1994-1995 Resident
- George W. Boudreau
- Indiana University
- The Surest Foundation of Happiness: Education and Society in Franklin's Philadelphia
- Ana Barahona
- University of Mexico
- Mobile Genetic Elements and their Relation to Classical Genetics
- Jonathan R. Dean
- University of Chicago
- The Diplomacy of Conflict: Native American Responses to Euroamerican Incursion in the Collected Papers of Franz Boas
- Michael R. Dietrich
- University of California, Davis
- American Traditions in Physiological Genetics
- Carol F. Karlsen
- University of Michigan
- Relations of Power, the Power of Relations: Iroquois Communities in Central and Western New York 1770-1920
- Edward J. Larkin
- Stanford University
- Thomas Paine and the Politics of the American Literary Imagination
- Catherine J. Lavender-Teliha
- University of Colorado
- Revealing Reflections: Sexuality, Gender, Environment, and Ritual in Early Southwestern Ethnographic Texts
- Jean-François Lejeune
- University of Miami
- Havana and the Regular Cities of the Caribbean
- Peter C. Mancall
- University of Kansas
- Philadelphia Woman and the 18th Century Fur Trade
- Margaret H. McAleer
- Georgetown University
- Paupers, Criminals, and Gentlemen: Philadelphia's Irish, 1785-1805
- Jeffrey Mullins
- Johns Hopkins University
- The Moral Mind: Agency, Psychology, and the Mind-Body Connection in America, 1790-1860
- Stephen P. Rice
- Yale University
- Incorporating the Machine: Labor, Fatigue, and the Problem of Self- Regulation in 19th Century Industrial America, 1820-1885
- Judith Johns Schloegel
- Indiana University
- Herbert Spencer Jennings, Tracy M. Sonneborn and the Career of American Protozoan Genetics
- R. S. Stephenson
- University of Virginia
- British and American Military Society in the Trans-Allegheny West: 1754-1765
- Mart A. Stewart
- Western Washington University
- A National Weather: Meteorology and the Exploration and Settlement of the West
- Christian Warren
- Brandeis University
- Lead Poisoning in 20th Century America: The Medical and Public Health Communities' Response to the "Silent Epidemic"