woman's history book

PROFESSIONAL AFFILIATIONS

  • AHA
  • Society for Early Modern Women
  • Allen Howard
  • Allen Howard
  • Professor Emeritus of History
  • Degree: Ph.D., University of Wisconsin, Madison

 

Emeritus professor Allen Howard passed away on July 4, 2025. A memorial service will be held in late fall and we will share the Obituary once we receive it!

Allen Howard taught and did research in African and Atlantic history. His research focused geographically on the upper Guinea coast area of West Africa and topically on ethnicity, commerce, and urban social life. He has written extensively on the application of spatial analysis to African history. Along with Michael Adas, he played a major role in developing and supervising the minor field in World and Comparative History. He also was actively engaged in the Black Atlantic/Diaspora major field and in the Center for Africa Studies, where he was a member of the Executive Committee and was the Program Chair from 1999 to 2004.

COURSES TAUGHT

 

Undergraduate

  • 506:114 World Civilizations: Europe, Africa, the Americas
  • 508:222 Modern Africa
  • 508:322 West Africa
  • 508:320 History of Southern Africa
  • 508:422 African Cultural History
  • 506:401, 402 seminar on African Biography and Autobiography
  • 506:401, 402 seminar on African Cities

Graduate

  • 510:541 Colloquium in Global History: The Atlantic
  • 510:509 The Teaching of History
  • 510:551 Seminar in Global and Comparative History

PUBLICATIONS

  • Community Leadership and the Transformation of Freetown, 1801-1976. (Mouton: 1978), co-author.
  • The Spatial Factor in African History. The Relationship of the Social, Material, and Perceptual (Brill Academic Publishers, 2005); co-edited
  • "Cities in Africa/Les villes en Afrique " (a special issue of the Canadian Journal of African Studies (editor; 2003).
  • Completing a manuscript entitled Contested Places; Disputed Rules: Traders and Authorities in Northern Sierra Leone, 1780-1930.
  • Currently researching a book that examines the social, cultural, and economic histories of Liverpool, Freetown, and Kingston from the 18th century to the present.
  • Recently published articles and book chapters:
  • "Nineteenth-Century Costal Slave Trading and the British Abolition Campaign in Sierra Leone," Slavery and Abolition 27:1 (2006).
  • "Nodes, Networks, Landscapes, and Regions: Reading the Social History of Tropical Africa 1700s-1920," in The Spatial Factor in African History.
  • "Re-Marking on the Past: Spatial Structures and Dynamics in the Sierra Leone-Guinea Plain, 1860s-1920s," in The Spatial Factor in African History.
  • "Cities in Africa, Past and Present: Contestation, Transformation, Discourse." introduction to special issue Canadian Journal of African Studies, 37:3 (2003).
  • "Contesting Commercial Space in Freetown, 1860-1930: Traders, Merchants, and Officials," Canadian Journal of African Studies; 37:3 (2003).
  • "Mande Identity Formation in the Economic and Political Context of Northwestern Sierra Leone," Paideuma,46 (2000).
  • "Mande and Fulbe Interaction in Northwestern Sierra Leone, Late 18th through Early 20th Centuries, Mande Studies 1:1 (1999).
  • "Islam and Trade in Sierra Leone, 18th-20th Centuries" in A. Jalloh and D. E. Skinner, eds., Islam and Trade in Sierra Leone, Trenton: Africa World Press, 1997.
  • "Pawning in Coastal Northwest Sierra Leone, 1870-1910" in T. Falola and P. E. Lovejoy, eds., Pawnship in Africa. Debt Bondage in Historical Perspective, Westview Press, 1994.

PROFESSIONAL AFFILIATIONS

  • African Studies Association
  • Association of Concerned Africa Scholars
  • World History Association
  • American Historical Association
  • Mande Studies Association
  • Society of Economic Anthropology
  1. Bell, Rudolph M.

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