• Director, Glasscock Center for Humanities Research
  • Professor
Research Areas
  • Caribbean / Atlantic World
  • Empires & Colonialism
  • U.S. in the World
  • War & Society
  • Phone: 979-845-7151
  • Email: tbickham@tamu.edu
  • Office: Melbern G. Glasscock Building, 207
  • Document: CV
Troy Bickham

Educational Background

  • D.Phil., University of Oxford 2001

Research Interests

  • Troy Bickham is a Professor of History and currently serves as Director for the Melbern G. Glasscock Center for Humanities Research.  Having joined Texas A&M in 2003, he served in various roles at the university’s campus in Qatar from 2009-19, before returning to the Department of History.  He teaches broadly in the histories of Britain and its empire, the Atlantic world, and British colonial North America during the seventeenth, eighteenth, and early-nineteenth centuries.  He is an elected Fellow of the Royal Historical Society.

    Bickham has written on a variety of topics and published in multiple leading journals, including Past & Past PresentJournal of British StudiesJournal of Social History, and the William and Mary Quarterly.  He is the author of four monographs: Savages within the Empire (2005), which explores how encounters with Native Americans affected British culture in the eighteenth century; Making Headlines (2008), which examines British engagement with the American Revolution via the British newspaper press; and The Weight of Vengeance (2012), which is a transatlantic study of the Anglo-American War of 1812.  His most recent book, Eating the Empire (2020), investigates how food from around the world shaped British culture in the eighteenth century.  He is currently working on a project that maps the movement of news in early modern Britain and its empire.

    Areas of Speciality

    • Atlantic World
    • Britain and its Empire
    • Early America

Selected Publications

  • Eating the Empire:  Food and Society in Eighteenth-Century Britain

  • The Weight of Vengeance: The United States, the British Empire and the War of 1812

  • Making Headlines: The American Revolution as Seen Through the British Press

  • Savages Within the Empire