Robert A. Wardhaugh

Professor

PhD, University of Manitoba, 1995

Telephone: 519-661-2111 ext. 84969
Office: Lawson Hall 2263
Office Hours: Tuesdays 10:00 am - 12:00 pm and Wednesdays 10:00 am - 12:00 pm

 

Supervision

Master's and Doctoral Level supervisory privileges

Teaching: Fall/Winter 2026-27

Course Code

Course Title

HIST 2121A Canada and the Two World Wars
HIST 2174B Hockey Over Time
HIST 2201E Canada's Past: a Critical History From the Origins to the Present
HIST 9804A Canada and its Historians

Research and Specialization

Professor Robert Wardhaugh is a Canadian political and regional historian whose research interests include the latter 19th and 20th centuries; the Prairie West; the era of Mackenzie King; Federalism; World War I & II; Political parties; Political culture; the 1920s and the 1930s; Small towns and rural life; Regionalism.


Teaching Philosophy

My pedagogical approach in a university classroom is based around very simple concepts. Ultimately, I seek to communicate and then to engage with students so that I can translate what I hope is my sufficient learning and passion for the subject.

This objective is more difficult to achieve than it appears. In order for communication (and then to go one step further for engagement) to occur, the barriers must come down. I attempt to lower these barriers through offering the students a welcoming, energetic, stimulating, and most importantly, respectful atmosphere in which to learn. If I fail to communicate with my students, I have failed to teach them.

I seek to have my students question the course content. The analytical component is critical for success. I want them to critically and creatively evaluate and analyze the information presented. My passion for history is impossible to conceal and I seek ways to share this sentiment. I strongly encourage discussion and debate; I urge students to be critical of historical issues and to analyze the past in ways in which they are not accustomed. It is essential that history be tied to the present so students will recognize the importance and usefulness of studying the subject.

If I have succeeded, students will leave my class feeling they have learned important information about Canadian history but also feeling confident in raising questions pertaining to this history. I want them to be excited by the subject, something I also believe essential for the learning process. That excitement and passion serves as the crucial building blocks required to move on to further objectives. Once students have become engaged with the subject, they have the opportunity to embrace it on a deeper, more critical and analytical level.

 

Supervisions

  • Ryan McLachlan, The Sea is at her Gates: Canada, Britain, and the Evolution of British Maritime Imperial Defence
  • Nolan Brown, Protecting the Individual: The Origins and Development of Saskatchewan Conservatism, 1905-1944 (2019)

  • Elliot Worsfold, Welcoming Strangers: Race, Religion, and Ethnicity in German Lutheran Ontario and Missouri, 1939-1970 (2018)

  • Graeme Phillips, An Articulate Minority': Studies in the Ideas of Canadian Peace, 1945-1963 (2018)

  • Jonathan Scotland, And the Men Returned: Canadian Veterans and the Aftermath of the Great War (2016)

  • Daniel Heidt, First Among Equals: Ontario Federalism, 1856-1900 (2014)

Theses

  • Kaden Prowse, A War Worth Remembering: South African War Commemorations in London, Ontario, 1902-1917 (2025)

  • Michael Brown, Newspaper Coverage of Child Emigration to Southern Ontario Through the Children's Emigration Homes (2024)

  • Andrew Hawkes, Performing Masculinity: Calgary Men in the Great War (2024)

  • Marshall Cosens, Moral Subjects: The Girls' Friendly Society, Empire and Modern Girlhood in Canada, c 1920s (2022)

  • Maggie Ross, "She was a disgrace to her sex": Prostitution and Moral Panic in London, Ontario, 1880-1885 (2019)

Cognates

  • Thomas Dumoulin, London Residents' Responses to Nazi Antisemitism (in progress)

  • Theo Avgeropoulos, Keeping Toronto the Good: The Political Policing of Canadian Communists by the Toronto City Police, 1928-1934 (2026)

  • Emily Liashko, Decolonizing the Western Gaze: Ukrainian Canadian Mobilization Against Russocentric Institutional Hegemony (2026)

  • Marsha Bultena, Vimy Ridge or Vimy Myth: An Analysis of the Battle of Vimy Ridge Through a Century of Ontario’s Textbooks (2023)

  • Michael Feagan, Precarious Professionals: The Liminal Identity of Canadian Telegraph Operators, 1880-1914 (2019)

  • André Lachance, A Community of British Nations: An Examination of Mackenzie King’s Movement towards Dominion Autonomy (2017)

  • Robert MacMillan, The Rarely Studied, Seriously Satirical, Political Party: The Rhinoceros Party of Canada (2017)

  • Nevcihan Ozbilge, The Chanak Crisis, Canada, and the Fears of Bolshevism (2017)

  • Phil Makarow, The Wrong Side of the Barricades: Pierre Elliot Trudeau’s Peace Initiative and the 1980s Canadian Peace Movement (2016)

  • Erik Rayment, On Dry Land: Immigration and the Prohibition Movement in Ontario, 1896-1927 (2016)

  • Paul Chudnovsky, The Halo Effect: Examining the Activism and Advocacy of the Homophile Association of London, Ontario, from 1975-2005 (2015)

  • Daniel Murchison, Native Gambling in Ontario and the Colonial Politics of Neoliberal Governmentality, 1990-2000 (2015)

  • Ryan Stevenson, The Witness: Egerton Ryerson Young and the First Nations of Northern Manitoba, 1868-1876 (2015)

  • David Cahill, A New Crusade: Realigning and Rescuing Canada’s Right (2014)

  • Samuel Cowan, Sam Cowan, Gordon Kesler and the Rise of an Alberta Separatist Party (2014)

  • Shaun White, A Formula for Democracy: Public Consultation and Constitutional Renewal during the Trudeau and Mulroney Years (2012)

  • Nolan Brown, Politics, Football, and Four Good Inches of Rain: the Roughriders and the Construction of Identity and Community in Saskatchewan (2011)

  • Aaron Van Tassel, “Modernity, Consumerism and Eaton’s Store” (2011)

  • Carly Simpson, City of Intolerance: Harassment, Homophobia, and HALO: The Development of a Gay and Lesbian Community in London Ontario, 1971-2003 (2009)

  • Trevor Tovell, Reconciling Resource Development and Social Responsibility: Federal Government Intervention in the Northwest Territories, 1920-1966 (2009)

  • Jonathan Scotland, Northern Knights: Canadian Aces and the History of Canada’s First Air War (2009)

  • Jason Burns, Contention and Controversy: Re-presenting Canada’s Role in the Strategic Bombing of Germany (2008)

  • Daniel Hambly, The 1986 CF-18 Maintenance Contract: A Legitimate Western Grievance or an issue of Mis-information? (2005)

 

Major Research Projects

My present project is a history of Fielding, a village in Saskatchewan that has fallen into ruin and become a ghost-town. Working alongside my coauthor, Professor James Flath, this book will tell the story of Fielding from the last ice age to its disappearance in the 1980s. In doing so, it will seek to explain the plight of many rural communities in the Prairie West, and Saskatchewan in particular. The book will serve as a microcosm for the larger history of the small town on the prairies.


Select Publications

Books

rowell sirois commission book cover

 

(with Barry Ferguson) The Rowell-Sirois Commission and the Remaking of Canadian Federalism (Vancouver: UBC Press, 2021)

 

 

Behind the Scenes book cover

Behind the Scenes: The Life and Work of W.C. Clark (Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 2010)

 

 

 

Mackenzie King and the Prairie West book cover

Mackenzie King and the Prairie West (Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 2000)

 

 

 

Textbooks

Origins book cover

 

(with Alan MacEachern) Origins: Canadian History to Confederation, 8th ed., Nelson, 2017

 

 

Destinies book cover

(with Alan MacEachernDestinies: Canadian History since Confederation, 8th ed. Nelson, 2017.


 

 

 

Edited Books

The Premiers of Manitoba book cover


Manitoba Premiers of the 19th and 20th Centuries
, co-edited with Barry Ferguson (Regina: Canadian Plains Research Centre, 2010)

 

 

Time, History, and the Writing of the Canadian Prairies book cover

Time, History, and the Writing of the Canadian Prairies, co-edited with Alison Calder (Winnipeg: University of Manitoba Press, 2005)

 

 

Towards Defining the Prairies book cover

Towards Defining the Prairies: Region, Culture, and History (Winnipeg: University of Manitoba Press, 2001)

 

 

 

 Additional Publications

 

 


Awards & Distinctions

  • May 2010-May 2013
    SSHRC Standard Research Grant
  • June 2011
    Manitoba Historical Society
    Margaret McWilliams Award
    Best Scholarly Book on Manitoba History, 2010
  • May 2008
    University of Western Ontario
    Award of Excellence
    for Undergraduate Teaching