Nick Syrett

Position title: Chair & Professor, Gender & Women's Studies

Pronouns: he/him

Email: nsyrett@wisc.edu

Address:
3327 Sterling Hall

Nicholas L. Syrett is Professor and Chair of the Department of Gender and Women’s Studies. He is also coeditor of the Journal of the History of Sexuality. He holds an AB in Women’s and Gender Studies from Columbia University and a PhD in American Culture from the University of Michigan.

Syrett studies gender, sexuality, age, and childhood in the nineteenth- and twentieth-century United States. He is a coeditor of Age in America: The Colonial Era to the Present (NYU Press, 2015) and the author of four books: The Company He Keeps: A History of White College Fraternities (North Carolina, 2009), American Child Bride: A History of Minors and Marriage in the United States (North Carolina, 2016), An Open Secret: The Family Story of Robert and John Gregg Allerton (Chicago, 2021), and most recently The Trials of Madame Restell: Nineteenth-Century America’s Most Infamous Female Physician and the Campaign to Make Abortion a Crime (New Press, 2023), the latter of which was supported by an ACLS fellowship. He has published articles in the American Historical Review, American Studies, Genders, GLQ, Historical Reflections/Réflexions Historiques, the Journal of the Gilded Age and Progressive Era, the Journal of the History of Childhood and Youth, the Journal of the History of Sexuality, and the Pacific Historical Review.

He is currently beginning a project on the history of illegitimate birth and the regulation and consequences of bastardy in the nineteenth- and twentieth-century United States. He is also coediting Queer American History: A Reader in Documents and Essays (with Amy Sueyoshi), to be published by the University of Chicago Press in 2026 and The Cambridge History of Sexuality in the United States (with Jen Manion), to be published by Cambridge in 2027.

Syrett has served as president of the Society for the History of Children and Youth and co-chair of the LGBTQ+ History Association (formerly the Committee on LGBT History), for which he also cochaired its inaugural three conferences. He has been interviewed about his work in venues like Time, Newsweek, the New York Times, NPR’s Morning Edition, and Teen Vogue, among others.

Selected Publications:

The Trials of Madame Restell: Nineteenth-Century America’s Most Infamous Female Physician and the Campaign to Make Abortion a Crime (New York: The New Press, 2023). 

An Open Secret: The Family Story of Robert and John Gregg Allerton (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2021).  

American Child Bride: A History of Minors and Marriage in the United States (Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 2016). 

The Company He Keeps: A History of White College Fraternities (Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 2011). 

  • For forty years in the mid-nineteenth century, “Madame Restell,” the nom de guerre of the most successful female physician in America, sold birth control medication, attended women during their pregnancies, delivered their children, and performed abortions in a series of clinics run out of her home in New York City. It was the abortions that made her famous. “Restellism” became the term her detractors used to indict her.

    Restell began practicing when abortion was largely unregulated in most of the United States, including New York. But as a sense of disquiet arose about single women flocking to the city for work, greater sexual freedoms, changing views of the roles of motherhood and childhood, and fewer children being born to white, married, middle-class women, Restell came to stand for everything that threatened the status quo. From 1829 onward, restrictions on abortion began to put Restell in legal jeopardy. For much of this period she prevailed—until she didn’t.

    A story that is all too relevant to the current attempts to criminalize abortion in our own age, The Trials of Madame Restell paints an unforgettable picture of the changing society of nineteenth-century New York and brings Restell to the attention of a whole new generation of women whose fundamental rights are under siege.

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  • Syrett, N. An Open Secret: The Family Story of Robert and John Gregg Allerton. University of Chicago Press, 2021.

    In 1922 Robert Allerton—described by the Chicago Tribune as the “richest bachelor in Chicago”—met a twenty-two-year-old University of Illinois architecture student named John Gregg, who was twenty-six years his junior. Virtually inseparable from then on, they began publicly referring to one another as father and son within a couple years of meeting. In 1960, after nearly four decades together, and with Robert Allerton nearing ninety, they embarked on a daringly nonconformist move: Allerton legally adopted the sixty-year-old Gregg as his son, the first such adoption of an adult in Illinois history.

    An Open Secret tells the striking story of these two iconoclasts, locating them among their queer contemporaries and exploring why becoming father and son made a surprising kind of sense for a twentieth-century couple who had every monetary advantage but one glaring problem: they wanted to be together publicly in a society that did not tolerate their love. Deftly exploring the nature of their design, domestic, and philanthropic projects, Nicholas L. Syrett illuminates how viewing the Allertons as both a same-sex couple and an adopted family is crucial to understanding their relationship’s profound queerness. By digging deep into the lives of two men who operated largely as ciphers in their own time, he opens up provocative new lanes to consider the diversity of kinship ties in modern US history.

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  • Syrett, N. American Child Bride: A History of Minors and Marriage in the United States. University of North Carolina Press, 2016.

    Most in the United States likely associate the concept of the child bride with the mores and practices of the distant past. But Nicholas L. Syrett challenges this assumption in his sweeping and sometimes shocking history of youthful marriage in America. Focusing on young women and girls — the most common underage spouses — Syrett tracks the marital history of American minors from the colonial period to the present, chronicling the debates and moral panics related to these unions.

    Although the frequency of child marriages has declined since the early twentieth century, Syrett reveals that the practice was historically far more widespread in the United States than is commonly thought. It also continues to this day: current estimates indicate that 9 percent of living American women were married before turning eighteen. By examining the legal and social forces that have worked to curtail early marriage in America — including the efforts of women’s rights activists, advocates for children’s rights, and social workers — Syrett sheds new light on the American public’s perceptions of young people marrying and the ways that individuals and communities challenged the complex legalities and cultural norms brought to the fore when underage citizens, by choice or coercion, became husband and wife.

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  • Syrett, N. The Company He Keeps: A History of White College Fraternities. University of North Carolina Press, 2011.

    Tracing the full history of traditionally white college fraternities in America from their days in antebellum all-male schools to the sprawling modern-day college campus, Nicholas Syrett reveals how fraternity brothers have defined masculinity over the course of their 180-year history. Based on extensive research at twelve different schools and analyzing at least twenty national fraternities, The Company He Keeps explores many factors — such as class, religiosity, race, sexuality, athleticism, intelligence, and recklessness — that have contributed to particular versions of fraternal masculinity at different times. Syrett demonstrates the ways that fraternity brothers’ masculinity has had consequences for other students on campus as well, emphasizing the exclusion of different groups of classmates and the sexual exploitation of female college students.

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