Glenda Gates Riley
"Glenda
has not merely worked diligently to uncover Women's history sources
previously overlooked... Her inspired writings and animated public
speaking awaken a sense of new discoveries about Iowa women in
her audiences." -Margo Dundon, 1985
Glenda
Gates Riley, professor of history at the University of Northern
Iowa since 1969, is an internationally known historian and an
advocate for women. In 1972, she taught the first Women's history
course in Iowa. She later co-designed the first Women's studies
program in the state and served as Director of Women's Studies
at UNI. Riley brought Iowa women to national attention through
her book, Frontierswomen: The Iowa Experience, which received
a Distinguished Achievement Award from the Iowa State Historical
Society. She has served on the Iowa Historical Records Advisory
Board, the Historical Advisory Board of Iowa, and the Board of
Trustees of the Iowa State Historical Society. More recently,
she held a Distinguished Fulbright appointment as Mary Ball Washington
Professor of American History at University College, Dublin,
where she taught the first Women's history course in the Republic
of Ireland. She has also twice held the Visiting Women's Chair
in Humanistic Studies at Marquette University in Milwaukee. In
1988, she became the first woman to win a Distinguished Scholar
Award at UNI. She was inducted into the Iowa Women's Hall of
Fame in 1990.
UPDATE: Riley accepted
appointment as the Alexander M. Bracken Professor of History
at Ball State University in Muncie, Indiana in 1991. She published Divorce: An American Tradition, 1991; A Place to Grow:
Women in the American West, 1992; The Life and Legacy
of Annie Oakley, 1994; Building and Breaking Families
in the American West, 1996; Women and Nature: Saving the Wild West, 1999; Prairie
Voices: Iowas
Pioneer Women, 1996; and a second edition of Inventing
the American Woman: An Inclusive History. In 1992, she held
the Wayne Aspinall Visiting Professorship at Mesa State College
in Colorado and appeared in the television special The Wild
West on the Fox network. She has served as president of the
Western History Association. In 1995, she received the Outstanding
Researcher Award from Ball State University and in 1998, received
a Fulbright Research Award. She continues to speak and consult
widely in such countries as Korea and Ireland.
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