In a world rocked by questions about truth, evidence and the nature of human understanding, History matters. Studying History at Huron fosters empathy, brings precision and energy to your writing, and prepares you for critical and engaged citizenship. Students are placed at the heart of world-class research on democracy, racial and gender equality, repairing relationships with Indigenous peoples, and the future of human freedom.
Our research-driven and award-winning teaching will transform the way you think about the past and the way you see the present.
At a Glance
Upcoming Start Dates
September, 2026
Duration
3.5 – 4 Years (Full time, 4.0 – 5.0 Credits per year)
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Beyond the Classroom
Every Huron History student participates in experiential research as part of learning the historian’s craft.
Recent examples include:
– Phantoms of the past: Students travel to the UK to conduct field work and present their research on 18th and 19th-centuryenslavement and antislavery activism.
– Letterpress studio: Huron’s letterpress studio provides students with a maker space to work on early-20th-century printing presses.
– Hands-on history: As part of a course on the Sixty Years War, Huron’s History students took a 5-day trip on a tall ship exploring the coast of Lake Erie
First-Year Course Examples
– History of Love
– History of Violence
– Murder: A Social and Legal History
Experiential Learning
Find out more about hands-on learning with Huron
Guaranteed Paid Internship Opportunities
Explore the many internship opportunities to gain real experience while you study
Peer & Professional Mentorship
Learn about Huron’s internal and external mentorship programs
Undergraduate Research
Discover Huron’s unique opportunities for students to conduct research
History Undergraduate Degree Careers
Learn about where History can take you. Huron’s unique learning environments encourage graduates to turn their passions into purpose-driven careers. Here are just a few of the paths you can pursue with this degree:
Average Class Size
of Huron students receive a Paid Internship Opportunity
million in annual scholarships
of Huron graduates secured employment or pursued graduate studies
History Program Modules
History and memory are at the heart of all human experience. Studying History is key to understanding contemporary culture, and to unlocking hope for a future that holds endless capacity for change.
Our courses offer global perspectives, taking you to the leading edge of historical scholarship through our faculty research expertise, and award-winning teaching.
History builds flexible and practical skills in research, writing, crafting argument, collaboration, public engagement, and a sense of empathy. History students at Huron have unparalleled opportunities for hands-on historical research, travel, and experiential learning in the local community and through international collaboration and study. Our programs easily combine with study in a range of other disciplines, or with our unique and innovative minors, including Public History, and History of the Book.
Huron’s Minor in Public History—the first undergraduate Public History program in Canada—promotes critical reflection about the meaning of the past, and develops digital communication and research skills. Students learn through community-based and active history partnerships with museums, heritage organizations, libraries and archives.
A joint program offered by Huron University College, King’s University College and Western University, Public History at Huron will teach you new ways to communicate about history in and beyond museums, archives, historical sites, film, fiction, on the web, and public discourse and policy making.
You can combine the module with a History Honors Specialization, Major or Specialization, or with modules in other disciplines at Huron or at Western such as Archaeology, Classical Studies, Geography, Visual Art, Museum and Curatorial Studies, and Media, Information and Technoculture.
The new Minor in History of the Book is a joint program Huron’s English and Cultural Studies at Huron. Courses introduce you to the field of book studies, provide opportunities to create digital scholarship, and give you new perspective on historical study and evidence.
The program features collaborative workshops, community-based research, and a capstone course in Huron’s new Letterpress Studio.
Pacific Rim Studies offers interdisciplinary and cross-regional studies of East Asia and North America, focusing on the common, comparative, and interactive aspects of the lives of the peoples in the Pacific Rim region.
While encouraging students to find commonalities between disciplines, Pacific Rim Studies Minor will also introduce them to a diversity of approaches, primary sources and intellectual traditions that shape this dynamic transnational and interdisciplinary research area.
The minor will benefit students interested in the fields of law, education and policy making, and any field which builds on the connections between the regions which form the Pacific Rim.
This interdisciplinary module offers the only program in African history in the Western family of history departments. Learn critical perspectives on the histories of Africa, histories of the African Diaspora in the Americas, and the histories of Africa and African Diasporas in a global context.
Choose from our unique-to-Huron courses in African history, and from courses across a range of programs at Huron and Western, including English and Cultural Studies, Global Studies, Theology, Women’s Studies, Geography, and Political Science.
Designed for students completing a major or specialization in a discipline or program other than History, this module offers global perspectives that draw on our unique suite of world history courses.
Including electives from across Huron programs, the World History minor complements modules in a wide range of fields, including Management and Organizational Studies, Global Studies, Philosophy, and Political Science.
Study empire and colonialism, enslavement and dispossession, and the power of resistance movements to challenge and dismantle the structures of imperial power through the global history courses and cross-disciplinary options in the Studies in Imperialism minor. Understanding the history of imperialism is key to understanding the contemporary world, including Canada’s place in a global context.
Study the interconnected cultures, literatures, and histories of the Atlantic World through a module that includes elective courses from across the Faculty of Arts and Social Science at Huron. The courses in the module highlight theme of revolution, slavery, emancipation, imperialism and post-colonial movements, Enlightenment, and women’s activism.
This module includes engaging and unique-to-Huron courses in the history and culture of China. The minor is designed to complement studies in a range disciplines, including BMOS, Global Great Books, and Governance, Leadership and Ethics.
History Undergraduate Courses
| Course – See link for Academic Calendar description | Instructor | Section – see links for Course Outline |
| HIS 1606F – China: Current Issues in Historical Context | Fang | 550 |
| HIS 1808G – Powerful Words: Global History Through Key Sources | Wilkinson | 550 |
| HIS 1815G – Histories of Love | Bell | 550 |
| HIS 1816G – Histories of Violence | Read | 550 |
| HIS 1817G – History in the Headlines | Blocker | 550 |
| HIS 1818F – Treasure: Objects of Desire in Global History | Compeau | 550 |
| HIS 1819F – Monsters: A Human History | Reid-Maroney | 550 |
| HIS 2125F – Northern Enterprise: Canadian Business and Labour History | Blocker | 550 |
| HIS 2204G – Crises and Confederation: The Making of Modern Canada | Blocker | 550 |
| HIS 2296F – Selected Topics – Race, Resistance, and Resilience: Cultivating the Historical Roots of Black Canada | Solomon | 550 |
| HIS 2302G – American Modern: The United States in the Twentieth Century | Reid-Maroney | 550 |
| HIS 2400G – Modern France | Read | 550 |
| HIS 2413E – Europe and the Paradoxes of Modernity | Compeau | 550 |
| HIS 2604F – European Imperialism in Africa | Read | 550 |
| HIS 2610F – Women in East Asia | Fang | 550 |
| HIS 2702E – Ten Days That Shook the World | Fang | 550 |
| HIS 2801G – History of Wars | Compeau | 550 |
| HIS 2822F – Jewish History from 1942 | Tesler-Mabé | 550 |
| HIS 3203F – History of Education in Canada | Peace | 550 |
| HIS 3311G – Slavery and Freedom | Solomon | 550 |
| HIS 3416G / JEWISH 3416G – The Holocaust | Tesler-Mabé | 550 |
| HIS 3708G – Political Scandals in History | Read | 550 |
| HIS 3801E – The Historian’s Craft | Reid-Maroney | 550 |
| HIS 4414F – Secrets, Spies & Surveillance | Compeau | 550 |
| HIS 4606G – Sex, Law, & Society in Imperial China | Fang | 550 |
| HIS 4802F – Masculinity & Modern History | Read | 550 |
| HIS 4804G – Murder: Social & Legal History | Bell | 550 |
| Course – See link for Academic Calendar description | Instructor | Section – see links for Course Outline |
| HIS 1808G – Powerful Words: Global History Through Key Sources | Wilkinson | 550 |
| HIS 1815G – Histories of Love | Bell | 550 |
| HIS 1816F – Histories of Violence | Fang | 550 |
| HIS 1817G – History in the Headlines | Blocker | 550 |
| HIS 1818F – Treasure: Objects of Desire in Global History | Compeau | 550 |
| HIS 1818G – Treasure: Objects of Desire in Global History | TBA | 550 |
| HIS 1819F – Monsters: A Human History | Reid-Maroney | 550 |
| HIS 2125F – Northern Enterprise: Canadian Business and Labor History | Blocker | 550 |
| HIS 2204G – Crises and Confederation: The Making of Modern Canada | Blocker | 550 |
| HIS 2302F – American Modern: The United States in the Twentieth Century | Reid-Maroney | 550 |
| HIS 2415G – The Age of Napoleon | Compeau | 550 |
| HIS 2420G – Britain During World War II | Bell | 550 |
| HIS 2604G – European Imperialism in Africa 1830-1994 | Solomon | 550 |
| HIS 2701E – Patterns and Perspectives in World History | Compeau | 550 |
| HIS 2702E – Ten Days That Shook the World | Fang | 550 |
| HIS 2710F – Red, White, Black et Blancs: The Americas to 1867 | Peace | 550 |
| HIS / JS 2821F – Jewish History from the Origins of the Israelites to 1492 CE | Sabo | 550 |
| HIS 3202G – Treaties, Property, and the Law in Canada | Peace | 550 |
| HIS 3313F – The Movement: Civil Rights and African-American History in the 20th Century | Solomon | 550 |
| HIS 3314F – California Calling: Histories of the “Golden State” in Text, Sound, and Image | Reid-Maroney | 550 |
| HIS 3801E – The Historian’s Craft | Bell | 550 |
| HIS 4605E – War and Memory in Modern East Asia | Fang | 550 |
| HIS 4804G – Murder: A Social and Legal History | Bell | 550 |
| HIS 4702G – European Imperialism | Compeau | 550 |
| Course – See link for Academic Calendar description | Instructor | Section – see links for Course Outline |
| HIS 1606F – China: Current Issues in Historical Context | Fang | 550 |
| HIS 1808G – Powerful Words: Global History Through Key Sources | Wilkinson | 550 |
| HIS 1815G – Histories of Love | Bell | 550 |
| HIS 1817G – History in the Headlines | Blocker | 550 |
| HIS 1818F – Treasure: Objects of Desire in Global History | Compeau | 550 |
| HIS 1818G – Treasure: Objects of Desire in Global History | Compeau | 550 |
| HIS 1819F – Monsters: A Human History | Reid-Maroney | 550 |
| HIS 2204G – Crises and Confederation: The Making of Modern Canada | Blocker | 550 |
| HIS 2302G – American Modern: The United States in the Twentieth Century | Reid-Maroney | 550 |
| HIS 2413E – Europe and the Paradoxes of Modernity | Ramsay | 550 |
| HIS 2420G – Britain During World War II | Bell | 550 |
| HIS 2603E – China: Tradition and Transformation | Fang | 550 |
| HIS 2709F – Race, Rights, and Revolution: The Atlantic World in the Eighteenth Century | Reid-Maroney | 550 |
| HIS 2710F – Red, White, Black et Blancs: The Americas to 1867 | Melle | 550 |
| HIS 2712F – Tyrants: Historical Profiles in Oppression and Resistance | Compeau | 550 |
| HIS 2714G – Merchants of Empire: The First Global Corporations | Compeau | 550 |
| HIS 2801G – History Wars | Compeau | 550 |
| HIS 2822F – Jewish History from the Spanish Expulsion to the Modern Era | Tesler-Mabé | 550 |
| HIS 3230F – Digital Disruptions: Using Digital Tools to Learn Mi’kmaw and Acadian Histories | Peace | 550 |
| HIS 3311F – Slavery and Freedom: African-American History, 1600-1896 | Solomon | 550 |
| HIS 3416G – The Holocaust | Tesler-Mabé | 550 |
| HIS 3706E – Political Assassinations, 1900-2000 | Fang | 550 |
| HIS 3801E – The Historian’s Craft | Reid-Maroney | 550 |
| HIS 4802G – Masculinity and Modern History | Compeau | 550 |
| HIS 4804G – Murder: Social and Legal History | Bell | 550 |
| HIS 4810F – Making History Matter to the Public: Practicing Active History | Isaac | 550 |
| HIS 4903E – Senior Thesis | Peace | 550 |
History Professors
Tenured, Tenure-stream Instructors:
Program Sessional and Per Course Instructors:
Professor Emeriti
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Key Contacts







Lisa Jones Keenan is the Vice President of Sales at Xplornet Communications, the largest rural fixed wireless broadband service provider in Canada. 
Leigh Allen is the AVP, Global Strategic Research, Reinsurance Group of America Inc., one of the world’s largest global life and reinsurance companies.
Yola Ventresca is a Managing Partner, Lerners LLP, Secretary of Huron’s Board of Governors and a Huron Class of ’02 alumni. Selected as one of Canada’s “Best Lawyers,” she is passionate about the value of Liberal Arts in helping students succeed in their careers.
Susan Farrow is an Assistant Professor in The Temerty Faculty of Medicine at the University of Toronto and a Founding Partner and Co-Director of The Toronto Institute of Group Studies, an organization offering certified training and education in group leadership.
Frank Holmes is CEO and Chief Investment Officer of U.S. Global Investors, as well as a business commentator, philanthropist and Huron Class of ‘78 alumnus. Holmes also serves as the Executive Chairman of HIVE Blockchain Technologies, the first cryptocurrency mining company to go public in 2017.
Kelly Meighen is an experienced philanthropist and volunteer. In her role as president of the T.R. Meighen Family Foundation, she has created a legacy of volunteerism and philanthropic giving in the areas of youth mental health advocacy, environmental conservation and cultural vibrancy.
Ranjita is Executive Chair of the Oxford Global Partnership, advising investors, businesses, family offices and entrepreneurs on sustainable, inclusive and responsible value creation. A Business Fellow at Oxford University’s Smith School, Ranjita engages with companies on pursuing value with values, and teaches a postgraduate “Essentials of ESG & DEI” course.
Caleb Hayhoe is the Founder & Chairman of Flowerdale Group and a Huron Class of ’85 Alumnus. Flowerdale Group is a Hong Kong based family office with a global investment outlook across public markets, real estate and private investment. Hayhoe previously spent over ten years building a global sourcing business together with an exceptional team, and remains committed to entrepreneurialism and helping great ideas become sustainable companies.

