This biographical article is written like a résumé. Please help improve it by revising it to be neutral and encyclopedic. (January 2024)
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Thomas Mackaman (born 1975) is a historian and member of the Socialist Equality Party.[1] He is a professor of history at Kings College in Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania.[2] Mackaman is noted for his writing and interviews with prominent historians challenging the New York Times' 1619 Project, first published on the World Socialist Web Site.[3]
Mackaman attended University of Minnesota for his BA in history.[4] He earned his PhD in history at the University of Illinois.[5] While at Illinois, Mackaman won awards for undergraduate teaching from the university.[6][7] In 2023 he was named John H.A. Whitman Distinguished Service Professor.[8]
Mackaman's New Immigrants and the Radicalization of American Labor was published in 2017.[9] Mackaman has written on labor history, immigration history, and American history.[10][non-primary source needed] He is active in public labor history, serving on the Anthracite Heritage Foundation[11] and helped secure a historical marker for the 1919 Baltimore Mine Tunnel disaster.[12]
After the publication of the New York Times’ 1619 Project, Mackaman conducted interviews with a number of noted historians, including James McPherson, Gordon S. Wood, James Oakes, Clayborne Carson, and Richard Carwardine. The interviews, which asserted that the 1619 Project had committed conceptual and factual errors, drew significant media attention[13][14] and were attacked on social media by project creator, Nikole Hannah-Jones.[15] The interviews, along with essays by Mackaman, David North, and other writers, were assembled in a book, The New York Times and Racialist Falsification of History.[16]
Mackaman ran for state legislature in Illinois in 2004 as a Socialist Equality Party candidate in the 103rd District covering the Champaign-Urbana area.[17] The state Democratic Party attempted to keep his name off the ballot by challenging the veracity of petitions, but the state election board ruled against the Democrats’ claims.[18][19] Mackaman won 3.52% of the vote, while Democrat Naomi Jakobsson was returned to the Illinois House of Representatives.[20]
Mackaman has written extensively for the World Socialist Web Site, especially on topics related to American history.[21]
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