Skip Navigation

Dr. Graham Warder

Photo of Dr. Graham  Warder
Associate Professor
History
Morrison Hall 124 • M/S 1301
603-358-2947

Graham Warder received his B.A. from Dartmouth College and his Ph.D. from the University of Massachusetts Amherst. Dr. Warder is an expert on nineteenth-century America, with a special focus on antebellum reform efforts. For the past twenty years, his main research interest has been U.S. disability history, an outgrowth of his work with the Disability History Museum website. He has extensively worked on and spoken about disability history curriculum, including a recent project called "Reform to Civil Rights," part of Emerging America, a collaborative effort partially funded by the Library of Congress. He is the author of "Temperance Nostalgia, Market Anxiety, and the Reintegration of Community in T.S. Arthur's Ten Nights in a Bar-Room," published in 2004 in an anthology entitled, Cultural Change and the Market Revolution in America 1789-1860. He teaches courses on disability history, the American Civil War, sports history, American history and alcohol, and the history of eugenics.

Is this your profile? Edit