J. Franklin Jameson

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John Franklin Jameson (September 19, 1859September 28, 1937) was an American historian, author, and journal editor who played a major role in the professional activities of American historians in the early 20th century. He was born in Somerville, Massachusetts, the son of John Jameson, a schoolteacher, lawyer, and postmaster, and Mariette Thompson. He graduated from Amherst College in 1879 as class valedictorian, studying with John W. Burgess and history professor Anson W. Morse. More influential was Herbert Baxter Adams, head of the department of history and political science at the Johns Hopkins University, where Jameson received the first doctorate in history in 1882. He became an instructor; his dissertation "The Origin and Development of the Municipal Government of New York City," was published in article form in 1882. He moved to Brown University as professor in 1888.

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Jameson was a social historian, an expert in historiography, and above all an intellectual entrepreneur. His base was the American Historical Association, which he helped found in 1884. He chaired its Historical Manuscripts Commission in 1895 and became the first managing editor of the American Historical Review (AHR), 1895-1901, 1905-1928, serving as the gatekeeper and information central for academic historiography. After an interlude at the University of Chicago he went to Washington in 1905 as director of the Department of Historical Research of the heavily endowed Carnegie Institution of Washington. It was controlled by scientists who never fully supported Jameson, though he held the position until 1928.

Jameson was the first professional historian to become the AHA president (1907). Although a number of colleagues and friends of Jameson went on to serve as AHA presidents, they also tended to refer to Jameson as "the Dean," a jocose reference to his influence within the organization. At that time, the AHA used a system of electing a Second Vice President who ascended to the Presidency of the organization over the subsequent two years, a system that lacked certain democratic safeguards. Trouble arose in the AHA as younger men protested Jameson's authoritarianism. In 1913-15 the insurgents, led by Frederic Bancroft, accused Jameson and an inner circle of notable historians of the time (including Frederick Jackson Turner, Andrew C. McLaughlin, George Lincoln Burr, and Charles Homer Haskins) of being undemocratic, and published a pamphlet attacking both the system of governance and the individuals. A compromise was offered by Jameson's co-editor of the AHR and incoming President, George Lincoln Burr, who refused to take office unless he were elected by the membership directly. As a result, the insurgents gained some new, more democratic rules, including the direct annual election of the President, and Burr was unanimously elected President of the AHA. Although the controversy was resolved, there was some collateral damage to Jameson's reputation.[1]

During World War I Jameson edited historical material for soldiers in their training camps, and he published articles in the AHR that supported the Allies. At Carnegie he supervised a series of documentary publications, such as guides to archival resources around the world, documentary editions of the letters of members of the Continental Congress, documents on the slave trade and slave law, and the papers of Andrew Jackson, as well as an atlas of American history. Jameson began numerous annual publications and, with Waldo Leland started lobbying Congress to create a National Archives, the building for which was first funded in 1926. The National Archives organization was established in 1934. In 1926 he finally published an influential short book in the works for three decades, The American Revolution Considered as a Social Movement. After losing his position at Carnegie in 1928 he became head of the Division of Manuscripts at the Library of Congress, where he made some notable acquisitions of major collections.

  1. ^ [1] Presidential Address of R. R. Palmer, American Historical Review 76:1 (February 1971): 1-15

  • An Historian's World: Selections from the Correspondence of John Franklin Jameson, ed. Elizabeth Donnan and Leo F. Stock (1956)
  • Jameson, J. Franklin. The History of Historical Writing in America (1891)
  • Jameson, J. Franklin, ed. The papers of John C. Calhoun, Annual Report of the American Historical Association (1899).
  • Jameson, J. Franklin, The American Revolution Considered as a Social Movement. (1926)

  • Morey Rothberg. "Jameson, John Franklin"; American National Biography Online (2000)online version
  • Morey Rothberg and Jacqueline Goggin, eds., John Franklin Jameson and the Development of Humanistic Scholarship in America (3 vols., 1170335030-1021758592.55287)

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