Difference between revisions of "Tools: History Skills Biographies"

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The latest MarineLives History Skills Programme kicks off this week (week commencing Monday 12th October 2015). There are two remaining places. To learn more and to apply for one of these places please use our [http://marinelives.org/wiki/Special:MarineLivesContact contact form]
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To see profiles of previous participants in our history skills training programmes see [http://marinelives.org/wiki/Tools:_Biographies sample volunteer biographies]
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==Colin Greenstreet==
 
==Colin Greenstreet==
  

Revision as of 12:45, October 11, 2015

The latest MarineLives History Skills Programme kicks off this week (week commencing Monday 12th October 2015). There are two remaining places. To learn more and to apply for one of these places please use our contact form

To see profiles of previous participants in our history skills training programmes see sample volunteer biographies

Colin Greenstreet


Colin Greenstreet and Bron (a Hungarian vizsla)

Colin Greenstreet is co-founder and co-director of the MarineLives project. He studied human sciences, and philosophy, politics and economics at the University of Oxford, and was the recipient of a Kennedy scholarship for study at Harvard Business School. His career has been spent in finance, consulting, pharmaceutical research and development, and as an entrepreneur.

Likes: Mountains, languages, travel, and dogs (plus wife, Yerevag; elder daughter and musician, Rebecca; and younger daughter and aspiring neuroscientist, Francesca)

Dislikes: Broccoli

Languages: English, German, indifferent French, staggers through Dutch with a dictionary and a glass of wine

Academic interests: Editing the private papers of Sir George Oxenden (1620-1669); writing an academic dual biography of Sir George Oxenden and his elder sister and commercial agent, Elizabeth Dallison. For papers, seminar and conference presentations see his academia.edu page

Tweets at at @marinelivesorg.



Dr Philip Hnatkovich


Dr Philip Hnatkovich

Philip Hnatkovich is a Co-Director of the MarineLives project. He received his Ph.D. from Pennsylvania State University in 2014. He is a historian of the British and French Atlantics, with interests in early modern maritime networks, cultural geography, and transnational communities. His doctoral thesis ("The Atlantic Gate: The Anglo-Huguenot Channel Community, 1558-1685") examines Anglo-French mercantile networks in English Channel ports during the French Wars of Religion, when a militant alignment of Huguenot and Elizabethan elites oversaw a decades-long collaboration in privateering and experimental transatlantic plantation ventures. He argues that the maritime society of the Channel region produced merchant capital, maritime expertise, and formative models for northern trade and colonial settlement in the Americas.

He resides in Pittsburgh, where he spends his spare time dabbling in local politics, perfecting his barbecue technique, riding his bike, and building blanket forts with his daughter.

Languages: English, French, some bits of Latin.

Tweets occasionally @_beneze_



Ross Keel


[ADD PROFILE]



Oliver Tanner


[ADD PROFILE]



Maya Silverman


[ADD PROFILE]



Samuel Watson


[ADD PROFILE]



Jill Wilcox


Jill Wilcox is co-founder and co-director of the MarineLives project. Jill's passion for family history led her to complete a history degree at the University of Hertfordshire as a mature student. Subsequently, she has spent sixteen years as a comprehensive teacher and head of department. She completed a MEd in leading teaching and learning at the University of Cambridge in 2011. Throughout her career Jill has used technology to engage and assist her students in their learning.