
department of history
What Can The Conflict In Ukraine Teach Us About The Future Of Warfare?
Mar 5, 2024 • 5 min. readIn a talk at Texas A&M’s Bush School, historian Phillips O’Brien said the Russian invasion, now in its third year, raises a number of difficult questions about military power in the 21st century.
Texas A&M Professor of History Dr. Albert S. Broussard says King’s influence extended well beyond the U.S.
A team of six current and former Texas A&M history students has been hired by the U.S. Army to help preserve its cherished legacy.
Texas A&M history professor Dr. Daniel Schwartz provides insight on Roman history and the prevalence of a certain meme.
Texas A&M-Led Humanities Project Seeks To Preserve An Endangered Language
Sep 21, 2023 • 6 min. readThe team is working to preserve Syriac, a 2,000-year-old language that once flourished in the Middle East and Central Asia.
Texas A&M Student Working To Bring Home Soldiers Missing In Action
Nov 11, 2022 • 5 min. readThis Veterans Day, almost 82,000 American soldiers, from WWII through to the Gulf Wars, are still missing or unaccounted for.
How The US Became Independent (And Inseparable) From Great Britain
Jul 1, 2022 • 8 min. readFrom Winston Churchill to Kate Bush, a Texas A&M historian explores the close, complicated relationship between the United States and the country we celebrate our independence from today.
A contract awarded to the Texas A&M Engineering Experiment Station will support the development of applications to memoralize veterans interred at three VA cemeteries.
A Texas A&M professor of history says that not only do long wait times discourage people from voting, they disproportionately affect Black and Latino voters.
The 1969 uprising and protests in Greenwich Village helped jump-start the modern LGBTQ movement, a Texas A&M expert says, making way for a more tolerant America.