Kerry A. Trask (born October 17, 1941) is an American historian and author. Trask has worked as a history professor at the University of Wisconsin Manitowoc for more than thirty years. Trask was also the Democratic candidate for the Wisconsin State Assembly from the 25th District in the 2010 general election.
Career
Kerry Trask was born in Orillia, Ontario, to Victor Arnold and Lillian Trask. He worked his way through college in steel foundries, dairy farms, and as a ranger with the Ontario Department of Lands and Forests. Trask earned his B.A. in American History, from Hamline University in St. Paul, Minnesota.[1] He went on to earn his M.A. and Ph.D. in American History from the University of Minnesota, Minneapolis.[1] Shortly after earning his Ph.D. in American History, Trask joined the faculty of the University of Wisconsin Manitowoc.[1]
During his 36 years at the UW Manitowoc, Trask served as history professor, History Department chair for all 13 University of Wisconsin Colleges, interim dean for the University of Wisconsin Sheboygan, chair of the Appeals and Grievances Committee for the UW Colleges, a member of the Board of Advisors to the UW System’s Institute on Race and Ethnicity. He was also a member of the AFL-CIO Academic Rights and Freedom Committee. He was named professor emeritus of history at the University of Wisconsin Manitowoc, and is a fellow of the Wisconsin Academy of Sciences, Arts and Letters,[2] and a scholar-advisor to the Black Earth Institute.[3]
Among other books Trask wrote Black Hawk: The Battle for the Heart of America.[4] He has also had his work published in magazines and scholarly publications including The Wisconsin Magazine of History,[5]The American Historical Review,[6] and The William and Mary Quarterly,[7] among others. He is the reviews editor for Voyageur: Northeastern Wisconsin’s Historical Review.[8] In addition, Trask has done work with Wisconsin Public Television. In 2009 he was a consultant and on-film commentator for Wisconsin Hometown Stories: Manitowoc and Two Rivers.[9] Two years prior he was featured as an on-film commentator for The Black Hawk War, an episode of Wisconsin Public Television’s weekly program, In Wisconsin.[10]
His work has been awarded in several different forums. In 2006, he received the Benjamin F. Shambaugh Award from the State Historical Society of Iowa for Black Hawk: The Battle for the Heart of America.[11] The same year he was named a Library Resident Fellow with the American Philosophical Society.[12]
^Schweitzer, Mary McKinney, et al. Reviewed work(s): Paxton: A Study of Community Structure and Mobility in the Colonial Pennsylvania Backcountry by George W. Franz, (JSTOR), Third Series, Vol. 48, No. 1, January 1991, pp. 132-134, Trask review on p. 132.
^Valeri, Mark (1990). "Rev. of Kerry Trask, In the Pursuit of Shadows". The William and Mary Quarterly. Third. 47 (4): 597–598. doi:10.2307/2937987. JSTOR2937987.