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(Grand Rapids, Mich.) - Dr. John C. Pinheiro, professor of history and director of
Catholic studies at Aquinas College, has been elected to a four-year term on the National
Network Board (NNB) of the Lilly Fellows Program (LFP) in Humanities and the Arts.
The LFP seeks to strengthen the quality, and shape the character, of church-related
higher education. The NNB is comprised of twelve members who represent colleges from
across the United States. Working directly with LFP staff, the NNB helps to develop
new projects and activities, and to consider new directions for the LFP.
“It is a great honor to serve on the Lilly Fellows Program board,” said Pinheiro.
“I’ve enjoyed working with this organization over the last few years, and am excited
to continue this work as a board member. Representing Aquinas College, I know that
I will bring a unique perspective to the national conversation while also bringing
knowledge of larger scale trends back to Aquinas.”
Aquinas College joined the LFP network in 2009. In 2012, Pinheiro received a grant
that allowed Aquinas to host the LFP's Summer Seminar for College and University Teachers.
In a unique collaboration the seminar, "Teaching Peace and Reconciliation," was held
at the Corrymeela Peace and Reconciliation Centre in Northern Ireland. As a part of
this seminar, selected faculty learned about the contemporary divisions between the
Catholic and Protestant communities.
“The opportunities that come through the Lilly Fellows Program, and the programmatic
developments that result from being a part of this organization, provide great exposure
for Aquinas and allow us to contribute on a national stage,” said Aquinas Provost,
Dr. Gilda Gely. “As an expert in history and Catholic studies, John has extensive
experience in these fields and will be an excellent addition to the board.”
Pinheiro joined Aquinas’ history department in 2004. In 2008, he developed and began
directing Aquinas’ Catholic studies program. Pinheiro's publications include academic
and popular articles on the early American republic. He has also written for the History
News Service, and lectured for the Hauenstein Center for Presidential Studies and
Acton Institute for the Study of Religion and Liberty. In addition he has written
two books, Missionaries of Republicanism: A Religious History of the Mexican-American
War (Oxford University Press, 2014) and Manifest Ambition: James K. Polk and Civil-Military
Relations during the Mexican War (Praeger, 2007).