Welcome to Tri-University History Graduate Program
The Tri-University Graduate Program in History combines the faculty and resources of three of Canada’s premier universities, University of Guelph, University of Waterloo, and Wilfrid Laurier University. With over seventy graduate faculty in the program, we are one of the largest History graduate programs in the country and able to provide courses and supervise research across the widest possible range of areas. At the same time, through small seminars, close student-professor relationships, and teaching assistantships and scholarships held at one of our three participating campuses, we provide the atmosphere and collegiality of a smaller, more intimate program.
News
Arctic research by Dr. Sam Hossack is timely
Dr. Sam Hossack defended her timely dissertation, “A Broken History: Examining the Events, Experiences, and Narratives of the High Arctic Relocations, 1950-2010,” on January 10, 2025 at the University of Waterloo.
Gender dynamics article by Megan Blair receives award
Megan Blair, University of Waterloo PhD candidate's article published in Gender and History in 2023 was awarded the E. Lisa Panayotidis Memorial Graduate Student Award from the Canadian History of Education Association during their October conference. The prize is one of the Founders prizes which are awarded biennially.
Megan's article examined the gender dynamics of feminist organizing at the University of Waterloo in the 1960s and 1970s. The article was entitled: '''Fraternity for Frustrated Females’: The Gender Dynamics of 1970s Feminist Organising at the University of Waterloo, Canada."
2024-25 TUGSA co-presidents announced
Recently, Tri-U students held their annual election. Ethan Coudenys, MA student at Guelph, Rosemarie Forsberg, MA student at Laurier, and Vera Zoricic, PhD student at Waterloo became the 2024-25 co-presidents. They organize events and encourage community-building among Tri-U students. Check out their bios.
Events
A.Y. Jackson, the Group of Seven and the Great War with Douglas Hunter
Laurier Centre for the Study of Canada, together with Guelph Museums, presents author Douglas Hunter. Hunter explores the role of the First World War in the life and career of artist A.Y. Jackson, and its impact on the formation of Canada’s most famous art collective, the Group of Seven.
Applications due for position in Rural North American History
The History Department at the University of Guelph is delighted to announce a search for a tenure-track assistant professor position in Rural North American history.
Scottish History: TUGSA graduate student research panel
TUGSA Student research panel on Scottish History, February 26, 1:00 pm on Zoom.