Laurel Shire

Associate Professor 

GSWS Graduate Chair (Joint with the Department of Gender, Sexuality and Women's Studies)

Email: lshire@uwo.ca
Telephone: 519-661-3645 (History) or 519-661-2111 x87671 (GSWS)

Department of History Office: Lawson Hall 2226

Department of GSWS Office: Lawson Hall 3255

Office Hours:

Fall 2026: Mondays 1:35-2:35pm in Lawson 3255 and Tuesdays, 1pm-2pm in Lawson 2226 (History Office), or by appointment

Winter 2027: Office hours: Mondays, 1pm-2pm in Lawson 3255

Also available for zoom office hours at other times, email to request a meeting 

 

Supervision

Master's & Doctoral Level supervisory privileges

Teaching: Fall/Winter 2026-27

Course Code

Course Title

HIST 2312F The United States: The Beginnings to 1865
HIST 3340G Reading Black Lives: Biography and Autobiography in Black North American History

Research and Specialization

Professor Shire is a social and cultural historian whose research focuses on the United States in the nineteenth century, especially the relationship between race, gender, and U.S. expansion. Her research connects scholarship on North American borderlands, Western and Southern U.S. history, the Atlantic world, Native and African American studies, and women’s and gender history.


Teaching Philosophy

I enjoy teaching all aspects of the American past that touch on the ways that different people shaped it, especially marginalized groups. I want students to engage with historical content as well as criticism, and to immerse themselves in the culture of the past. I strive to be an accessible and compassionate teacher while also maintaining high expectations. Effective and imaginative teaching requires empathy and encourages students to engage with a variety of material, and to develop stronger research and writing skills. All of my undergraduate courses address historiography and teach students how to engage with primary sources. I also support student development as writers and make myself available to discuss strategies for improvement. 
 
I am not accepting new doctoral students for supervision in Fall 2027. However, I welcome inquiries from prospective graduate students and I am happy to supervise MA students and PhD comprehensive exams in US social and cultural history in the 19th and 20th centuries, particularly those interested in race, gender, sexuality, labour, and settler colonialism. I have recently supervised MA projects in African American/Canadian, US colonial, and women's history in the 19th and 20th centuries. I am currently supervising PhD students working on histories of settler colonial regimes in Northern Ireland, Algeria, and German Southwest Africa (Namibia). I have also directed many doctoral comprehensive exams in U.S. history and in histories of colonialism, race, gender, sexuality, and labour. If you are considering entering a PhD program in History, you should read recent reports about what PhD graduates in History are doing with those degrees, see reports from the CHA
(link tohttps://cha-shc.ca/publications/cha-committee-on-the-future-of-the-history-phd-in-canada-report/) and the AHA (link tohttps://www.historians.org/research-and-publications/perspectives-on-history/november-2022/four-more-years-a-where-historians-work-update). 


PhDs Supervised

Carla Joubert, “Barberton Daisies: Women and Settler Colonialism in the Zuid Afrikaanse Republiek and Alberta in the Nineteenth Century”

Erin Brown, “You Go to My Head: Women's Prescription Pill Use in Postwar America”


Current supervisions

Brigette Farrell (co-supervised with Dr. Geoff Read at Huron), Medical Imperialism in French Algeria

Liam Clifford, The Orange Order: An Institution of Settler Colonial Culture

Shaun Hislop, Discourses on German Settler Colonialism, Genocide, and Reconciliation

Liz Borden (GSWS), The History of Relationship Anarchy: Non/Monogamies, Decolonization, and Anti-Normative Intimacies

Peyton Campbell (GSWS), Parent-Led Climate Change Activism: Intergenerational Reproductive and Environmental Justice

Sirena Van Schaik (GSWS) topic in development on Gender-Based and Family Violence (co-supervised with Dr. Laura Cayen)

Aranya Vadera (GSWS) topic in development on Lesbian Identity in India (co-supervised with Dr. Chris Roulston)

Yingnan Chen (GSWS) topic in development on “Administrative Intimacy”: government entry into intimate life in the early People’s Republic, early 1950s - mid1960s (co-supervised with Dr. Chris Roulston)


MA Supervisions

Bailey Ashton, The Filthy Mouth of a Dirty Conscience: The Portrayal of Imperialism, Race, and White Supremacy in American Soap Advertisements, 1850-1950.

Max Bennett, Disorient/ed/ing Bodies: Racialization, Disabilities and Archival Silence in the Detroit River Region

Alicia Boyer, The Great American Murderess: Popular Ballads and Narratives About Women Who Kill.

Hannah Brett, Producing Legal Subjects and Defining Womanhood: Gender and Authority under the Dominions Land Act, Manitoba, 1872-1930

Sara Duodu, 
“Dressed Up” and Beaten Down: Black Veterans and Black Criminality in American Newspapers, 1917 – 1921

Matthew Mazzanti, African American Critiques of the Vietnam War: Reconsidering the Relationship
Between the Civil Rights Movement and Black Power

Maria Zukovs, Protests through Poetry: Perceptions of English Colonialism in Seventeenth Century Ireland.


Major Research Projects

Dr. Shire's first book was published in2016. The Threshold of Manifest Destiny: Gender and National Expansion in Florida argues that American political leaders leveraged gender norms – not only masculinity but alsofemininity – in order to Americanize Florida, setting a precedent for U.S. policy in many subsequent frontier zones further West. They used white womens presence in Florida to justify violence against Seminole peoples and to rationalize generous social policies for white settler families, many of them slaveholders. At the same time, they relied on white womens material, domestic and reproductive labor to create homes and families there; the building blocks of permanent colonial settlement. In short, white women were indispensable to the process of settling Florida for the U.S., a process that displaced both Indigenous people and enslaved people of African descent. 
 
Prof. Shire’s next monograph will be titled
The Women at44 Queen Street: Gender and Labor in Early Baltimore. This book will use the women who lived in the household of Mary Young Pickersgill (at 44 Queen Street in Baltimore, Maryland, from 1807-1857) as the subjects of a microhistory on women, race, class, and labour in the early 19th century American city. The women who lived in this household were responsible for one of the most famous pieces of material culture in U.S. history: the Star-Spangled Banner. Although the flag hangs in the Smithsonian National Museum of American History, very little is known about the women and girls who created it. This book will reveal the myriad ways in which women’s work – even in the age of “True Womanhood” – supported early U.S. capitalization and urbanization. It builds on my knowledge of gender and nationalist projects in the early 19th century United States, and on my longstanding love for Baltimore.  

Dr. Shire is currently working on three research articles: one on reproductive justice and the historyof settler colonialism, one on non/monogamies in 19th century America (with Liz Borden), and one on the forced federal dispersal of the Miami Indians of Indiana in the 20th century (with Dr. Ashley Glassburn, Univ. of Windsor).

Selected Publications

Books:

The Threshold of Manifest Destiny: Gender and National Expansion in Florida, Early American Studies series, University of Pennsylvania Press, 2016. 

This book won the 2017 Mary Kelley Prize from the Society for Historians of the Early American Republic, honoring the best book published on the history of women, gender, or sexuality in the Early American Republic. It also received the 2018 Rembert Patrick Award for the best scholarly book on a Florida history topic from the Florida Historical Society.

Op-Ed:

with Dawn Peterson, “A ‘Man of His Time’ and the Methods of White Supremacy: #SHEAR2020 and the Plenary Debacle,” The Panorama: Expansive Views from the Journal of the Early Republic, August 7, 2020.  

Book Chapters:

Book Chapters (peer-reviewed) 

Joubert, Carla and Laurel C. Shire. “Using Letters or Other Types of Correspondence as Historical Sources,” in Research Methods for Primary Sources, digital collection, edited by Adam Matthew Digital and SAGE Research Methods, online, 2021. 

Kinghan, Patrick and Laurel C. Shire. “Using Oral Histories as Historical Sources,” in Research Methods for Primary Sources, digital collection, edited by Adam Matthew Digital and SAGE Research Methods, online, 2021.  

“Armed Occupiers and Slaveholding Pioneers: Mapping White Settler Colonialism in Florida in Jimmy L. Bryan, Ed., Inventing Destiny: Cultural Explorations of U.S. Expansion (University Press of Kansas, 2019) 

Refereed Journal Articles:

“Sympathetic Paternalism and Sentimental Racism: Feeling Like a Jacksonian,” Journal of the Early Republic symposium on the “Age of Jackson,” Volume 39 (Spring 2019): 111-122 .  

with Joe Knetsch. “Ambivalence in the Settler Colonial Present: The Legacies of Jacksonian Expansion,” invited for Special Issue, “Andrew Jackson at 250” of the Tennessee Historical Quarterly, Vol. LXXVI, No. 3., Fall 2017, 258-275 .

"Turning Sufferers into Settlers: Gender, Welfare, and National Expansion in Frontier Florida," Journal of the Early Republic, Volume 33, No. 3, Fall 2013. 

Clark, Laurel A. “The Rights of a Florida Wife: Slavery, U.S. Expansion and Married Women's Property Law,” The Journal of Women’s History, Volume 22, No. 4, Winter 2010, pp. 39-63. 

Clark, Laurel A. “Beyond the Gay/Straight Split: The Socialist Feminist Community of Baltimore,” National Women’s Studies Association Journal, Volume 19, Number 2, Summer 2007, pp. 1-31 (based on undergraduate thesis).

Book Reviews:

“Kristalyn Marie Shefveland, Selling Vero Beach:Settler Myths in the Land of the Aís and Seminole” for the Journal of American History, forthcoming. 

“Elizabeth Elbourne, Empire, Kinship, and Violence: Family Histories, Indigenous Rights and the Making of Settler Colonialism, 1770-1842,” for Comparativ: Journal of Global History and Comparative Social Research, Liepzig, forthcoming.  

“Daniel Burge, A Failed Vision of Empire: The Collapse of Manifest Destiny, 1845-1872" for the Journal of Southern History, 2023-08, Vol.89 (3), p.561-563.  

“Jessica Marie Johnson, Wicked Flesh: Black Women, Intimacy, and Freedom in the Atlantic World,” Histoire sociale / Social History, Volume 55, Numéro/Number 113, Mai/May 2022, 206-208. 

“Michel Gobat,Empire by Invitation: William Walker and Manifest Destiny in Central America,” Civil War History, Vol.66, No. 3 (Fall 2020): 326.  

“Julius Wilm, Settlers as Conquerors: Free Land Policy in Antebellum America,” Missouri Historical Review, Vol. 114, No. 2, January 2020: 142-43. 
 
“Verity McInnis, Women of Empire: Nineteenth-Century Army Officers’ Wives in India and the U.S. West,” The American Historical Review, Vol. 124, Issue 3 (June 2019), 1043–1044. 
 
“Julio Capó Jr., Welcome to Fairyland: Queer Miami before 1940,” Journal of American History, Vol. 105, Issue 3 (Dec. 2018), 726. 
 
“Janet Dean, Unconventional Politics: Nineteenth-Century Women Writers and U.S. Indian Policy,” H-Net, H-AmIndian, August 2017. 
 
“Deborah Rosen, Border Law: The First Seminole War and American Nationhood,” Law and History Review, Vol. 34, No. 1 (2016): 237.