Rockefeller donations focus of
research award
A Mississippi State research scientist is one of 37 John
D. Rockefeller Archive Center Scholars for 2000.
Ruth J. Haug of the university's Social Science
Research Center travels later this year to Sleepy Hollow,
N.Y., to further study John D. Rockefeller's
humanitarian efforts in the Magnolia State. She is the
SSRC's coordinator of administrative and research
services.
The archive center is a division of Rockefeller University
and Haug's scholarship is part of a program supporting
researchers whose projects involve substantial time at the
center.
Founder of Standard Oil and one of America's leading
philanthropists, Rockefeller (1839-1927) made grants
during the early 20th century to help fund public health
institutions in Mississippi and other states. The
International Health Board, which he established, laid the
groundwork for the agency that became the Mississippi
Department of Health.
Haug recently completed her doctorate at MSU, where her
dissertation focused on the state Health Department.
Her continuing research looks both at funding provided by
Rockefeller to Mississippi and a grant from the General
Education Board, another of his philanthropies,
specifically to MSU's Social Science Research Center.
This year's Rockefeller Archive Scholars come from
throughout the United States, as well as from the United
Kingdom, Croatia, Austria, India, Germany, and the Czech
Republic.
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