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Articles 1 - 17 of 17
Full-Text Articles in History
Steeples And Stacks: Religion And Steel Crisis In Youngstown By Thomas G. Fuechtmann (Review), Jacob Dorn
Steeples And Stacks: Religion And Steel Crisis In Youngstown By Thomas G. Fuechtmann (Review), Jacob Dorn
History Faculty Publications
Review of the book Steeples and Stacks: Religion and Steel Crisis in Youngstown by Thomas G. Fuechtmann.
Legacy Of Violence, Edward L. Ayers
Legacy Of Violence, Edward L. Ayers
History Faculty Publications
Sociologists continue to be vexed by the pathology of urban violence: Why is it so random, so fierce, so easily triggered? One answer may be found in our Southern past.
The Ohio Company And The Meaning Of Opportunity In The American West 1786-1795, Timothy J. Shannon
The Ohio Company And The Meaning Of Opportunity In The American West 1786-1795, Timothy J. Shannon
History Faculty Publications
Founded in 1786 by former officers of the Continental Army to promote an orderly expansion of American society westward, the Ohio Company soon succumbed to the desire of many of its investors to make money. The aims of settlement warred with the desire to make a profit through land speculation; eventually the company dissolved, a casualty of its inability to reconcile the varied interests of shareholders and to manage westward development.
(Review) The Devil At Baptism: Ritual, Theology, And Drama, Frederick S. Paxton
(Review) The Devil At Baptism: Ritual, Theology, And Drama, Frederick S. Paxton
History Faculty Publications
Reviews the book 'The Devil at Baptism: Ritual, Theology, and Drama,' by Henry Kelly.
The World The Liberal Capitalists Made (Book Review), Edward L. Ayers
The World The Liberal Capitalists Made (Book Review), Edward L. Ayers
History Faculty Publications
Review of the book, Slavery and Freedom: An Interpretation of the Old South by James Oakes. New York: Knopf, 1990.
Slavery and Freedom pursues its thesis with dogged energy. "Southerners took their definition of freedom from the liberal capitalist world which produced them and of which they remained a part," Oakes argues, "and this could only mean that southern slavery was defined as the denial of the assumptions of liberal capitalism."
Review Of Red November, Black November: Culture And Community In The Industrial-Workers Of The World, By S. Salerno, David J. Goldberg
Review Of Red November, Black November: Culture And Community In The Industrial-Workers Of The World, By S. Salerno, David J. Goldberg
History Faculty Publications
No abstract provided.
Lindbergh Makes The First Nonstop Solo Flight Across The Atlantic Ocean, John Alfred Heitmann
Lindbergh Makes The First Nonstop Solo Flight Across The Atlantic Ocean, John Alfred Heitmann
History Faculty Publications
In his high-wing monoplane, The Spirit of St. Louis, Lindbergh became the first aviator to fly solo across the Atlantic Ocean, making the trip from New York to Paris in 33.5 hours.
Goddard Launches The First Liquid Fuel Propelled Rocket, John Alfred Heitmann
Goddard Launches The First Liquid Fuel Propelled Rocket, John Alfred Heitmann
History Faculty Publications
Using liquid oxygen and gasoline as fuels, Goddard pioneered the first practical liquid fuel rocket, setting the stage for future developments in modern rocketry.
Burton Introduces Thermal Cracking For Refining Petroleum, John Alfred Heitmann
Burton Introduces Thermal Cracking For Refining Petroleum, John Alfred Heitmann
History Faculty Publications
Employing high temperatures and pressures, Burton developed a large-scale chemical cracking process, thus pioneering a method that met the need for more fuel.
Gorgas Develops Effective Methods For Controlling Mosquitoes, John Alfred Heitmann
Gorgas Develops Effective Methods For Controlling Mosquitoes, John Alfred Heitmann
History Faculty Publications
Employing recent discoveries on the role of mosquitoes in the transmission of malaria and yellow fever, Gorgas applied strict sanitary controls within the Panama region, thereby enabling construction of the canal.
(Review) Catholic Reform: From Cardinal Ximenes To The Council Of Trent, 1495-1563, Marc R. Forster
(Review) Catholic Reform: From Cardinal Ximenes To The Council Of Trent, 1495-1563, Marc R. Forster
History Faculty Publications
No abstract provided.
Review Of The Yankton Sioux, Michael L. Tate
Review Of The Yankton Sioux, Michael L. Tate
History Faculty Publications
Although numerous nonfiction works about American Indians fill juvenile sections of public libraries, most are written by educators who know little about the subtleties of Indian life. The result is a myriad of books that reflect a "Great Chiefs" approach, or worse yet, a type of composite Native American hero distill tribes for the young adult and general reading audience, Frank W. Porter III, Director of Chelsea House Foundation for the Study of American Indians, has initiated a 53-volume series of tribally and topically organized books. The length of each volume is rigidly maintained at 111 pages, and the list …
The Struggle For America's Soul: Evangelicals, Liberals, And Secularism By Robert Wuthnow (Review), Jacob Dorn
The Struggle For America's Soul: Evangelicals, Liberals, And Secularism By Robert Wuthnow (Review), Jacob Dorn
History Faculty Publications
Review of the book The Struggle for America's Soul: Evangelicals, Liberals, and Secularism by Robert Wuthnow.
Handbuch Der Byzantinistik By Otto Mazal (Review), Martin Arbagi
Handbuch Der Byzantinistik By Otto Mazal (Review), Martin Arbagi
History Faculty Publications
Review of the book Handbuch der Byzantinistik by Otto Mazal.
Intimate Colonialism: The Imperial Production Of Reproduction In Uganda, 1907-1925, Carol Summers
Intimate Colonialism: The Imperial Production Of Reproduction In Uganda, 1907-1925, Carol Summers
History Faculty Publications
British concern over the reproduction of the population and society of Uganda intensified from 1907 through 1924. Institutions and ideologies were developed to cope with an epidemic of STDs, to promote the family as a unit of reproduction, and to reform motherhood. The British colonizers and the African elite of Uganda built a population crisis from a collection of beliefs and data. The perceived severity of this crisis - and the response it evoked - changed over the years. That response began as a straightforward medical attempt to treat the ill. After the World War, though, "social hygiene" became an …
Whispers In The Golden Silence: Harry F. Byrd, Sr., John F. Kennedy, And Virginia Democrats In The 1960 Presidential Election, James R. Sweeney
Whispers In The Golden Silence: Harry F. Byrd, Sr., John F. Kennedy, And Virginia Democrats In The 1960 Presidential Election, James R. Sweeney
History Faculty Publications
In the election of 1960, Richard M. Nixon carried Virginia, the third consecutive victory for a Republican ticket in the strongly Democratic state. Senator Harry F. Byrd, Sr., the conservative Democratic power broker of Virginia, maintained what became known as a "golden silence," failing to endorse John F. Kennedy and privately working to ensure Nixon's victory. Byrd's stance angered many state Democrats, and by 1964 they broke the senator's power over the party, passing a resolution endorsing President Lyndon B. Johnson over Byrd's objections.
Reservation Leadership And The Progressive-Traditional Dichotomy: William Wash And The Northern Utes, 1865-1928, Davis Rich Lewis
Reservation Leadership And The Progressive-Traditional Dichotomy: William Wash And The Northern Utes, 1865-1928, Davis Rich Lewis
History Faculty Publications
In the early twentieth century, Indian Bureau officials noted an increasing incidence of tribal factionalism parallel to changes in Indian reservation leadership. They described this factionalism in terms of a progressive-traditional dichotomy. Modern scholars have unintentionally fallen into this semantic trap. This article explores the complexity of individual motivations and factional politics among the Northern Utes through the life of William Wash and suggests that such cultural middlemen offer a more complete picture of reservation politics.