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Articles 1 - 11 of 11
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Wagon Tracks Volume 34, Issue 1 (November 2019), Santa Fe Trail Association
Wagon Tracks Volume 34, Issue 1 (November 2019), Santa Fe Trail Association
Wagon Tracks
2 On the Cover: Comanche, circa 1834
4 Insights from your President; Trail News
5 Manager: Joanne's Jottings
8 SFTA Awards and Hall of Fame
11 Margaret Poisal "Walking Woman" Fitzpatrick/Wilmott/McAdams
17 Kindergarten Children on the Santa Fe Trail
27 Books: Comanche Jack Stilwell; A Grand Experiment
28 Chapter Reports
29 Membership Form
32 Calendar
Seventeenth-Century Spanish Colonial Identity In New Mexico: A Study Of Identity Practices Through Material Culture, Caroline M. Gabe
Seventeenth-Century Spanish Colonial Identity In New Mexico: A Study Of Identity Practices Through Material Culture, Caroline M. Gabe
Anthropology ETDs
This dissertation explores how seventeenth-century Spanish colonial households expressed their group identity at a regional level in New Mexico. Through the material remains of daily practice and repetitive actions, identity markers tied to adornment, technological traditions, and culinary practices are compared between 14 assemblages to test four identity models. Seventeenth-century colonists were eating a combination of Old World domesticates and wild game on colonoware and majolica serving vessels, cooking using Indigenous pottery, grinding with Puebloan style tools, and conducting household scale production and prospecting. While assemblages are consistent in basic composition, variations are present tied to socioeconomic status. This blending …
Wagon Tracks Volume 33, Issue 4 (August 2019), Santa Fe Trail Association
Wagon Tracks Volume 33, Issue 4 (August 2019), Santa Fe Trail Association
Wagon Tracks
2 On the Cover: Somewhere along the Arkansas
4 President: As I See It
5 Manager: Joanne's Jottings
6 Trail News
7 Symposium 2019
10 Education and the New Mexico Elite during Santa Fe Trail Days
16 A Map of DAR Markers across Kansas Located
20 Trip of Firsts
23 Hiram Young: Black Entrepreneur on the Santa Fe Trail
26 Books: Esteban: The African Slave Who Explored America; Las Vegas, NM: 1835-1935
28 Chapter Reports
29 Membership Form
32 Calendar
Beach Bodies: Gender And The Beach In American Culture, 1880-1940, Margaret Elena Depond
Beach Bodies: Gender And The Beach In American Culture, 1880-1940, Margaret Elena Depond
History ETDs
This dissertation argues that American beaches, within the world of leisure and pleasure, were significant contested spaces of social change and debate. Overtime, from about 1880 to 1940, social restrictions loosened at the beach, allowing men, women, and people of color to express themselves in ways that had been previously controlled, curtailed, or proscribed. The emergence of mass popular amusements at the beach attracted a wide array of the American population. Both working-class and middle-class Americans absorbed the culture of new beach attractions, such as amusement parks, piers, boardwalks, and bathhouses. In doing so, they interacted more with each other …
Complicated Lives: Free Blacks In Virginia, 1619-1865, Sherri L. Burr
Complicated Lives: Free Blacks In Virginia, 1619-1865, Sherri L. Burr
Faculty Book Display Case
Would the United States have developed differently if Virginia had not passed a law in 1670 proclaiming all subsequently arriving Africans as servants for life, or slaves? What if the state had not stripped all Free Blacks and Indians of voting rights in 1723, or outlawed interracial sex for 337 years?
Complicated Lives upends the pervasive belief that all Africans landing on the shores of Virginia beginning in late August 1619, became slaves. In reality, many of these kidnap victims received the status of indentured servants. Indeed, hundreds of thousands of free African Americans in the South and North owned …
Wagon Tracks Volume 33, Issue 2 (February 2019), Santa Fe Trail Association
Wagon Tracks Volume 33, Issue 2 (February 2019), Santa Fe Trail Association
Wagon Tracks
2 On the Cover: Winter at Fort Larned
4 President: As I See It
5 Manager: Joanne's Jottings
6 Symposium 2019
9 Trail News
10 DAR Legislation Names Fines
13 SFTA 2018 Hall of Fame Inductees
16 Dedication of Marker at Dry Route Crossing of Pawnee Fork and Boyd's Ranch
19 Taking the Leap Forward
20 Las Vegas Transformed: Under Military Occupation 1846-1851
26 Winter on the Plains
27 Books: The Chisholm Trail: Joseph McCoy's Great Gamble
28 Chapter Reports
29 Membership Form
32 Calendar
Wagon Tracks Volume 33, Issue 3 (May 2019), Santa Fe Trail Association
Wagon Tracks Volume 33, Issue 3 (May 2019), Santa Fe Trail Association
Wagon Tracks
2 On the Cover: Rock Creek Camping
4 President: As I See It
5 Manager: Joanne's Jottings
6 Trail News
7 Symposium 2019
10 Symposium 2021
12 SFTA 2019 Board of Directory Nominees
15 New Mexico Daughters Sent to School in St. Louis
20 St. Louis, the Santa Fe trade, and the Great Flood of 1844
27 Books: Coast to Coast Empire: Manifest Destiny and the New Mexico Borderlands
28 Chapter Reports
29 Membership Form
32 Calendar
Decolonizing Playwriting Through Indigenous Ceremonial Performances, Jay B. Muskett
Decolonizing Playwriting Through Indigenous Ceremonial Performances, Jay B. Muskett
Theatre & Dance ETDs
This dissertation attempts to express the importance of storytelling within the Indigenous Theater framework. It does so by first analyzing the progression of the writer’s unique upbringing and analyzing the influences of story upon an indigenous identity. I will also attempt to describe the aesthetics of Native Theater along two lines of methodology which includes praxis described and developed by Hanay Geiogamah and Rolland Meinholtz. I will also explain how the script 1n2ian tries to follow those concepts of Native Theater to create a ceremonial performance that uses a blending of both methodologies.
The Justice System Is Criminal, Raven Delfina Otero-Symphony
The Justice System Is Criminal, Raven Delfina Otero-Symphony
2020 Award Winners
No abstract provided.
Paper Presented At The National Council Of Preservation Education Conference, Samuel E. Sisneros
Paper Presented At The National Council Of Preservation Education Conference, Samuel E. Sisneros
University Libraries & Learning Sciences Faculty and Staff Publications
Historic preservation’s principles and practices directly correlate and support the charge of librarians and archivists to provide resources for the public and contribute to scholarship and community building. This paper, presented at the National Council of Preservation Education conference in Denver, Colorado (Oct. 10-12, 2019), will discuss the research methodologies, historical context and preservation issues of a recovery project of an historic site in New Mexico.
Issue No. 111: Spring 2019
La Crónica de Nuevo México
ii President’s Message
1 World War I and the Spanish Flu Pandemic in New Mexico by Rick Hendricks
6 Interview with David Holtby—A Preview of His Plenary Session of the 2019 New Mexico History Conference, “Conflicted Legacy: New Mexico and World War I”
10 Mock Peace Conference to Commemorate the 100th Anniversary of the World War I Armistice, by Judy Reinhartz
11 Book Reviews and Notes, compiled by Richard Melzer
12 HSNM News—Calls for Applications for 2019 HSNM Grant Programs
13 Anna’s Warning, edited by John Ramsay