蹤獲弝け

Zachary Tingley

Part-time Lecturer

Biography

Zachary Tingley is an Atlantic Canadian Historian who specializes in the history of the Gulf of Saint Lawrence Region. He is a 4th year PhD candidate at the University of New Brunswick, Saint John, his SSHRC funded dissertation Navigating a Marine Commons: The Gulf of St. Lawrence and the Challenges of Maritime Safety, 1815-1867 explores the relationships between navigational safety, governance, and the environment. Before coming to 蹤獲弝け Allison University he was a lecturer at the University of New Brunswick, Fredericton.

Publications

Peer Reviewed

 

Zachary A. Tingley and Elizabeth Mancke, Intercolonial Cooperation and the Building of St. Paul and Scatarie Island Lighthouses, 1826-2840, Acadiensis 51, no. 2 (2022): 60-90.

 

Other

 

Reflections on Space, Imagination, and Maritime Safety in the Gulf of St. Lawrence, 1820-1839, Borealia Early Canadian History,  (July 22, 2024).

 

New Brunswick Lighthouses and Colonial Spaces, 1784-1867, Borealia Early Canadian History,  (March 19, 2018).

Education

University of New Brunswick, Fredericton (MA)

Saint Thomas University, Fredericton (BA)

Teaching

Topics in Environmental History

Introduction to Environmental History

Research

Zacharys research interests are centered on the role of Atlantic Canada in the Atlantic World. He is particularly interested in the way that people conceived of maritime space and how at certain points in time people worked together to find shared solutions in this space which saved lives.

 

His current research projects include an examination of the lighthouse as a public good in Atlantic Canada during the nineteenth century, a co-authored project with Dr. Joshua MacFadyen on the Gulf of St. Lawrence Survey. Zachary is also a collaborator on the SSHRC funded project Ecologies, Knowledge, and Power in the Gulf of St. Lawrence Region c1500-Present currently being led by Dr. Joshua MacFadyen and Dr. Erin Spinney.

Grants, awards & honours

2023 York Sunbury Historical Society Authors Recognition Award as co-author of Intercolonial Cooperation and the Building of St. Paul and Scatarie Island Lighthouses, 1826-1840