Archives West Finding Aid
Table of Contents
Thomas J. Pressly papers, circa 1949-1988
Overview of the Collection
- Creator
- Pressly, Thomas
- Title
- Thomas J. Pressly papers
- Dates
- circa 1949-1988 (inclusive)19491988
- Quantity
- 15 cubic feet (15 boxes)
- Collection Number
- 5816 (Accession No. 5816-001)
- Summary
- Papers of a history professor at the University of Washington
- Repository
-
University of Washington Libraries, Special Collections
Special Collections
University of Washington Libraries
Box 352900
Seattle, WA
98195-2900
Telephone: 2065431929
Fax: 2065431931
speccoll@uw.edu - Access Restrictions
-
Open to all users.
- Languages
- English
Biographical NoteReturn to Top
Thomas Pressly, an emeritus professor of history in the University of Washington, died on April 3, 2012. Born January 18, 1919, he was raised in Tennessee and educated in the public schools and Harvard University. After receiving bachelor's and master's degrees and well before Pearl Harbor, he was drafted into the Army. He became a commissioned officer and served in Panama for nearly a year before returning to the States for training as a navigator. Following a year as an instructor, he was sent to Italy where he navigated combat missions in B-24s during the last months of the European War. Now a captain, he left the Army in November 1945.
Following a brief return to graduate study, Pressly embarked on an academic career that started at Princeton and continued, beginning in the fall of 1949, at the University of Washington. In 1954, Princeton University Press published his first book, Americans Interpret Their Civil War. It was widely reviewed and greatly admired. During these years of his early career, he received fellowships from the Ford Foundation and the Center for Advanced Study of the Behavioral Sciences and started a second book, a study of the idea of the right of revolution. Promoted to full professor in 1960, he published two years later an article on his new topic in the American Historical Review.
In the 1960s Pressly dedicated himself to teaching. He had a strong interest in aspiring history teachers and continued to support them after graduation. His approach to teaching, dubbed "the Pressly Method" by his colleagues, testified to his confidence in students as capable of reading the primary sources and writing effectively about what they found. In 1974, the UW Alumni Association recognized him as an "Outstanding Teacher."
Pressly's reputation as a professor dedicated to teaching spread beyond the University of Washington. In 1965 and 1966, he participated in National Defense Education Act Summer Institutes for High School History Teachers, and later in the Sixties, he served on the American Historical Association's Committee on Teaching and co-authored a booklet for the association on "The Preparation of Secondary School History Teachers." He also served from the late 1970s to the mid-1990s on the National Advisory Board of the Society for History Education, and in 1989, he contributed an article to the Organization of American Historians' Magazine of History.
Pressly established two funds in the UW history department, one recognizing high school history teachers, the other offering financial assistance to new history faculty members under pressure to both teach and publish.
After retiring from teaching in 1988, Pressly remained active. He explored the possibility of updating his book on the Civil War and completed two other books. One of these, Voices from the House Divided: the United States Civil War as Personal Experience, gave students the primary sources he wanted them to read and use. In addition, he played tennis and jogged, visited often with friends, and spent ample time with members of his family. He and his wife Cameron had met and married during World War II, had two children, and were together for more than 60 years.
—Richard S. Kirkendall University of Washington
Content DescriptionReturn to Top
Correspondence, lectures, scholarly articles and clippings.
Correspondents include Bob Skotheim, Stull Holt, Robin Winks, Lee Benson, David Potter and Maclyn Burg.
Use of the CollectionReturn to Top
Restrictions on Use
Creator's literary rights not transferred to the University of Washington Libraries
Administrative InformationReturn to Top
Names and SubjectsReturn to Top
Subject Terms
- University Archives/Faculty Papers (University of Washington)
Personal Names
- Benson, Lee--Correspondence
- Burg, Maclyn Philip, 1927- --Correspondence
- Holt, W. Stull (William Stull), 1896-1981--Correspondence
- Potter, David Morris--Correspondence
- Pressly, Thomas--Archives
- Skotheim, Robert Allen--Correspondence
- Winks, Robin W.--Correspondence
Other Creators
-
Corporate Names
- University of Washington. University Archives