Award Recipients
We have awarded 796 awards, prizes, and fellowships in the past 129 years.
For more information about this author, please see the Handbook of Texas entry on Molcie Lou Rodenberger.
Professor Joseph G. Dawson III taught at Texas A&M University in College Station from 1985 to his retirement in 2018. During 2012-2013 he served as the Charles B. Ewing Chair and Visiting Professor of History at the U.S. Military Academy at West Point. Dawson was honored to be selected as a Fellow of the Texas State Historical Association in 2013. His publications include an essay on “The Army of the Texas Republic,” in Single Star of the West: The Republic of Texas, edited by Kenneth Howell and Charles Swanlund (2017), and an essay about Texas on the eve of the Second World War in Texas and Texans in World War II, edited by Christopher Bean (2022). Among his other publications, Dawson edited The Texas Military Experience: From the Texas Revolution through World War II (1995). He earned his Ph.D. in History from Louisiana State University in 1978.
Julia Lee Sinks, pioneer settler, author, and historian, was born on January 17, 1817, in Ohio, the daughter of George and Mary (Morse) Lee. In the spring of 1840 she moved with two brothers and a sister from Cincinnati, Ohio, to settle in Austin just after Austin was selected as the capital of Texas. She married George W. Sinks, then chief clerk of the Post Office Department of the Republic of Texas. They became parents of six children. In 1848 Mrs. Sinks was at La Grange on the occasion of the burying of the victims of the Mier expedition and the Dawson massacre at Monument Hill. She was a member of the Texas Veterans Association and was a charter member, vice president, and honorary life member of the Texas State Historical Association. Soon after the founding of TSHA in 1897 she presented to it two scrapbooks containing original letters concerning the John H. Moore campaigns against the Indians and other incidents of Texas history. Besides contributing "Editors and Newspapers of Fayette County" and "Rutersville College" to the first two volumes of the Quarterly of the Texas State Historical Association, Mrs. Sinks was a frequent contributor of historical notes and items. She spent most of the last years of her life in Giddings, although in 1900 she was living in Brazoria with the family of her son-in-law James A. Cook. From her home in Giddings she sent various articles on Texas history to the Dallas Morning News and the Galveston News. She died on October 24, 1904, in Giddings and was buried in the Giddings City Cemetery. Her collection of miscellaneous documents relating to Texas history from 1837 to 1900 was presented to the University of Texas at Austin.
Ty Cashion is Professor of History and has enjoyed teaching at Sam Houston State University since 1999. He is a fellow of the Texas State Historical Association and is currently the university’s only representative in the prestigious Texas Institute of Letters. He is also past-president of the East Texas Historical Association and has served on the boards of several other historical societies.
Texas Monthly magazine included Dr. C in a short list of “a new breed of scholars” that is “changing the way contemporary Texans look at their state.” Most recently he completed Lone Star Mind: Reimagining Texas History. It will appear in November. Among Cashion’s other published volumes includes Sam Houston State University: An Institutional Memory.
Robert Marshall Utley is an American author and historian who has written sixteen books on the history of the American West. He is a former chief historian for the National Park Service. Much of his writing deals with the United States Army in the West, especially in its confrontations with the Indian tribes