Science and Commerce in Early America with Laura Clerx

In this episode of Historians & Their Histories, we speak with Laura Clerx, a PhD candidate in the History Department at Boston College. Laura discusses her research into the connections between scientific inquiry and commercial enterprise in the post-revolutionary United States. She explores why the same figures who populated early scientific societies were also the ones spearheading major economic projects and how the drive to build a national economy shaped the very questions early American scientists asked. We also hear about her unique path from an undergraduate degree in evolutionary biology to the field of history and learn how the meaning of the word "science" has changed over time. 

Laura Clerx is the recipient of an Andrew W. Mellon Fellowship from the MHS.

To learn more about MHS fellowships and how to apply, please visit this page.

Episode transcript

Episode Special Guest:

Laura Clerx headshot sq.jpg

Laura Clerx is a PhD candidate at Boston College and the senior editorial assistant at the Journal of the Early Republic. She is currently completing a dissertation entitled "Nature's Properties: Science and Commerce in Early America, 1780-1850."

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