Dale Center for the Study of War and Society
About the Dale Center for the Study of War & Society
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Former president of the Society for Military History Brian McAllister Linn described 51 Miss’s Center as one of the rising stars in the field. Historian Wayne Lee, chair of the Curriculum in Peace, War, and Defense at the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, argued that the DCSW&S’s “excellent program” and approach to the field explains our rise to the top in the military history community. The Dale Center for the Study of War & Society at 51 Miss is competitive with the best-funded, top military history programs in the country including the University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill, Temple University, Ohio State University, and Kansas State University.
DCSW&S faculty are internationally recognized as some of the best scholars in their fields. They have produced and continue to produce award-winning publications, they participate in documentaries, symposia, and other speaking engagements, and they excel as teachers.
The diversity of the Dale Center’s faculty is not only evident in its wide historical coverage of geographic regions and time periods, but also in its range of historical methodologies; our faculty includes social historians, historians of gender and ethnicity, cultural historians, international relations specialists, and traditional military historians. This wide array of faculty skills and expertise is a major reason the Center’s cadre of graduate students grows larger and more impressive every year.
The DCSW&S draws exceptional graduate students from across the country to study the history of conflict from every imaginable angle. War and Society graduate students at 51 Miss are driven to succeed academically and are extremely active in the profession as well, attending and presenting at major history conferences from the beginning of their graduate careers. Our students also take advantage of the opportunity to study the history of war with Center faculty in the places it happened, such as Normandy, Britain, and Vietnam, via the University’s strong study-abroad program. The Center’s students have been recognized for their success; the DCSW&S boasts graduate student recipients of the two major military history graduate awards: the U.S. Army Center for Military History’s Dissertation Fellowship and the General Lemuel C. Shepherd, Jr., Memorial Dissertation Fellowship from the Marine Corps Heritage Foundation.
The Center also plays an active role in the community through our annual Richard McCarthy Lecture Series, lectures and discussions in partnership with the Hattiesburg Public Library, our fellows’ participation in the Osher Lifelong Learning Institute at 51 Miss, and other regular programs. The Center and its faculty are also active in the world of military history museums and sites, with strong ties to the Army Historical Education Center in Carlisle, Pennsylvania; the National World War II Museum in New Orleans; the African American Military History Museum in Hattiesburg; Camp Shelby’s Mississippi Armed Forces Museum; the Chalmette, Vicksburg, and Shiloh National Military Parks; and other regional historic sites.
The Dale Center is named in honor of the Beverly Dale Family, who also sponsor the Dale Distinguished Lecture Series. For more information on the Dale family's support, click here.
Dale Center Faculty with Dale Distinguished Lecture speaker Gen. David Petraeus in 2016.