John B. Boles (born October 20, 1943) is an American historian.[1] He retired as the William P. Hobby Professor of American History at Rice University in 2019.[2]
Early life
John B. Boles was born on October 20, 1943, in Houston, Texas, to Billie and Mary Boles. After WWII ended, his parents returned to their hometown of Center, Texas, a rural, racially segregated Bible Belt town. They raised cotton, and later, chickens, and Mr. Boles also drove a taxi. The family was staunchly Baptist in a town permeated with evangelical Christianity. This background—and his lack of awareness of other lifestyles—informed Boles' later historical research.[1][3]
Young Boles was an avid student, and after high school enrolled at Rice University, where he earned a Bachelor of Arts degree in 1965. In 1967, he married classmate Nancy Gaebler, with whom he later had two children. He earned a PhD from the University of Virginia in 1969.[4]
Career
Boles' career began in 1969 as an assistant professor at Towson State University near Baltimore, and within five years, he was promoted to full professor. Near the end of his ten-year tenure at Towson he was also an NEH Fellow in Anthropology at Johns Hopkins University. In 1977 he initiated his long-term relationship with Rice University, working there for a year as visiting editor of the Journal of Southern History. In 1978 he moved to New Orleans and taught at Tulane University. In 1981, Boles settled at Rice, where he was appointed Allyn R. and Gladys M. Cline Chair in History in 1991 and William P. Hobby Professor of American History from 1997 until his retirement in 2019.[1][2][5]
Boles is the author of numerous books about the social history of the Southern United States, including religious, black, and women's history, and the editor of a dozen more. His articles and reviews have been published widely in academic journals. For over 30 years, he was the editor the Southern Historical Association's publication, Journal of Southern History, retiring in 2013. He served as president of the SHA for the 2017-18 term.[6]
The culminating work of Boles' career is Jefferson: Architect of American Liberty, published in 2017,[7] in which he took "an interpretive middle ground" regarding the wide swing of opinions on Jefferson's complex personality and legacy. Boles' aim was to "view him [Jefferson] holistically and within the rich context of his time and place." Jonathan Yardley called the book "perhaps the finest one-volume biography of an American president."[8]
Awards and fellowships
Robert Foster Cherry Chair for Distinguished Teaching, 1999-2000 [9]
George R. Brown Award for Superior Teaching, 2007, 2009[10]
National Endowment for the Humanities Fellow in Anthropology at Johns Hopkins University, 1976-77[5]
Selected works
Boles, John B. (1972). The Great Revival, 1787–1805: The Origins of the Southern Evangelical Mind. Lexington: University Press of Kentucky (Reprinted Ann Arbor, UMI, 1992.). ISBN0-8131-1260-5. OCLC664363602.
Boles, John B. (1983). Black Southerners. Lexington: University Press of Kentucky. ISBN0-8131-0303-7. OCLC9621875.
Boles, John B. (1997). A University So Conceived: A Brief History of Rice. Houston, Texas: Rice University. OCLC37907268.
Boles, John B. (2001) "Coming of Age in the Bible Belt" in Autobiographical Reflections on Southern Religious History, Univ. of Georgia Press, pp. 111–30. Publisher's website. Also available as Google book.
Boles, John B. (2004). The South Through Time: A History of an American Region. Upper Saddle River, New Jersey: Pearson Prentice Hall. ISBN9780131835481. OCLC65167047.
Boles, John B. (2007). A Companion to the American South. Chichester, U.K.: John Wiley & Sons. ISBN9781405138307. OCLC437213922.
Boles, John B.; Hall, Randal L. (2010). Seeing Jefferson Anew In His Time and Ours. Charlottesville, Virginia: University of Virginia Press. ISBN9780813929934. OCLC860399811.
^"Prof. John B. Boles,"Universitat Leipzig. Retrieved July 7, 2022. Note: Some websites say 1967, not 1969.
^ ab"John B. Boles," biography, Past recipients of Cherry Award, Baylor University. Retrieved July 7, 2022.
^Officers, Southern Historical Association, 2020. Retrieved July 7, 2022.
^"Jefferson: Architect of American Liberty." Rice University's Baker Institute for Public Policy. Retrieved July 7, 2022. [Note: This is about a book-signing event, and includes a video presentation by Boles.]