View Profile [124775]
Timothy B. Neary <timothy.neary@salve.edu> Salve Regina University Dissertation: "Crossing Parochial Boundaries: African Americans and Interrracial Catholic Social Action in Chicago, 1914-1954." Loyola University Chicago, 2004. |
|
Address: | Department of History - 310 Wakehurst Salve Regina University 100 Ochre Point Avenue Newport, Rhode Island 02840-4192 United States |
Primary Phone: | 401-341-3292 |
Secondary Phone: | 401-847-3928 |
Fax Number: | 401-341-2989 |
Web Page: | https://www.salve.edu/departments/his/index.cfm |
List Affiliations: | Advisory Board Member for H-Illinois |
Interests: | American History / Studies Religious Studies and Theology Urban History / Studies |
Bio: Timothy B. Neary Ph.D., U.S. History Loyola University Chicago 2004 M.A., U.S. History Loyola University Chicago 1997 A.B., American Studies Georgetown University, Washington, DC 1993 Teaching Experience: Assistant Professor Salve Regina University 2005-present Assistant Professor Stephen F. Austin State University 2004-2005 Visiting Lecturer in Catholic Studies Univeristy of Illinois at Chiago Spring 2004 Lecturer, “The Evolution of Western Ideas and Institutions since the Seventeenth Century” School of Professional Studies, Loyola University Chicago Fall 2003 Lecturer, "American Urban History" Loyola University Chicago Summer 2003 Teaching Fellow, "American Pluralism" Loyola University Chicago Spring 2000 Teaching Fellow, “The Evolution of Western Ideas and Institutions since the Seventeenth Century” Loyola University Chicago Fall 1999 Middle School Teacher Latin School of Chicago Summers 1996, ’97, ’98, & ’99 Middle School Teacher St. Ignatius Loyola Academy, Baltimore, Maryland 1993-1995 Publications Book Chapter “ ‘An Inalienable Right to Play’: African American Participation in the Catholic Youth Organization,” in Chicago Sports, Elliott Gorn, editor (Urbana: University of Illinois Press, forthcoming 2004). Journal Articles “Crossing Parochial Boundaries: Interracialism in Chicago’s Catholic Youth Organization, 1930- 1954,” American Catholic Studies 114.3 (fall 2003): 23-37. “Chicago-Style Environmental Politics: Origins of the Deep Tunnel Project,” Journal of Illinois History 4.2 (summer 2001): 83-102. “Black-Belt Catholic Space: African-American Parishes in Interwar Chicago,” U.S. Catholic Historian 19.4 (fall 2000): 76-91. Newspaper Article “ ‘An Inalienable Right to Play’,” Chicago Tribune, Sunday, 17 June 2001, “Perspective” sect. 2, p. 1, 6. Encyclopedia Entries “National Council of Churches, Commission on Religion and Race” in Encyclopedia of African American Associations, Nina Mjagkij, editor (New York: Garland, 2001), 445-46. “Albany Park Community Area” in Encyclopedia of Chicago History, James Grossman, Ann Keating, and Jan Reiff, editors (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, forthcoming). Book Reviews Something Within: Religion in African-American Political Activism by Fredrick C. Harris, in Peace and Change: A Journal of Peace Research 26.3 (July 2001): 402-04. Gem of the Prairie: An Informal History of Chicago’s Underworld by Herbert Asbury, in Northwest Ohio Quarterly 70.1/2 (winter/spring 1998): 93-94. |