The Tri-University Graduate History Program is a partnership among three programs at three universities in south-western Ontario: the University of Guelph, the University of Waterloo and Wilfrid Laurier University.

Colloquium website will be updated regularly.

University of Guelph Rural History Roundtable Speaker Series #4
Lecture by Matthew Dougherty, Assistant Professor, Emmanuel College, Toronto
For information about joining the lecture, see the website for updates, or contact Brandon Mendonca (bmendonc@uoguelph.ca).

March 25, 2023: 29th Annual Tri-University History Conference (Rescheduled)
Keynote and Performer
Dr. Omeasoo Wāhpāsiw of Carleton University will deliver the keynote address. Performer is Kevin McKay from Cross Lake First Nation.

Join our Ph.D student, Emily Oakes, currently studying at the Tri-U through Wilfrid Laurier University for this lecture, part of the Military Lecture Series.
Emily Oakes’ presentation will examine how the soldier-horse relationship functioned in the Canadian Expeditionary Forces and its effects on the soldiers, such as J.E.B. Seely or John McCrae, who wrote about their bonds with their horses.

Laurier Centre for the Study of Canada Speaker Series #3

University of Guelph Rural History Roundtable Speaker Series #3
Lecture by Maddie Hendricks, MA, University of Guelph.

Online event with featured speakers:
Dr. Clive Shiff, Johns Hopkins University Microbiology and Immunology
Dr. Jim Webb, Colby College, Department of History
Dr. Nina Martin, Johns Hopkins University International Health

Laurier Centre for the Study of Canada Speaker Series #2

University of Guelph Rural History Roundtable Speaker Series #2
Lecture by Dr. Matthew Hatvany, Professor of Historical Geography, Université Laval.
Research Panel Description
The panel features graduate history students from the University of Waterloo and the University of Toronto. Panelists include Tolulope Akande (University of Waterloo), Arshad Desai (University of Toronto), and Abigail Opoku (University of Waterloo). The event will be hybrid: held in the MacKirdy Reading Room (HH 117) at the University of Waterloo and on Zoom.

University of Guelph Rural History Roundtable Speaker Series #1
Dr. Catharine Wilson, F. R. S. C. will launch her new book, Being Neighbours: Cooperative Work and Rural Culture, 1830-1960.

If the twentieth century marked the age of human rights, the twenty-first century is shaping up to be the age of truth and reconciliation.
