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Sam_IconDr Samuel McLean
Social Media Editor

Samuel McLean is a recent graduate of the Department of War Studies, King’s College London. His PhD thesis examined the relationship between military institutional development and state development following regime change, specifically between the Royal Navy and the English/British state from the Restoration in 1660, to the replacement of the Articles of War in 1749. Sam’s primary research interests are in the processes of institutional definition and development. Although trained primarily as a historian, his research is heavily influenced by sociology, anthropology and computer science. At the moment, he is combining his love of history, web development and databases by focusing largely on the creation and development of database driven online research tools.

Samuel received a BA(Hons) in history from the University of Guelph, and then completed a Master of Arts in History in the Tri University Program from Wilfrid Laurier University, the University of Guelph, and the University of Waterloo under the supervision of Dr Roger Sarty. He has been twice awarded the Canadian Nautical Research Society’s Gerry Panting Award for Young Scholars. Samuel has presented at several conferences including CNRS conferences in 2010 and 2011, 2015 and 2017, the 2012 “Britain and the Sea” at the University of Plymouth, and the 2013 “Navy and the Nation 1688 to the Present” at the National Maritime Museum, the 2014 “Godly Government” Conference at the University of York and the 2017 McMullen Naval History conference at the US Naval Academy. Presentations include a September 2013 Lunchtime Lecture at the National Army Museum in London. He has had several book reviews published in Northern Mariner, as well as an essay on the academic use of social media in Argonauta.

Sam is a Councillor for the Canadian Nautical Research Society, and can be found on Twitter at @Canadian_Errant. Samuel’s Blog on this Site is “From the Gunroom” although he is currently blogging about the ADM 8 Database Project. Sam is available to consult on historical projects, conduct research, and also provide technical services such as webmaster and web development for academic projects. He can be contacted here.

 

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From the Gunroom

Lately, I’ve been thinking quite often about history as a social process, as a collaboration. Truth be told, this has been a recurring theme in my approach to history for yea[...]
As I mentioned in my last blog entry, I have a bit of a problem with my big mouth. This presents many varied challenges to my ongoing academic existence, and one in particular has [...]
It may not be the finest song to have been released in the 1980s, but “Final Countdown” fits both my 1986 birthday and the theme that I’d like to address in this [...]
On the Thursday before I teach my every-other-weekly undergraduate seminars, I have a neat, and very academic routine. After going to one of the two weekly lectures I have to atten[...]