Vera Brown Holmes | |
|---|---|
| Born | (1890-09-21)September 21, 1890 Fredericton, New Brunswick, Canada |
| Died | November 19, 1980(1980-11-19) (aged 90) |
| Occupation | Historian |
| Spouse | |
| Awards | Guggenheim Fellow (1931) |
| Academic background | |
| Alma mater | |
| Academic work | |
| Discipline | History of the Americas |
| Institutions | |
Vera Lee Brown Holmes (September 21, 1890 – November 19, 1980) was a Canadian-American historian. Born inFredericton, New Brunswick, she got her PhD atBryn Mawr College after a delay caused byWorld War I and worked as a professor atSmith College from 1924 until her retirement in 1958. A 1931Guggenheim Fellow, she also wroteA History of the Americas, with its two volumes released in 1950 and 1965.
Vera Lee Brown, the daughter of Anna Dorothea (née Scovil) and Frank Manson Brown, was born on September 21, 1890 inFredericton, New Brunswick.[1] She was educated atNetherwood School for Girls andMcGill University, the latter of where she got her AB in 1912 and AM in 1913.[1] She later moved toBryn Mawr College and became a 1914 M. Carey Thomas European Fellow,[1] before returning to McGill to work as a history lecturer from 1916 until 1920.[2]
After shelving plans a previous dissertation which had been delayed due toWorld War I,TheAudiencia in Spanish America, after its associated existing research was destroyed in a 1917 fire and another work on the topic was published, she did another round of research on a different dissertation,[1] and during the 1920-1921 academic year, she traveled to London for research at theBritish Museum andPublic Record Office.[3] In 1922, the dissertation granted her a PhD at Bryn Mawr and was published as a book,Anglo-Spanish Relations in America in the Closing Years of the Colonial Era (1763–1774).[2][1]
After a brief stint as chairman of theWilson College Department of History (1922–1923), she returned to Bryn Mawr to be the 1923-1924 Helene and Cecil Rubel Foundation Fellow.[2][3] In 1924, she joinedSmith College as assistant professor of history.[2] She was promoted to associate professor in 1927 and professor in 1931, before retiring in 1958.[2][4] She also served as chair of Smith's Department of History.[2] After releasing the 1930 bookStudies in the History of Spain in the Second Half of the Eighteenth Century,[2] she wroteA History of the Americas, a two-volume book on thehistory of the Americas, with the volumes –From Discovery to Nationhood (1950) andFrom Nationhood to World Status (1965) – being released more than a decade apart.[5]
In 1931, she was elected aGuggenheim Fellow for research onSpain–United Kingdom relations in the context of 18th-centurycolonialism.[2] During her career in Smith, she started directing ahistory of the Americas course there in 1935.[5] After she was granted professor emerita status, Smith awarded her a Sophia Smith Fellowship for her service to the college,[5] as well as an honorary degree in 1960.[6]
In 1936,[7] she married John Herbert Arkwright Holmes, an English-born Anglican priest who served as dean ofChrist Church Cathedral in Fredericton from 1932 until 1936 and as dean of divinity atUniversity of King's College from 1936 until 1955.[8] They were married until his death in 1963,[5] and he had three children from a previous marriage.[5]
Holmes died on November 19, 1980.[6] Her archives are held in the Smith College Libraries.[4] She is buried in Forest Hill Cemetery in Fredericton, New Brunswick.[5]