[ picture]

JOHN GRABOWSKI, historian

Holds a joint position as the Krieger-Mueller Historian and Vice President for Collections at the Western Reserve Historical Society and the Krieger-Mueller Associate Professor of Applied History at the Western Reserve University. He has been with the Society in various positions in its library and museum since 1969. In addition to teaching at CWRU he serves as the editor of The Encyclopedia of Cleveland History and The Dictionary of Cleveland Biography. He has also taught at Cleveland State University, Kent State University and Cuyahoga Community College. During the 1996-1997 and 2004-2005 academic years he served as a senior Fulbright lecturer at Bilkent University in Ankara, Turkey.

He is also the author of Cleveland: A Tradition of Reform, Sports in Cleveland: An Illustrated History; and co-author of Polish Americans and Their Communities in Cleveland. He and his wife Diane are the authors of Cleveland: A History in Motion, and Cleveland: Then and Now. They, along with Professor David Hammack, are the editors of Identity, Conflict & Cooperation: Central Europeans in Cleveland, 1850-1930. He has also written numerous articles relating to immigration history and to archival issues. His research interests center on American immigration, public history, and the disjuncture between "academic" and "popular" history. He is currently conducting research on early Turkish immigration to the United States and on the evolution of historical societies in the United States.

From: American Council for Polish Culture (ACPC) 63rd Convention Program, July 14-17, 2011, Cleveland, Ohio, at the Pope John Paul II Polish-American Cultural Center