
Ryan Hall
Department/Office Information
HistoryRyan Hall is an historian of the North American West, Native American, and borderlands history. His current book project examines the long history of corruption and theft in America's "Indian Affairs" administration and asks how graft shaped U.S. westward expansion and the Indigenous experience on reservations during the nineteenth century.
His first book, Beneath the Backbone of the World: Blackfoot People and the North American Borderlands, 1720-1877, was a history of the Blackfoot (Niitsitapi) people of what is now Montana and Alberta. It told the story of how Blackfoot people used the ancient geography of their homelands to preserve their way of life during the chaotic early years of American and Canadian invasion.
Prior to coming to ±«Óãtv, Professor Hall received his Ph.D. from Yale University and taught at the University of Toronto and Northern Arizona University. During the spring 2025 semester he was in residency at the Newberry Library in Chicago as the Lloyd Lewis Fellow in American History. In the fall 2025 semester, he will be teaching courses on the Civil War (HIST314), Native American History (HIST/NAST243), and Native Oklahoma (CORE131).