Marla Miller

Marla Miller is an American public historian.

Career

Miller's scholarship focuses on the work of women in the United States prior to industrialization, with a focus on material culture and craft. She holds a PhD from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.[1] Miller is well known for her work on Betsy Ross which challenges popular narratives about Ross' involvement with the creation of the United States flag.[2]

Miller currently serves as the Director of the Public History Program at the University of Massachusetts Amherst.[1] Miller was elected vice president/president elect of the National Council on Public History Board of Directors in 2016.[3] She is currently serving as NCPH president.[4] She is a speak in the Organization of American Historians Distinguished Lectureship Program.[5]

In addition to her academic work Miller has worked as both an editor and a public history consultant. She has sat on the editorial board of The Public Historian, Journal of the Early Republic, and the New England Quarterly.[1] Miller's co-authored 2012 report Imperiled Promise: The State of History in the National Park Service which won the National Council on Public History prize for Excellence in Consulting in 2013.[6]

Publications

  • The Needle's Eye: Women and Work in the Age of Revolution, University of Massachusetts Press, August 2006.
  • Editor. Cultivating a Past: Essays in the History of Hadley, Massachusetts, University of Massachusetts Press, 2009.
  • Betsy Ross and the Making of America, Holt, 2010. 
  • University of Massachusetts Amherst: A Campus Guide. Princeton: Princeton Architectural Press, 2013; with Max Page.
  • Rebecca Dickinson (Lives of American Women series). Boulder, CO: Westview Press/Perseus, 2013.
  • Co-Editor with Max Page, Bending the Future: Fifty Ideas for the Next Fifty Years of Historic Preservation in the United States, University of Massachusetts Press, 2016.
  • Entangled Lives: Labor, Livelihood, and Landscapes of Change in Rural Massachusetts, Johns Hopkins University Press, 2019.

Awards

References

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