
Faculty Member Receives Lifetime Achievement
Award For Work on Catholic History
Frank Coppa, Ph.D, founding director of St. John’s
doctoral program in Modern World History and a faculty member
since 1965, will be officially honored by one of the nation’s
leading Catholic scholarly organizations. A scholar whose impact on
the study of modern Catholic history has long been recognized on
campus, Dr. Coppa will receive the American Catholic Historical
Association’s first-ever Lifetime Distinguished Scholarship
Award at the Association’s annual banquet in Boston on January 8,
2011.
Dr. Coppa will be recognized for his many “contributions, which
have fundamentally animated the research of others, beside being
significant in their own right,” said Rev. Steven Avella, ACHA
President. Dr. Coppa retired from St. John’s in May 2010.
“He’s giant in his field,” said Konrad Tuchscherer, Ph.D.,
Associate Professor of History at St. John’s. Dr. Tuchscherer
fondly recalled that Dr. Coppa was a mentor who “brought me along
into the Doctor of Arts Program in history. In fact, the program’s
very existence today, which is thriving, is part of his legacy.”
Among his numerous accomplishments, Dr. Coppa was awarded a
Fulbright as well as National Endowment for the Humanities’ grants.
He has also written pioneering books on such controversial topics
as the life of Pope Pius the 12th and the relationship between the
Papacy and the Holocaust. In addition, he introduced a
groundbreaking course on the role of the papacy in the modern
world. “I am dedicated to clearing up misperceptions and
making 20th and 21st Century Catholic history relevant and
understandable,” he said.
Professor Coppa credits St. John’s supportive environment for
enabling him to be so productive. In particular, he cites the
University’s Catholic heritage and the library’s gift to him of the
Holy See encyclicals. “St. John’s has been a good place for me to
pursue my scholarly interests,” he said. In turn, his fellow
faculty members consider themselves lucky to have had Dr. Coppa as
a friend and colleague. “Not only is he one of the most preeminent
scholars in the field of Catholic history,” said Dolores Augustine,
Ph.D., “but, equally important, he has contributed to a general
spirit of collegiality in the History Department.”