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  1. 1. Dr Hannah Grenham
    Hannah has been a member of staff at Lincoln Bishop University since 2017, when she joined the Centre for Enhancement in Learning and Teaching (CELT) as a Learning Development Tutor. Since 2021, she has worked as a Senior Lecturer on the Foundation Year programme and also contributes to teaching in the History department. Prior to coming to Lincoln Bishop, Hannah earned an undergraduate MA in English and Modern History and a postgraduate MLitt in Modern History, both from the University of St Andrews. She was awarded her PhD from the University of St Andrews in 2017 for a thesis titled ‘Power to the People: Changing Attitudes to Computer Technology in the United States, 1951-1982’. Hannah is also a Certified Practitioner of Learning Development through ALDinHE and an Associate Fellow of the HEA. Hannah’s research interests are in late modern US history, particularly in the connections between society, culture, and technology. She is also interested in researching the professionalisation of Learning Development and pedagogical practices within Higher Education. Foundation Year Our degrees with an embedded Foundation Year offer the chance to study almost any undergraduate degree at Lincoln Bishop over four years, rather than the traditional three. For more information, visit: lincolnbishop.ac.uk/course-types/foundation-year
  2. 2. Dr Tim Galsworthy
    Lecturer in History & Military HistoryDr Tim Galsworthy joined Lincoln Bishop University in September 2023 having previously taught at the University of South Wales, University of Gloucestershire, and University of Sussex. Tim’s research focuses on the interplay between memory, politics, and race in the modern United States. In particular, he is interested in the relationships between the Republican Party and memories of the American Civil War.Tim has won grants and fellowships from numerous bodies to support his research. These include the Association of Centers for the Study of Congress, the British Association for American Studies, Mississippi Political Collections, Pennsylvania State University Special Collections, the Roosevelt Institute for American Studies, and the South Caroliniana Library.Tim has served on various academic committees including Pubs and Publications, Historians of the Twentieth Century United States, and the Southern Historical Association Graduate Council. He has a background in public outreach and knowledge exchange involving radio, podcasts, published opinion pieces, and public events. Tim is currently a managing editor of the British Journal for Military History and serves on the editorial team of the student journal Solertia.Tim was awarded his PhD in History from the University of Sussex in 2023, where he was funded by the CHASE Doctoral Training Partnership. He also holds an MPhil in American History from Selwyn College, Cambridge and a BA in History from the University of Bristol.Tim teaches a range of History and Military History modules covering the modern and early modern periods, with a particular focus on the United States, Europe, and Britain/the British Empire.
  3. 3. Dr Erik Grigg
    Senior Lecturer in HistoryI have a wide background in teaching both academically and in the heritage sector (in museums and castles). My primary focus is early medieval Britain, but I also take an interest in the Home Guard, Magna Carta, the Cornish language, the fall of the Western Roman Empire, Vikings, Forest Law and warfare in history. I give regular talks to history groups throughout the East Midlands.Related courses:HistoryMilitary HistoryArchaeology & Historyerik.grigg@lincolnbishop.ac.uk
  4. 4. Dr Hazel C Kent
    Hazel Kent is a historian with research interests in Modern British history, focusing particularly on left wing political culture, conscientious objection and pacifism. Hazel has worked at Lincoln Bishop University since 2007, where she is now a Senior Lecturer in History. Prior to this Hazel taught undergraduate History students at the University of Sheffield, where she undertook her MA and PhD. She is also a qualified secondary school History teacher and spent eight years as a Head of Department. Teaching Hazel teaches on a range of undergraduate modules: The Historian's Craft: Doing History at University; People and Places: Researching Local History; A better world is possible: British Protest Movements 1800-2000; The Long Weekend: Britain between the wars, 1918-1939; A life on the left: Fenner Brockway 1888-1988; and The Global Cold War. She also supervises third year dissertations, and has taught an MA module on Biography as Historical Practice. Hazel holds a PGCE from the University of Leicester and has been a Fellow of the Higher Education Academy since 2012. 
  5. 5. Dr Alan Malpass
    Senior Lecturer – Military History alan.malpass@lincolnbishop.ac.uk Dr Alan Malpass is a historian who specialises in 20th century military history, particularly civilian internment and prisoners of war. Before joining in 2019, Alan taught at Sheffield Hallam University, where he completed his PhD. Alan teaches a range of modules across the History and Military History courses. Inspired to study history by playing a lot of board/computer games, Alan incorporates them into his teaching at every opportunity. He is currently playing games which represent POWs and their experiences. You can find out more about Alan’s research about Italian and German prisoners of war in Lincolnshire here. Related courses: HistoryMilitary HistoryArchaeology & History
  6. 6. Dr W. Jack Rhoden
    I am a historian from Lancashire but crossed the Pennines over 20 years ago. I gained my PhD at the University of Sheffield for my study of ‘Caricatural representations of Louis-Napoleon Bonaparte, 1848-1871’. I then completed a post-doc based at Chatsworth House before lecturing at the University of Sheffield, Sheffield Hallam and Cardiff University.I am interested in all things nineteenth century, especially French and British political culture, political cartoons, book collecting, archive history and more recently the institutional history of this university, which began life as Lincoln Diocesan Training College in 1862.
  7. 7. Dr Martin Huggon
    Martin Huggon is a Lecturer in Archaeology and Heritage, particularly specialised in field archaeology and medieval archaeology. After spending 5 years in commercial archaeology he gained his PhD at the University of Sheffield, researching the archaeology of medieval hospitals in England and Wales, after which he began teaching archaeology at Bishop Grosseteste from 2017 onwards, initially as a Visiting and then Associate Tutor, before being made a lecturer in 2020. He is also editor of the journal Church Archaeology. His current research interests are focused upon the archaeology of later medieval religion, in particular monasteries, hospitals, friaries, and nunneries. Associated with this is a current research project on the military orders in the British Isles and Ireland, with the aim of carrying out field survey and excavation on sites across Lincolnshire and Yorkshire. He is also writing up excavations at Sulgrave Castle, one of the important Five Castle sites from across England.
  8. 8. Kimberley Edwards
    Kimberley joined Lincoln Bishop in February 2023 after being a Head of History and teaching history at a variety of schools across Lincolnshire and Yorkshire for over a decade. Kimberley has worked with a range of different schools and departments, supporting both humanities and history teams through her role as a Specialist Leader in Education. For this role Kimberley specialised in improving teaching and learning within classrooms. Kimberley has also mentored and coached several teaching trainees across her career. Kimberley has also worked as an External Examiner and Team Leader for a large exam board within the UK, ensuring consistency across marking. Kimberley is passionate about history education, especially linking research to classroom-based practice. e: Kimberley.Edwards@lincolnbishop.ac.uk
  9. 9. Dr Derwin Gregory
    Dr Derwin Gregory, Associate Professor of Conflict Archaeology, studied Geography at the University of Cambridge before working as a European Funding Officer for a local authority. In this role, Derwin travelled across the North Sea region working with local business to create international networks of mentors. Derwin then returned to academia to study a Masters in Landscape Archaeology at the University of Bristol, before joining Historic England as part of a training scheme delivered in partnership with the Chartered Institute of Archaeologists. On completion of the scheme, Derwin undertook a PhD in the Department of History at the University of East Anglia on the infrastructure of the Special Operations Executive during the Second World War. Following his viva, Derwin joined the University of East Anglia as a Partnership and Development Officer working with local authorities to research the history of the throw away society. Derwin was then appointed as a Lecturer in Modern History and was responsible for running a project on the archaeology of the United States Army Air Force during the Second World War. Working with members of armed forces community, the project supported the wellbeing of veterans, and worked with local businesses to promote the East Anglia as a tourism destination to the American market. Derwin Joined Lincoln Bishop University as Programme Leader for Archaeology in September 2020, before being appointed as Head of the School of Applied Humanities in January 2026.
  10. 10. Dr Ian Hardwick
    Dr Ian Hardwick specialises in the archaeology of later prehistory and the Roman period in Britain, together with the study of past landscapes (of all periods). He has undertaken several research projects looking at interactions between the Roman Empire and the local people(s) of central and northern Britain, together with the impacts these relations had upon surrounding frontier landscapes. Having worked for English Heritage / Historic England and in commercial archaeology on a wide range of archaeological survey projects (particularly in aerial survey), he gained his PhD at the University of York researching the region-wide impacts of the northern frontier of Roman Britannia (from Yorkshire to southern Scotland). This was followed by work as a post-doctoral research assistant on the Leverhulme Trust-funded ‘Beyond Walls: Reassessing Iron Age and Roman Encounters in Northern Britain’ project at the University of Edinburgh, and his current role as lecturer in archaeology at Lincoln Bishop University in Lincoln. His research interests include broader concepts of landscape, identity and frontier, together with how these themes interact (for Roman Britain and other empires of the ancient and more recent past).

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