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Articles 1 - 11 of 11
Full-Text Articles in History
Settler Colonial Strategies And Indigenous Resistance On The Great Lakes Lumber Frontier, Theodore Karamanski
Settler Colonial Strategies And Indigenous Resistance On The Great Lakes Lumber Frontier, Theodore Karamanski
Theodore J. Karamanski
The geographic and economic setting of the nineteenth century Upper Great Lakes region created unique challenges to American settler colonialism and encounters with the Indigenous people of this land of lakes and forests. Many Anishinaabeg bands responded creatively through the use of Christianity, education, and American law in an attempt to fortify their presence in the region. European Americans, who sought to appropriate the wealth of the Upper Midwest’s vast stands of hardwood and pine forests, only seldom needed to resort to guns to take control of the land. Instead of a war of conquest they entangled Anishinaabeg property owners …
The Beginning Of Public History Ethics In The Usa, Theodore J. Karamanski
The Beginning Of Public History Ethics In The Usa, Theodore J. Karamanski
Theodore J. Karamanski
No abstract provided.
What Price History: Politics, Commercialism, And Urban Preservation, Theodore J. Karamanski
What Price History: Politics, Commercialism, And Urban Preservation, Theodore J. Karamanski
Theodore J. Karamanski
Historic preservation is the child of the city. In North America, the United States Conference of Mayors served as midwife to the birth of the modern historic preservation movement, when in January 1966, it issued the report With a Heritage So Rich. The report’s authors argued that in losing historic buildings and districts to urban renewal America was severing a vital link to the past. “Connections between successive generations of Americans—concretely linking their ways of life—are broken by demolition. Sources of memory cease to exist.” Part coffee-table book and part policy proposal, the volume laid the foundation for the …
A Catholic History Of The Heartland: The Rise And Fall Of Mid-America: A Historical Review, Theodore J. Karamanski
A Catholic History Of The Heartland: The Rise And Fall Of Mid-America: A Historical Review, Theodore J. Karamanski
Theodore J. Karamanski
This article traces the evolution of a historical journal sponsored by Loyola University Chicago from 1918 to 2002 that in part focused on the Catholic history of the Midwest region. In 1918 in response to the centennial of Illinois statehood the Illinois Catholic Historical Review was founded. Its purpose to ensure that the role of Catholics in the formation and growth of Illinois was properly acknowledged. It came at a time when the Catholic Church was widely identified with foreign-born immigrants. In 1929 the journal changed its name to Mid-America: An Historical Review. Inspired by the work of Herbert Eugene …
A Midwesterner's Reflections On Teaching Public History In China, Theodore J. Karamanski
A Midwesterner's Reflections On Teaching Public History In China, Theodore J. Karamanski
Theodore J. Karamanski
No abstract provided.
Monuments To A Lost Nation, Theodore Karamanski
Monuments To A Lost Nation, Theodore Karamanski
Theodore J. Karamanski
With the bright orange glow of the setting sun at their backs, the chiefs and headmen of the Potawatomi people faced the commissioners of the United States government. Most were grave and morose as they signed the treaty ceding their homelands in the Chicago area and agreeing to removal beyond the Mississippi. The 1833 Treaty of Chicago was one of a series of agreements that terminated the native title to the American heartland and seemed to end Native American presence in the life and culture of Chicago. But a rediscovery of the city's native roots emerged in the late nineteenth …
A Catholic History Of The Heartland: The Rise And Fall Of Mid-America: A Historical Review, Theodore Karamanski
A Catholic History Of The Heartland: The Rise And Fall Of Mid-America: A Historical Review, Theodore Karamanski
Theodore J. Karamanski
No abstract provided.
Great Lakes Navigation And Navigational Aids: Historical Context Study, Theodore J. Karamanski
Great Lakes Navigation And Navigational Aids: Historical Context Study, Theodore J. Karamanski
Theodore J. Karamanski
No abstract provided.
Museums, Monuments, And National Parks: Toward A New Genealogy Of Public History, Theodore Karamanski
Museums, Monuments, And National Parks: Toward A New Genealogy Of Public History, Theodore Karamanski
Theodore J. Karamanski
No abstract provided.
State Citizenship As A Tool Of Indian Persistence, Theodore J. Karamanski
State Citizenship As A Tool Of Indian Persistence, Theodore J. Karamanski
Theodore J. Karamanski
No abstract provided.
History, Memory, And Historic Districts In Chicago, Theodore J. Karamanski
History, Memory, And Historic Districts In Chicago, Theodore J. Karamanski
Theodore J. Karamanski
Across America, National Register Historic Districts have done a better job helping to preserve building stock and stabilize communities than they have of meeting the articulated goal of With a Heritage So Rich, the foundational 1966 study that gave birth to the National Register of Historic Places. According to that report, historic sites were to “give a sense of orientation to our society” and help to implant in people “values of time and place.” This article looks at the evolution of historic districts in Chicago, Illinois through the lens of public memory. It explores the relationship between “official” memory and …