John P. McKay, born in St. Louis, Missouri, is a professor of history and an author. He received his B.A. from Wesleyan University in 1961, and his Ph.D. from the University of California, Berkeley in 1968. He became a professor of history at the University of Illinois in 1976, where he holds the position of Professor Emeritus of history. McKay specializes in modern French history, and nineteenth-century European economic and social history.
In 1970 McKay won the Herbert Baxter Adams Prize for his book Pioneers for Profit: Foreign Entrepreneurship and Russian Industrialization, 1885-1913. He has translated Jules Michelet's The People and has written Tramways and Trolleys: The Rise of Urban Mass Transport in Europe, as well as more than a hundred articles, book chapters and reviews. He contributed to Imagining the Twentieth Century, edited by Charles C. Stewart and Peter Fritzsche, as well as Europe, 1789-1914, edited by John Merriman and Jay Winters.
Among other publications McKay have made contributions to are A History of World Societies and A History of Western Society, both published in several editions. A History of Western Society is often used in Advanced Placement European History classes.
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