History Honors Student Gabriele K. Kim Wins the Theodore H. Jack Award

Congratulations to Emory History Honors student Gabriele K. Kim, who has won the Theodore H. Jack Award for the Summer of 2022. Gabriele will travel to the Virginia Davis Laskey Library Archives in Nashville, TN, to conduct research on her project, “Transpacific Encounters: Southern Methodist Women and the Chinese Missionary Enterprise (1880-1920).” 

She is very grateful for the support of Prof. Chris Suh, her thesis director, throughout her entire college career. She was able to work on her first research project with him last year through SIRE program (2020-2021). She took “HIST 285: Asian American History” in her first year and most recently took “HIST 488: Transpacific Life.” She writes that she “really loved talking ‘HIST 385: American Conservatisms’ with Dr. Joseph Crespino, and Dr. Kate Rosenblatt’s ‘Religion & the Constitution’ course. Still, picking one favorite professor or classes is too hard because they are all so wonderful!”

The Department of History is able to award these funds because Mrs. Mary Spencer Jack Craddock (’33C) made a contribution to Emory in honor of her father, Theodore Henley Jack, in 1992.  Prof. Jack was an historian and early Emory history faculty member. In 1916 he was selected to head the Department of History of the new Emory College. He became Dean of the Graduate School in 1919, Dean of the College of Liberal Arts in 1920, and Vice-president of Emory University in 1929. Mrs. Craddock’s gift honors her father’s commitment to Emory and to historical scholarship.

This fall, all of the winners of our summer funding awards will make presentations on their projects and their summer research experiences to the History Department. We look forward to hearing about Gabi’s summer! Many congratulations, again, Gabi!

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