James E. Bunce


James Edward Bunce was an American historian, author, and educator who specialized in British and American colonial history.
Born on August 18, 1924 in Brooklyn, New York, Bunce attended St. John's University, and then Fordham University in Bronx, New York, where he received the M.A., and Ph.D. in History. His doctoral dissertation was prepared under Professor Ross J. S. Hoffman.
Bunce taught at Seton Hall University from 1947-1949 before joining the History faculty at St. John's in 1949, where he remained until his retirement. At St. John's, he was promoted to Assistant Professor in 1953, and then to Associate Professor in 1958. Among the undergraduate and graduate courses that Bunce taught were classes in British history, seventeenth and eighteenth century American history, and British imperialism in Africa. He was a proponent of the "Imperial school" of historians who believed that one needed to study the American colonies as part of the larger British Empire.
He contributed five articles on British history to Catholic Encyclopedia for School and Home, and a chapter in Gaetano L. Vincitorio, Studies in Modern History. Bunce co-edited a Festschrift for his mentor, Ross J. S. Hoffman - Crisis in the "Great Republic": Essays Presented to Ross J. S. Hoffman, to which he also contributed an essay on "The Whigs and the Invasion Crisis of 1779". He also co-edited Long Island as America: A Documentary History to 1896. In 1983, he authored a pamphlet, Suffolk County in 1683, for the Suffolk County Tercentenary Commission. He also contributed book reviews to the Catholic Historical Review.
Bunce was living in Mount Vernon in Westchester County, New York, and died on December 22, 2015 at age 91. He was buried in Holy Cross Cemetery in Brooklyn, New York on December 30, 2015, in the family grave with his parents, Ralph and Sarah Bunce.

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