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DU鈥檚 Susan Schulten Named Colorado State Historian

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As Colorado approaches its 150th year of statehood, Schulten will help shape how the state鈥檚 layered history is told鈥攚hile opening new doors for DU history students.

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On Aug. 1鈥擟olorado Day鈥 stepped into a new chapter and a new title.

As the newest Colorado State Historian and leader of History Colorado鈥檚 State Historian鈥檚 Council, Schulten is helping shape how Coloradans understand history. This professional honor is a powerful connection between the 黑料门, where Schulten has taught history since 1996, and the state it calls home.

Schulten is a nationally recognized scholar of American history, the Civil War, President Lincoln, and her greatest passion, maps. Her work explores how maps have mattered in American history, particularly how they have defined what people knew and also what they thought they knew. She points out that maps powerfully shape reality, noting the way that maps galvanized opposition to slavery in the 1850s. Her work has also illuminated how the creation of the Colorado territory was tied to the descent into the Civil War.

鈥淭he relationship between Colorado statehood and national politics also is really intimate,鈥 Schulten says, adding that the Centennial State鈥檚 three electoral votes played a pivotal part in the 1876 United States presidential election, one of the closest in American history.

Founded in 2018, the five-person听听is made up of interdisciplinary scholars who provide complementary perspectives and rotate the State Historian position every year on the anniversary of Colorado鈥檚 statehood. Schulten has served on the council since 2022.

From the classroom to the Capitol, Schulten brings with her the intellectual rigor, research experience, and public engagement that define DU鈥檚 approach to scholarship. She鈥檚 taught thousands of students how to ask hard questions about the past. Now, she鈥檒l bring that same curiosity and clarity to communities across Colorado through lectures, exhibits, public media, and education initiatives. She also hopes to continue to open doors for DU history students.

鈥淪tudents are the first thing we think about, whether it鈥檚 in the classroom or connecting them to internships in 黑料门 or around the country,鈥 Schulten says. 鈥淭his appointment is just one more opportunity to continue that work.鈥

The appointment also coincides with Colorado celebrating its 150th year of statehood in 2026, just as the U.S. marks its 250th year of independence. This November, History Colorado will unveil an exhibit marking 50 turning points in American history, including the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo, which ended the Mexican-American War and ceded land to the U.S., and the inkwell used by Ulysses S. Grant and Robert E. Lee at the Appomattox Court House, where the Army of Northern Virginia surrendered and effectively ended the Civil War.听

Schulten鈥檚 classes this quarter have already benefited from the work with History Colorado, and she appreciates how DU鈥檚 latitude and freedom allow her to teach broadly about American history.

鈥淏eing on the State Historian鈥檚 Council and seeing those 50 turning points has been really instructive for me,鈥 Schulten says. 鈥淚n American history, nothing is inevitable. There are these moments that have serious and long-lasting implications. That has given me renewed appreciation for the way that people's actions matter.鈥

Read more about Schulten at and .

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