Dr. Richard Schellhammer is chair of the Department of History and Social Sciences and interim dean of the College of Liberal Arts.

Story: Phillip Tutor | Photo: Betsy Compton

After career of serious research and teaching, historian looking forward to peaceful pursuits

The hints inside Dr.聽Richard Schellhammer鈥檚 crowded campus office aren鈥檛 subtle. They reveal personal secrets: who he is, what he adores, how he fills his days. History books bloat his bookshelves. Framed trinkets of his academic expertise — pre-World War I Germany — hang near the desk. He鈥檚 a native Pennsylvanian, so a black Pittsburgh Steelers jersey dominates one wall.

If anything, the chair of the 鈥檚&苍产蝉辫;Department of History and Social Sciences and interim dean of the College of Liberal Arts is a man of serious pursuits.

Now, after nearly three decades at UWA, the retiring Schellhammer was recently awarded the title of Professor Emeritus, a distinction that honors his professional accomplishments and the campus leadership he鈥檚 provided.

His last day at UWA is Aug. 1.

鈥淚t’s an honor to be named,鈥 Schellhammer, 62, said. 鈥淚t just means you’ve done a good job. That, to me, means you’ve been a good teacher and a good colleague, and the university appreciates the work you’ve done. It鈥檚 a good end to a career.鈥

But to trace his career鈥檚 beginnings requires a trip back to his home state, where he was raised not far from Pittsburgh. When he was an 11th-grader, Schellhammer鈥檚 family migrated north to , a small city about 75 miles from Buffalo, New York. (Bradford鈥檚 twin claims to fame, which Schellhammer easily recites, are  and .) He then enrolled at , where he earned his bachelor鈥檚 of arts degree in history in 1984.

Graduate school took him to the Midwest, where he unexpectedly 鈥済ot into the moonshot, I got into (the , a top-five program in the country鈥 for his master鈥檚 degree, and then to the  for his Ph.D. A delay in applying to USC returned him to State College, Pennsylvania, where for a year he drove a cab, delivered furniture and learned that college students often lack the best tipping habits.

鈥淟iberal arts degrees prepare you in general. Liberal arts degrees prepare you to do what any kind of employer wants. I’m a teacher, and I use history to teach my students how to construct a logical argument and present the facts rationally.鈥

— Dr. Richard Schellhammer

He left USC with a doctoral degree, teaching experience at that university, the  (where he drove 242 miles, roundtrip, twice a week for class) and , and a dissertation focusing on the comparative labor history of cutlery workers in , and .

A faculty opening at UWA and personal connections in higher education brought him in January 1994 to baby直播鈥檚 Black Belt — a long way, in distance and size, from northern Pennsylvania and Chicago鈥檚 South Side.

Once on campus, he rose in rank and responsibility with each turn of the calendar. A commonly held trait among UWA faculty is the ability to succeed while wearing multiple hats. Schellhammer embodies that trend, given that he鈥檚 a professor, a department chair, his college鈥檚 interim dean, and has served on the UWA faculty senate.聽He also serves on the baby直播 State Holocaust Commission.

The weightiness of that schedule may be why UWA鈥檚 most recent Professor Emeritus already knows what he plans to do with his free time.

鈥淚 plan to go walking in the woods every day,鈥 he said.

Preaching the value of liberal arts

That mental escape doesn鈥檛 mean Schellhammer鈥檚 adoration of his profession has waned. He discusses the enjoyment he gets from teaching with the same convincing tone he uses when explaining his research into early British films or the meaning of the first World War. (It鈥檚 modernism, he says.)

鈥淚 think if you’re going to teach, you have to look at it as a vocation,鈥 he said. 鈥淚 mean that in more of a religious sense, that you have to look at it as something to make the world better. You have to enjoy the interaction with the kids and try to show them what they’re capable of doing. You’re fulfilling literally your God-given role, and you should take those talents you’ve got. You can’t make somebody a good teacher. You either are or you’re not.鈥

Given that Schellhammer is a department chair and interim dean, a holistic appreciation of liberal arts is baked into his outlook. Ask him why students today should study the humanities and he remains steadfast. 鈥淚 tell my students all the time that every single study that’s ever been done on this shows that, within reason, money doesn’t make up for a job you hate,鈥 he said. 鈥淲hy should you major in history? Because you love it.鈥

He then asks and answers his own question — with a question. 鈥淲hat can you do with a history degree? What do you want to do with it?鈥

His point hinges on versatility and nimbleness — in life, in knowledge, in the workforce. 鈥淟iberal arts degrees prepare you in general. Liberal arts degrees prepare you to do what any kind of employer wants. I’m a teacher, and I use history to teach my students how to construct a logical argument and present the facts rationally.鈥

His departure nearing, Schellhammer is eager to hop behind the wheel of the retirement gift he bought for himself — a silver 1986  that鈥檚 still impressive despite its odometer鈥檚 124,000 miles and a few mechanical headaches. He鈥檚 also looking forward to those walks along forested trails that remind him of his childhood in Pennsylvania. He and his wife fancy a new home, perhaps one high in the Appalachian mountains, where those walks could become daily routines.

鈥淚t鈥檚 really peaceful and calm,鈥 he said. 鈥淚t makes me feel good.鈥