The George Washington Presidential Library at Mount Vernon offers fellowships to support the growing community of scholars whose research focuses on the life and leadership of George Washington, and his place in the development of American civic life and culture. Both long and short-term fellowships are available for trained scholars of all professional levels.

Learn More about the Mount Vernon Fellowship Program

Lydia Mattice Brandt, Ph.D.

Lydia Mattice Brandt, Ph.D.

"Making Mount Vernon Anew"

Dr. Brandt is an assistant professor of art history at the University of South Carolina. Her current research explores the ways in which Americans have remembered Mount Vernon from the eighteenth century to the present day and seeks to understand the influence of the house and its image on popular American architecture and visual culture.

Trenton Cole Jones, Ph.D.

Trenton Cole Jones, Ph.D.

"Deprived of Liberty: Enemy Prisoners and the Culture War in Revolutionary America, 1775-1783"

Jones received his Ph.D. from The Johns Hopkins University. He is a cultural historian of public violence in the eighteenth-century Atlantic world, and is studying the culture of war in revolutionary America by analyzing how revolutionary Americans addressed the problems of capturing and confining enemy prisoners of war.

Recipient of Amanda and Greg Gregory Family Fellowship

James Kirby Martin, Ph.D.

James Kirby Martin, Ph.D.

"George Washington: The Greatest Character of the Age"

Dr. Martin is Hugh Roy and Lillie Cranz Cullen University Professor of History at the University of Houston, Houston, Texas. A nationally-recognized scholar in United States history, he is well known for his writings on various aspects of American military and social history, specifically the American Revolution.

Recipient of James C. Rees Fellowship on the Leadership of George Washington

Edward Larson, Ph.D.

Edward Larson, Ph.D.

"George Washington’s Role in Shaping the Constitution"

Dr. Larson is a University Professor of history and holds the Hugh & Hazel Darling Chair in Law at Pepperdine University. He is the author of nine books and nearly one hundred published articles, and teaches, lectures, and writes about issues of law, politics, science, and medicine from an historical perspective. He received the 1998 Pulitzer Prize for History for his book Summer for the Gods: The Scopes Trial and America's Continuing Debate Over Science and Religion.

Sandra Moats, Ph.D.

Sandra Moats, Ph.D.

"George Washington and the Advent of American Neutrality as a Post-Revolutionary Concept, 1776-1779"

Dr. Moats is Associate Professor of History at the University of Wisconsin-Parkside, and her research focuses on the intersections of politics, culture, and diplomacy in the early American republic. She is the author of Celebrating the Republic: Presidential Ceremony and Popular Sovereignty from Washington to Monroe, 1789-1825.

Jon E. Taylor, Ph.D.

Jon E. Taylor, Ph.D.

"Genesis of America’s Historic Preservation Impulse: Mount Vernon Ladies’ Association"

Dr. Taylor is Associate Professor of History at the University of Central Missouri. His areas of expertise include Public History, America from 1877 to 1940, and Missouri History. He is the author of A President, A Church, and Trails West: Competing Histories in Independence, Missouri (2008).

Gwendolyn K. White

Gwendolyn K. White

"Commerce and Community at George Washington’s Mount Vernon, 1754-1799"

White is a Ph.D. candidate in the Department of History and Art History at George Mason University. White has a Master of Architectural History from the University of Virginia and previously held a fellowship at Mount Vernon transcribing some of Washington's farm and financial papers.

Recipient of James C. Rees Entrepreneurship Fellowship funded by the Donald W. Reynolds Foundation

2012 Fellow

Alan Pell Crawford

Alan Pell Crawford

"General George Washington and the Development of a Republican Understanding of Leadership"

Alan Pell Crawford is an American author and journalist who, in his books and articles, has written on the period of the United States' founding and the American conservative tradition. His most recent book, Twilight at Monticello: The final Years of Thomas Jefferson, a Washington Post best-seller, casts new light on the retirement of the nation’s third president and author of the Declaration of Independence.

Recipient of the M. Elaine Rand Fellowship

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