2013 OAH Annual Meeting Program

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oah 2013

San Francisco

annual meeting entangled histories A pr i l 11–14 • H i lton Sa n F r a nc i s c o


DO NOT PRINT [publication: OAH Annual Meeting Program (Jan 2013) — placement: Cover 2 — ad size: 7.5 x 10] DO NOT PRINT

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welcome

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here are few cities in the United States where members of the OAH prefer to meet more than the City by the Bay. San Francisco as a conference city or as a tourist destination is hard to beat—it has something for every visitor. Our 2013 program, likewise, has something for every OAH conferee. The program committee, so ably cochaired by Tom Guglielmo and Erika Lee, assembled sessions, panels, workshops, and plenaries that link to nearly every subfield of American history. A large number link directly to the conference theme of “Entangled Histories,” which explores the complexities, intersections, and tensions that characterize so much of US history.

The cavalcade of sessions and panels touch on a multitude of topics ranging from social, cultural, labor, and political history to race, ethnicity, gender, historical memory, and many other subjects. Sprinkled throughout the program as well are sessions on public history, international relations, and the history of education and technology in America. In addition, the Local Resource Committee, orchestrated with great care by Carol McKibben, has organized a wonderful and diverse set of tours and visits to important historical sites in San Francisco that we know will interest conferees. Take your pick: a walking tour of depression-era murals in Coit Tower with commentary by a distinguished historian of San Francisco and California; a tour of the historic architecture of Chinatown by a person unsurpassed

Linda A. Cicero / Stanford News Service

Although we cannot promise ideal California weather in April, we can promise an engaging and rich intellectual experience. Plenary sessions, featuring an outstanding cast of colleagues, will consider two different topics. The first, titled “Freedom Struggles”—in commemoration of the Emancipation Proclamation signed by President Abraham Lincoln 150 years ago—will address benchmark developments in the long history of Americans’ pursuit of equality. A second plenary will focus on the topic of “corporations in American life,” a subject of enormous importance to the history of industrial capitalism in the United States. It is a topic with a contemporary resonance that matches its historical significance. Both plenary sessions reflect “entangled histories,” the first about race, ideologies of difference, and power, and the other about wealth, class, and power.

in knowledge about the area; a bus tour of the Mission District’s world-famous murals; or a must-see tour of the recently renovated Angel Island Immigration Station. Interested in a tour of downtown San Francisco or of the Castro with a visit to the GLBT Museum? We have organized these tours too. The world-class city of San Francisco awaits you. Go to dinner in one of the city’s many colorful districts, walk or bike across the Golden Gate Bridge (which celebrated its 75th anniversary in 2012), or have your morning coffee in Union Square watching San Franciscans scamper by on their way to work. It is for me, of course, a special coincidence that my tenure as OAH president closes with the conference in a city so special and so close to home. Welcome to San Francisco! —Al Camarillo (Stanford University), OAH President

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attractions in san francisco

Above: The beautiful “painted ladies,” a row of traditional Victorian houses. Below: A panoramic view of the Golden Gate Bridge, which celebrated its 75th anniversary in 2012.

Photos courtesy San Francisco Convention and Visitors Bureau

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attractions in san francisco

Photos courtesy San Francisco Convention and Visitors Bureau

Above: A view of Fisherman’s Wharf. Left: Fresh Dungeness crab from Fisherman’s Wharf. Right: The popular rainbow flag is displayed proudly all around San Francisco.

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schedule of events

2013 OAH Annual Meeting Board and Committee Meetings Registration and Information Thursday, April 

Thursday, April 11 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8:00 am to 5:00 pm

8:00 am to 6:00 pm

Friday, April 12 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8:00 am to 5:00 pm

OAH Executive Board

Saturday, April 13. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8:00 am to 5:00 pm

Friday, April 

Sunday, April 14 (information only) . . 8:00 am to 11:00 am

7:30 am to 9:30 am OAH Committee Chairs

Exhibit Hall Hours*

8:00 am to 6:00 pm

Thursday, April 11 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6:00 pm to 7:30 pm

OAH 2014 Program Committee

Friday, April 12 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9:00 am to 5:00 pm

8:00 am to 10:00 am

Saturday, April 13 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9:00 am to 5:00 pm

OAH Committee on the Status of Women in the Historical Profession

*Bidding for the silent auction items will be open during the same hours as the Exhibit Hall, with the exception of Saturday, when bidding ends at 3:00 pm.

OAH Committee on Teaching

10:00 am to 1:00 pm OAH Nominating Board

Sessions and Events Thursday, April 

10:30 am to 12:30 pm

Concurrent Session 1 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1:00 pm to 2:30 pm

OAH International Committee

Concurrent Session 2 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2:45 pm to 4:15 pm

OAH Membership Committee

Plenary Session . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4:30 pm to 6:00 pm

11:00 am to 1:00 pm

Opening Reception . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6:00 pm to 7:30 pm

OAH/JAAS Japan Historians Collaborative Committee

Friday, April 

1:00 pm to 3:00 pm OAH Committee on Public History OAH Leadership Advisory Council

Concurrent Session 1 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8:30 am to 10:00 am Concurrent Session 2 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10:30 am to 12:00 pm Concurrent Session 3 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1:45 pm to 3:15 pm Plenary Session . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3:30 pm to 5:30 pm

Saturday, April 

Saturday, April 

8:00 am to 10:00 am

Concurrent Session 1 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8:30 am to 10:00 am

OAH ALANA Committee

Concurrent Session 2 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10:30 am to 12:00 pm

OAH Committee on Disability and Disability History

Concurrent Session 3 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1:45 pm to 3:15 pm

8:00 am to 12:30 pm

Business Meeting, OAH Awards Ceremony,

Journal of American History Editorial Board

and Presidential Address . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3:30 pm to 5:30 pm

10:30 am to 12:30 pm OAH LBGTQ Committee Meeting

1:00 pm to 3:00 pm OAH Committee on Community Colleges

Closing Reception . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5:30 pm to 7:00 pm

Sunday, April  Concurrent Session 1 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8:30 am to 10:00 am Concurrent Session 2 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10:30 am to 12:00 pm

OAH Committee on National Park Service Collaboration

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2013 oah annual meeting

Entangled Histories: Connections, Crossings, and Constraints in U.S. History Thursday to Sunday, April 11 to 14, 2013 Hilton San Francisco Union Square 2013 OAH Program Committee Thomas A. Guglielmo, George Washington University, Cochair Erika Lee, University of Minnesota, Cochair Matthew Countryman, University of Michigan Donald Fixico, Arizona State University Kelly Lytle HernĂĄndez, University of California, Los Angeles David Igler, University of California, Irvine Joe W. Trotter, Carnegie Mellon University Kariann Akemi Yokota, Yale University

Table of Contents Sponsors . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6 Registration . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8 Lodging . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9 Travel . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10 Highlights . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11 The Civil War at 150 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13 Meals . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14

2013 OAH Local Resource Committee Carol Lynn McKibben, Stanford University, Chair Marianne Babal, Wells Fargo Historical Services Isabel M. Barraza, Mission Cultural Center for Latino Arts Mark Brilliant, University of California, Berkeley Clayborne Carson, Stanford University Pedro Castillo, University of California, Santa Cruz Robert W. Cherny, San Francisco State University James Rawls, Diablo Valley College Jennie Emire Rodriguez, Mission Cultural Center for Latino Arts

Receptions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18 Map of San Francisco . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20 Tours. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21 Family-Friendly Attractions. . . . . . . . . . 25 Workshops . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 26 Exhibitors Index & Floorplan . . . . . . . . 30 Map of San Francisco Hilton . . . . . . . . . 32 Sessions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 33 Thursday . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 33 Friday . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 38

The 2013 OAH Annual Meeting Program is a publication of the Organization of American Historians, 112 North Bryan Avenue, Bloomington, IN 47408. The papers and commentaries presented during this meeting are intended solely for those in attendance and should not be recorded, copied, or otherwise reproduced, in whole or in part, without the consent of the presenters and the Organization of American Historians. Recording, copying, or reproducing a paper without the consent of the author is a violation of common law copyright. To view policies for recording events at the OAH Annual Meeting, see page 8. On the cover: A detailed view of the anchoring cable from the San Francisco Oakland Bay Bridge spanning San Francisco Bay. Library of Congress, Prints and Photographs Division.

Saturday. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 52 Sunday . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 65

Participant Index . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 72 OAH Distinguished Members. . . . . . . . 76 Advertisers Index . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 92 Preregistration Form . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 159

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sponsors

The OAH thanks the following…

The History Channel

Stanford University Department of History, Office of the Provost, School of Humanities and Sciences

Mission Cultural Center for Latino Arts

University of Southern California, Department of History

Harvard University, Department of History

Yale University, Department of History

Columbia University, Department of History

Penn State University, Department of History

University of Massachusetts Amherst Department of History University of California, Santa Cruz, Department of History

The University of Texas at Austin, Department of History University of California, Berkeley, Department of History

Southern Association for Women Historians

Coalition for Western Women’s History Western Association of Women Historians

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sponsors

…2013 OAH Annual Meeting Sponsors

Oxford University Press

Bedford/St. Martin’s

California Historical Society

Sonoma State University, North Bay International Studies Project

University of California, Davis, Department of History

University of Nevada, Las Vegas, Department of History

University of California, Irvine, Department of History

Business History Conference California State University, Fullerton, Department of American Studies Coordinating Council for Women in History University of Delaware, Department of History Occidental College, Department of History

University of California, Los Angeles, Department of History University of California, Santa Barbara, Department of Feminist Studies Women in the West Project, Autry National Center Pomona College, Department of History

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registration Preregister using the form on page 159 of this program or on the secure Web site at http://annualmeeting.oah.org. Preregistration is available through April 1, 2013. Paper forms will be accepted if postmarked or faxed on or before that date. All registrations received after April 1, 2013, will be handled onsite. Registration is not transferable. Mail the completed form with a check, a money order, or credit card information to: Annual Meeting Preregistration, OAH, 112 North Bryan Ave., Bloomington, Indiana 474084141. The OAH accepts checks, money orders, VISA, MasterCard, Discover, or American Express for preregistration and onsite registration. Registrations without complete payment will be held until payment is received.

Registration Rates Preregistration (Through March , ) OAH Member . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$150 OAH Member Student . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$85 Nonmember. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$190 Nonmember Student . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$105 Unemployed . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$85 Retired . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$85 One Day Only . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$85 Guest . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$65

Onsite Registration (After April , ) OAH Member . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$170 OAH Member Student . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$100 Nonmember. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$210 Nonmember Student . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$120 Unemployed . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$100 Retired . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$100 One Day Only . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$95 Guest . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$95

Guest Registration The OAH encourages attendees to bring guests and family members to the meeting. For registration purposes, a guest is a nonhistorian who would not otherwise attend the meeting except to accompany the attendee. Guests receive a convention badge that allows them to attend sessions and receptions, and to enter the exhibit hall.

Convention Materials Convention badges, tickets, and the Onsite Program can be picked up at the preregistration counter at the Hilton San Francisco, Grand Ballroom level.

One-Day Registration Attendees choosing to register for one day will receive a badge indicating the date for which they are registered and will receive access to the exhibit hall on that day.

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Teacher and Student Registration Special rates to attend the annual meeting are available for professors or high school teachers and their students. If you would like to bring a group to the meeting, please contact the meetings department (meetings@oah.org) for registration rates.

Cancellations Registration cancellation requests must be submitted in writing. Requests postmarked or e-mailed on or before April 1, 2013, will receive a refund less a $25 processing fee.

Consent to Use Photographic Images Registration and attendance at, or participation in, OAH meetings and other activities constitutes an agreement by the registrant to the OAH’s present and future use and distribution of the registrant’s or attendee’s image or voice in photographs, video, electronic reproductions, and audio of such events and activities.

Policy for Recording Events At its fall 2011 meeting, the OAH Executive Board approved the following policy for obtaining permission to audio or video record sessions at OAH annual meetings: ◆ Requests to record sessions or events must be submitted to the OAH office in advance of the meeting; ◆ Upon receipt, the OAH office informs each panelist individually of the request; ◆ Each panelist must submit a response in writing to the OAH office; and ◆ If one panelist does not wish to be recorded, then the request to record the event is denied. (The OAH office shall not disclose which panelist(s) declined permission.) Requests should include your full contact information, including the type of recording (audio or video), as well as the purpose of the recording. Questions or requests for recording must be sent to the OAH communications office (oah@oah.org). Please do not contact the participants directly. Recording, copying, and/ or reproducing a presentation at meetings and conferences of the Organization of American Historians without receiving prior approval is a violation of common law copyright.

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lodging (The hotel’s direct phone number is listed to the left.) Be certain to mention the OAH when making reservations. Rates do not include taxes, which are currently 15.58%. All reservations must be accompanied by a first-night room deposit, or guaranteed with a major credit card. Reservations must be cancelled no later than 72 hours prior to the scheduled arrival date to receive a refund of the deposit. The deadline for reservations at the Hilton San Francisco Union Square is March 4, 2013.

Amenities Available at the Hilton San Francisco Union Square Photos courtesy San Francisco Hilton Union Square

Hilton San Francisco Union Square  O’Farrell Street San Francisco, CA  Tel: () - | Fax: () - http://www.hiltonsanfranciscohotel.com/ The 2013 Annual Meeting will be held at the Hilton San Francisco Union Square, located in the heart of downtown San Francisco. Staying at the conference hotel is convenient and provides a great opportunity for networking. The San Francisco Hilton offers easy access to Nob Hill, Chinatown, the theater district, and all the shopping, dining, and entertainment opportunities available at Union Square. It is easily accessible via public transportation, such as Muni, BART, and the famous San Francisco cable cars.

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Self-parking: $53.58 (per 24 hours) Valet parking: $59.28 (per 24 hours) One isolated smoking floor Onsite business center Computer workstations High-speed Internet Children’s activities Cribs, high chairs Mini refrigerators ($15.00 per stay) Rollaway bed ($25.00 per mogjt) Automated Teller Machine (ATM) Car rental desk Fully equipped and accessible health club Accessible rooms, business center, and swimming pool Assistive listening devices for meetings

Reservations The Hilton San Francisco Union Square offers three options for guestrooms: standard rooms ($219/night), deluxe rooms ($239/night), and tower rooms ($279/night). To make a reservation by phone, call Hilton Reservations at (800) 445-8667.

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travel Traveling to San Francisco The city of San Francisco is served by two major airports, an extensive public transportation system, and many private taxi, ferry, and shuttle services. For a complete list of transportation options in and around San Francisco, visit http://www.sanfrancisco.travel/transportation/

By Air San Francisco International Airport (SFO) offers nonstop flights to more than seventy-four cities in the United States on seventeen domestic airlines. Visit SFO online (http:// www.flysfo.com) for up-to-the-minute departure and arrival information, airport maps, ground transportation, and more. Oakland International Airport (OAK) is served by most major United States carriers, with more than 150 daily departures. Visit the airport’s Web site (http://www.flyoakland.com) for details about ground transportation from OAK.

By Train Amtrak trains make stops at several locations in the Bay Area. Emeryville Station (EMY) is nearest to San Francisco, with connecting thruway bus service available to various locations in the city. The closest station to the San Francisco Hilton Union Square is the San Francisco Convention Center Bus Stop (SFM) at 747 Howard Street. Visit Amtrak online (http://www.amtrak.com) for complete details.

By Bus Greyhound Lines stops in San Francisco at 200 Folsom Street. Standard routes and the new Greyhound Express routes are available. Visit http://www.greyhound.com for more imformation.

By Car San Francisco is served by US-101 from the North and South, I-80 from the northeast, and I-280 from the South. Interstate 5 connects the northern and southern parts of California with the Bay Area via I-580 from the South or I-80. Several public parking lots are available near the Hilton San Francisco. Public parking options nearest the hotel are offered by the following companies: ◆ ProPark ◆ San Francisco Parking ◆ EZ Public Parking ◆ Central Public Parking

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Getting Around in San Francisco Bay Area Rapid Transit System (BART) BART provides fast, reliable transportation to and from the San Francisco and Oakland airports, as well as to destinations throughout the Bay Area. The Powell Street BART station is a short walk from the Hilton San Francisco. BART trains run every fifteen minutes from 4:00 am to midnight on weekdays, every twenty minutes from 6:00 am to midnight on Saturdays, and 8:00 am to midnight on Sundays. Real-time departure information is available at http://www.bart.gov.

San Francisco Municipal Railway (Muni) Muni provides transit service within the city and county of San Francisco twenty-four hours a day, seven days a week. Muni operates approximately 80 routes throughout San Francisco with stops within 2 blocks of 90 percent of all residences in the city. For more information, including routes, maps, schedules, and fares, visit Muni online at (http://www.sfmta.com).

Shuttle Services from the Airports Shared-ride vans provide service from both airports to the Hilton San Francisco. Depending on the number of passengers, shared-ride vans may make multiple stops. From San Francisco International Airport (SFO), van service is available on a walk-up basis, and pickup is available on the departures level from the roadway center island at all terminals. Rides from the hotel to the airport require advance reservations. Shared-ride vans serving San Francisco and Oakland airports include: ◆ Airport Express (415) 775-5121 ◆ Bayporter Express (415) 467-1800 ◆ Quake City Shuttle (415) 255-4899 ◆ SuperShuttle (415) 558-8500

Taxi Taxis are available at airport terminals twenty-four hours per day. Fares from San Francisco International Airport (SFO) to the Hilton San Francisco average $41 one way. Fares from Oakland International Airport average $60 one way.

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highlights State of the Field Sessions

Opening Night in the Exhibit Hall

These sessions are designed to present the historiography of a subfield and its evolution during the past ten to twenty years. Rather than focus on the cutting-edge developments that might be found in regular OAH meeting sessions, subject experts address how the field arrived where it is today. State-of-the-field sessions are aimed at scholars and teachers who are not already deeply immersed in a particular field, those who would like to catch up with the journal literature, those who wish to get up to speed in a new area, or those who may want to incorporate a particular historiography into their teaching.

Don’t miss this popular event, which opens the Exhibit Hall on the first night of the meeting. Enjoy drinks, hors d’oeuvres, and a chance to meet with friends while browsing the exhibits. Take this opportunity to visit and talk with exhibitor representatives, plan your bookshopping strategy, or meet colleagues before dinner.

What the OAH Can Do for You: Helping Newcomers Navigate the OAH The OAH staff and the OAH Membership Committee invite new members and firsttime meeting attendees to discuss how to get the most out of the annual meeting and the organization. This session is hosted by the OAH Membership Committee.

OAH Business Meeting and Awards Ceremony

2013 OAH Silent Auction

The OAH Business Meeting will be held immediately preceding the OAH Awards Ceremony and Presidential Address. All OAH members are encouraged to attend the meeting and participate in the governance of the organization. Proposals for action by the OAH shall be made in the form of ordinary motions or resolutions. All such motions or resolutions must be submitted at least thirty days prior to the meeting to OAH Executive Director Katherine M. Finley and the OAH Parliamentarian Jonathan Lurie, c/o OAH, 112 North Bryan Avenue, Bloomington, IN 47408.

Join us for the OAH Silent Auction in the Exhibit Hall. This online and onsite auction will offer items such as signed books from OAH exhibitors, travel packages at historic hotels throughout the United States, artwork, and restaurant gift certificates. Auction items will be shared online prior to the meeting so you can check out the deals before bids open on Thursday, April 11, at the opening reception in the grand ballroom at the Hilton San Francisco Union Square. Winning bids will be announced during the OAH Awards Ceremony on Saturday, April 13, at 4:00 pm.

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highlights

Exhibitor Talks Don’t miss out on the OAH’s newest learning opportunity during the 2013 Annual Meeting. Stop by the Exhibit Hall for one or more of these thirty-minute informal conversations and demonstrations, which highlight the many new products and services available to educators and researchers. A schedule of Exhibitor Talks will be available online prior to the meeting and in the Onsite Program.

OAH Career Center The OAH Career Center is the premier electronic recruitment resource for the American history profession. Employers and recruiters use the service to find the best American historians for academic and public history positions throughout the world. Whether you’re looking for a new job or ready to start your career, the OAH Career Center can help find the opportunity that is right for you. Stop by the OAH booth in the Exhibit Hall for a demonstration of the services offered through the Career Center or to begin your search.

traditional university teaching to sheep farming, freelance writing/editing and training/consulting for corporate clients, small-town economic development, and career coaching. Dr. Duttro is a Master Trainer of Dependable Strengths and a Career Development Facilitator Instructor for the National Career Development Association. She coauthored Seattle Job Source, edited a special issue of the Career Planning and Adult Development Journal, and has written widely for JobHunt.org, for CareerThoughtLeaders.com, and her own blog.

Career Sessions In addition to career coaching in the exhibit hall, the OAH put together several sessions this year that focus on you and your professional life. Sessions will focus on research and publishing in the digital age, oral history methodology, teaching history at the community college, working with the National Park Service, and jobs opportunities outside academia. Career sessions are noted in the Annual Meeting Program with a Í.

To facilitate your search, Dr. Kate Duttro will be available at the Career Center for questions and guidance. She will be leading two career sessions, as well as a question-andanswer session, at the Career Center booth from 9:00 am to 11:00 am on Friday, and 1:00 pm to 3:00 pm on Saturday. Dr. Duttro’s current work as a career coach to recovering academics grows from her own varied career, ranging from

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highlights

The Civil War at 150 The Politics of Self-Destruction in Civil War America Friday, April 12, 1:45 pm to 3:15 pm Chair: David Silkenat, North Dakota State University “Bent on Suicide”: The Political Rhetoric of Suicide in Civil War-Era America Diane Miller Sommerville, State University of New York at Binghamton “Lifeless now from Rebel hands”: Suicidal States and the Politics of Emancipation Kathleen Brian, George Washington

Teaching the Civil War in the Eighth Grade: The History Blueprint Approach

Rather Die Freemen Than Live to Be Slaves: Black Suicide and Militant Abolitionism Richard Bell, University of Maryland

Saturday, April 13, 10:30 am to 12:00 pm

Commentator: Terri Snyder, California State University, Fullerton

Through Nineteenth-Century Eyes: Seeing Race, Class, and War in the New York Draft Riots of 1863 Friday, April 12, 1:45 pm to 3:15 pm Chair: Daniel Czitrom, Mount Holyoke College The Unquiet Appearance of Early Nineteenth-Century American Working People Jonathan Prude, Emory University “Awful scenes of fiendish atrocity”: Racial Violence and the New York Draft Riots in the Pictorial Press Ross Barrett, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill “Our sketches are all real, not mere imaginary affairs”: The Visual Documentation of the New York Draft Riots Joshua Brown, City University of New York, Graduate Center Commentator: Leslie Harris, Emory University

Chair: Shennan Hutton, University of California, Davis Academic Collaboration on Teaching the Civil War Ari Kelman, University of California, Davis The History Blueprint Approach to Teaching the Civil War in the Eighth Grade Tuyen Tran, University of California, Davis Experiencing the Civil War Jah-Yee Woo, Oakland Unified School District, and Angela La Torre, Valley View Middle School

Eric Foner’s Reconstruction Turns Twenty-Five Saturday, April 13, 10:30 am to 12:00 pm Chair: Kate Masur, Northwestern University Heather Andrea Williams, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill ◆ Gregory P. Downs, City College and Graduate Center, City University of New York ◆ Eric Foner, Columbia University ◆ Thavolia Glymph, Duke University ◆ Steve Hahn, University of Pennsylvania ◆

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meals American History at Occidental College. She specializes in US cultural and social history since the Civil War. Dumenil is the author of The Modern Temper: American Culture and Society in the 1920s (1995) and Freemasonry and American Culture, 1880–1930 (1984); she is also a coauthor (with Ellen Carol Dubois) of Through Women’s Eyes: An American History (2008). She is currently studying American women and World War I. Hosted by the College Board

Community College Historians Breakfast 7:30 am to 8:30 am Cost: No charge

Friday, April 12

Community college historians will gather for the sixth annual OAH Community College Breakfast. The breakfast provides an opportunity for community college historians and members of the OAH Committee on Community Colleges to meet and to learn about upcoming workshops and professional development opportunities designed for professors working at community colleges.

New Members and Graduate Student Breakfast

Luncheons

Breakfasts

7:30 am to 9:00 am Cost: No charge Start your first day of the convention with complimentary coffee and a light breakfast at this informal gathering for graduate students and new OAH members. The OAH staff and leadership will be on hand to discuss the benefits of membership in the OAH and ways to get the most out of your time at the meeting.

Society for Historians of American Foreign Relations Luncheon and Stuart L. Bernath Memorial Lecture

Saturday, April 13

Presiding: Mark Bradley, University of Chicago, president of the Society for Historians of American Foreign Relations

College Board Breakfast 7:30 am to 9:00 am

Stuart L. Bernath Memorial Lecture: “Always Take the Cookie: Politics, Ethics, and Writing Histories of the Living”

Cost: 

Jeffrey A. Engel, Southern Methodist University

Keynote Speaker: Lynn Dumenil, Occidental College “Teaching the Culture Wars of the 1920s”

Jeffrey A. Engel is the founding director of the Presidential History Project at Southern Methodist University, where he leads a team of scholars who interview individuals involved

Lynn Dumenil is the Robert Glass Cleland Professor of

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Friday, April 12

12:00 pm to 1:30 pm Cost: 

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meals in formulating and implementing US presidential policies. Engel is also the editor of Into the Desert: Reflections on the Gulf War (2012); The Fall of the Berlin Wall: The Revolutionary Legacy of 1989 (2009); The China Diary of George H. W. Bush: The Making of a Global President (2008); and Local Consequences of the Global Cold War (2008). The society will also present the Stuart L. Bernath Book Prize, the Stuart L. Bernath Lecture Prize, the Stuart L. Bernath Scholarly Article Prize, the Arthur S. Link– Warren F. Kuehl Prize for Documentary Editing, and the Robert H. Ferrell Book Prize.

Women in the Historical Profession Luncheon 12:00 pm to 1:30 pm Cost:  Keynote Address: “Historians Go to Court: Marriage on Trial” Nancy F. Cott, Jonathan Trumbull Professor of American History, Harvard University George Chauncey, Samuel Knight Professor of History and American Studies, Yale University For years, Nancy F. Cott and George Chauncey have given their time and expertise as expert witnesses in major marriage equality and lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender rights cases. Their work as citizen historians builds on their landmark scholarly contributions: Professor Cott as a historian of women and gender and the author of Public Vows: A History of Marriage and the Nation (2000), The Grounding of Modern Feminism (1987), and The Bonds of Womanhood: Woman’s Sphere in New England, 1780–1835 (1997); and Professor Chauncey as a historian of gender and sexuality and the author of Gay New York: Gender, Urban Culture, and the Making of the Gay Male World, 1890–1940 (1995) and Why Marriage? The History Shaping Today’s Debate over Gay Equality (2005). Through the generosity of donors, the members of the OAH Committee on Women in the Historical Profession are able to offer free luncheon tickets to graduate students on a first-come, first-served basis. To request a ticket, send an e-mail to womenslunch@oah.org before April 1, 2013.

Sponsored by Business History Conference; California State University, Fullerton, Department of American Studies; Coalition for Western Women’s History; Columbia University, Department of History; Coordinating Council for Women in History; Harvard University, Department of History; Occidental College, Department of History; Penn State University, Department of History; Pomona College, Department of History; Vicki Ruiz; Sonoma State University, North Bay International Studies Project; Southern Association for Women Historians; University of California, Berkeley, Department of History; University of California, Davis, Department of History; University of California, Irvine, Department of History; University of California, Los Angeles, Department of History; University of California, Santa Barbara, Department of Feminist Studies; University of California, Santa Cruz, Department of History; University of Delaware, Department of History; University of Massachusetts Amherst, Department of History; University of Nevada,Las Vegas, Department of History; University of Southern California, Department of History; University of Texas at Austin, Department of History; Western Association of Women Historians; Women in the West Project, Autry National Center; Yale University, Department of History.

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meals terrain, from how adolescents and professional historians interpret primary sources to issues of teacher assessment and teacher community in the workplace.

Women and Social Movements Luncheon 12:00 pm to 1:30 pm CĔĘę: Reserve a seat by emailing tdublin@binghamton.edu. Keynote Address: “What’s New and Upcoming on the Women and Social Movements Web Sites” Kathryn Kish Sklar, Binghamton University Thomas Dublin, Binghamton University

Saturday, April 13 Focus on Teaching Luncheon 12:00 pm to 1:30 pm Cost: No charge Keynote Speaker: Sam Wineburg, Stanford University Trained as a cognitive psychologist, Sam Wineburg is the Margaret Jacks Professor of Education at Stanford University, where he directs the doctoral program in history education and the Stanford History Education Group, a research and development outfit dedicated to improving history instruction in the United States and abroad. His Historical Thinking and Other Unnatural Acts: Charting the Future of Teaching the Past (2001) won the Association of American Colleges and Universities’ Frederic W. Ness Book Award for the work that “best illuminates the goals and practices of a contemporary liberal education.” He has also received (with Brigid Barron) the James Harvey Robinson Prize and (with Susan Mosborg, Dan Porat, and Ariel Duncan) the William and Edwyna Gilbert Award from the American Historical Association. Over the last fifteen years Wineburg’s interests have crossed vast

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The Web site Women and Social Movements in the United States, 1600–2000 (http://www .womhist.alexanderstreet.com) is more than fifteen years old and its new online resource, Women and Social Movements, International: 1840 to the Present, will be completed by April 2013, so this is a good time to take stock of recent developments on the two Web sites. What are the differences between the two sites? What do they offer teachers and researchers? How might historians best take advantage of the resources they offer? These are some of the questions the site editors, Kathryn Kish Sklar and Thomas Dublin, will address during their luncheon talks.

Urban History Association Luncheon 12:00 pm to 1:30 pm Cost:  Keynote Speaker: Ananya Roy, University of California, Berkeley Ananya Roy is a professor of city and regional planning and the holder of a distinguished chair in global poverty and practice at the University of California, Berkeley. Roy teaches in the fields of urban studies and international development and serves as education director of the Blum Center for Developing Economies. Her most recent book, Poverty Capital: Microfinance and the Making of Development (2010), was the recipient of the 2011 Paul Davidoff Book Award from

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the Association of Collegiate Schools of Planning for research that advances social justice. Roy has also coedited (with Aihwa Ong) Worlding Cities: Asian Experiments and the Art of Being Global (2011).

Labor and Working-Class History Association Luncheon

History of Feminism and the Future of Women (2002) explores feminism in the West and its relationship to broader movements for women’s rights and social change throughout the world. She is currently studying the history of sexual violence in America.

12:00 pm to 1:30 pm

Society for Historians of the Gilded Age and Progressive Era Luncheon

Cost: 

12:00 pm to 1:30 pm

Keynote Address: “No Race-Baiting, Red-Baiting or Queer-Baiting!”: Allan Bérubé’s History of the Marine Cooks and Stewards Union

Cost: 

Estelle Freedman, Stanford University

Distinguished Historian Address: “Integrating African American History into Master U.S. Historical Narratives” Pero Gaglo Dagbovie, Michigan State University

Estelle Freedman specializes in women’s history and feminist studies. She has taught at Stanford University since 1976 and is a cofounder of the Program in Feminist Studies. Her most recent book, The Essential Feminist Reader (2007), is an edited anthology of sixty-four primary feminist history documents from around the world, spanning the fifteenth to the twenty-first centuries. Feminism, Sexuality, and Politics: Essays by Estelle B. Freedman (2006) is a collection of eight previously published and three new essays. No Turning Back: The

Pero Gaglo Dagbovie is a professor of history and director of the graduate program at Michigan State University. His scholarship includes twentieth-century African American intellectual history, black women’s history, the philosophy of black history, the history of the African American historical enterprise, African American studies, hiphop studies, and the teaching and learning of African American history. He is also the author of the forthcoming What Is African American History?

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receptions

Thursday, April 11

Friday, April 12

Dessert before Dinner

Paul K. Longmore Institute on Disability Reception

4:30 pm to 5:30 pm The Immigration and Ethnic History Society (IEHS) invites attendees to the fourth annual reception for graduate students and early-career scholars. The IEHS promotes the study of the history of immigration to the United States and Canada and the study of ethnic groups in the United States, including regional groups, Native Americans, and forced immigrants.

5:30 pm to 7:00 pm Immediately following the “Mischievous Entanglements: the Embodied Histories of Paul K. Longmore, Scholar, Teacher, Activist” offsite session from 3:30 pm to 5:30 pm. Under the leadership of Professor Catherine J. Kudlick, projects and events at the Paul K. Longmore Institute on Disability challenge prevailing notions that disability can be only a hopeless tragedy by showcasing disabled people’s strength, ingenuity, and originality. The reception will follow the session in the same location at 835 Market Street. Beverages and light hors d’oeuvres will be provided. Visit http://longmoreinstitute.sfsu.edu for directions and more information about the Institute.

OAH International Committee Reception 5:30 pm to 7:00 pm

Opening Night Reception in the Exhibit Hall 6:00 pm to 7:30 pm Join your colleagues for the OAH Annual Meeting Opening Reception, the opening of the OAH Exhibit Hall, and the OAH Silent Auction. Reconnect with friends and colleagues, make new acquaintances, and browse the exhibits. Enjoy beer, wine, and appetizers before heading out to enjoy San Francisco’s night life.

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The OAH International Committee welcomes all convention attendees interested in faculty and student exchanges and other efforts to promote global ties among American historians. Attendees from countries other than the United States are especially encouraged to attend.

OAH Distinguished Members and Donors Reception 5:30 pm to 7:00 pm The OAH is pleased to host an invitation-only reception for our longtime members and major donors. Members who recently reached the fifty-year membership milestone will be honored.

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receptions Public Historians Reception 5:30 pm to 7:00 pm Offsite at the California Historical Society The California Historical Society (CHS) will host this year’s Public Historians Reception at its museum, located at 678 Mission Street—just a short walk from the Hilton San Francisco. The OAH Committee on Public History invites all public historians and those interested in public history for drinks, refreshments, and the opportunity to view the CHS collections. This reception is a great opportunity to build your professional network and connect with colleagues. Sponsored by California Historical Society

Society for Historians of the Gilded Age and Progressive Era Reception 6:00 pm to 7:30 pm SHGAPE will host a reception for all its members and meeting attendees interested in the study of the Gilded Age and the Progressive Era. SHGAPE was formed in 1989 to encourage innovative and wide-ranging research and teaching on this critical period of historical transformation. SHGAPE publishes the quarterly Journal of the Gilded Age and Progressive Era and awards book and article prizes for distinguished scholarship.

Saturday, April 13 Closing Reception 5:30 pm to 7:00 pm Join the OAH in thanking OAH President Albert Camarillo for his service to the organization and the profession at a reception in his honor at the Hilton Union Square. Sponsored by the California Historical Society

Reception in the Mission District 8:00 pm to 10:00 pm Offsite at the Mission Cultural Center for Latino Arts The Mission Cultural Center for Latino Arts will host a postconference party in honor of OAH President Albert Camarillo. Join Professor Camarillo and friends for an evening of refreshments and music. Space is limited at the cultural center, so be sure to RSVP on the annual meeting registration form. Sponsored by the Mission Cultural Center for Latino Arts

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map of san francisco

Map data © Google

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tours The cost of transportation is included for all bus tours. If you require special assistance, please contact the OAH offices. Meals are not included in tours unless otherwise noted. Space is limited, so sign up early. Tours may be cancelled if an insufficient number of registrations are received. Registrants will receive a full refund for any cancelled tours. Buses will depart from the Hilton San Francisco. Please be on board and ready to depart by the beginning times listed below. San Francisco Convention and Visitors Bureau Photo

Entrance to Chinatown at Grant Avenue and Bush Street.

Thursday, April 11 Coit Tower and Rincon Center New Deal Murals : am to : pm; lunch to follow Cost:  The Coit Tower murals were funded through the Public Works of Art Project of the Civil Works Administration and were the first large New Deal mural project undertaking, completed in early 1934. The display at the Rincon Center (formerly Rincon Annex post office) was the last large New Deal mural project. Both were among the most politically contentious New Deal arts projects. Robert Cherny of San Francisco State University will lead a tour of the Coit Tower and Rincon Center projects. The walking tour will begin at Coit Tower, proceed down the Filbert Steps, through Levi Strauss Plaza (designed by Lawrence Halprin), along the Embarcadero to the

Abraham Lincoln Brigade Memorial in Justin Herman Plaza, across Harry Bridges Plaza, past the International Longshore and Warehouse Union’s Bloody Thursday Monument, to the Rincon murals. The total distance of the tour is about 1.5 miles. A lunch of dim sum will follow at Yang Sing, one of San Francisco’s best dim sum restaurants. The ticket price does not include lunch.

Chinese Historical Association of America and Chinatown Tour : pm Cost:  Join architectural historian Phillip P. Choy, who won the 2011 Oscar Lewis Book Award for Western History and author of San Francisco Chinatown: A Guide to Its History and Architecture (2012); Sue Lee, the executive director of the Chinese Historical Society of American Museum; and CHSA guide Charlie Chin who have volunteered to conduct guided tours of Chinatown. The tours are limited to fourteen participants total.

Friday, April 12 Angel Island Immigration Station : am to : pm Cost:  This tour will take place at the Angel Island Immigration Station in the San Francisco Bay, a National Historic Landmark that processed nearly half a million people as “the Ellis Island of the West” from 1910 to 1940. In 1970, the rediscovery of Chinese poetry carved into the

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tours

San Francisco Convention and Visitors Bureau Photo

Alcatraz Island, home to the infamous maximum security prison.

deteriorating walls of the barracks saved the site from destruction and led to renewed interest in the Angel Island Immigration Station. It was named a National Historic Landmark in 1998 and underwent a major renovation during its centennial in 2010. This tour coincides with an onsite panel, “Angel Island: Immigration and Immigrant Detention in the Past and Present.” Featuring academic and public historians as well as contemporary scholars of immigration, this panel examines new research on the Angel Island immigrant experience and connects Angel Island to public history, the history of immigration through Ellis Island, and contemporary practices of immigrant detention. Ferry transportation to and from the island is included in the ticket price for the tour.

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Saturday, April 13 Alcatraz Island : am to : pm Cost:  As home to some of America’s most infamous criminals, Alcatraz Island gained notoriety as one of the world’s most notorious prisons. But the island has many other interesting stories. Alcatraz also was home to the first lighthouse on the West Coast and the birthplace of the red power movement. Alcatraz is now a sanctuary for seabirds, including cormorants, snowy egrets, and night herons. A limited number of tickets are available through this special OAH offer. The ticket price includes ferry transportation to and from the island.

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tours Bike the Bridge : am to : pm Cost: Bike rental ; return ferry  Join local cyclist and historian Marianne Babal for a two-wheeled tour across the Golden Gate Bridge. Riders will cycle along the San Francisco shoreline, through the historic Presidio of San Francisco, then across the landmark Golden Gate Bridge before descending to Sausalito and a return to San Francisco by ferry. The ride will start from a waterfront bikerental location accessible by public transit from the conference hotel. Participants will pay for their own bike rental and return ferry. The tour is limited to twelve riders, will last three hours, and will cover approximately ten miles with an elevation gain of four hundred feet.

San Francisco Convention and Visitors Bureau Photo

The Golden Gate Bridge.

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tours The historian Drew Bourn of Stanford Medical History Center will give a one-hour guided tour of the Castro neighborhood. Please meet at base of the rainbow flagpole on the southwest corner of Market and Castro streets. The tour will also stop at the GLBT History Museum. Please plan extra time accordingly. The tour is limited to twenty participants.

The Castro Theatre

GLBT History Museum and Tour of the Castro : am to : am Cost: 

Mission District Murals and Mission Cultural Center for Latino Arts : pm to : pm Cost:  San Francisco’s Mission District is a vibrant community that has been the site of local Latino history and the cultural scene since the 1950s. Murals painted in and around the district are known for their artistic beauty and social/cultural meanings. Attendees will board one of the district’s “Mexican buses” for a short tour of the Mission District and its murals. After the tour, attendees will stop at the Mission Cultural Center for Latino Arts to hear “Voices from the Mission District”— accounts from individuals who lived the history of this area.

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San Francisco Convention and Visitors Bureau Photos

Once populated by dairy farms and covered by dirt roads, the Castro is now one of San Francisco’s most vibrant and cohesive communities. Irish, German, and Scandinavian immigrants moved to the outskirts of San Francisco in search of inexpensive land after the Market Street Cable Railway linked Eureka Valley, as it was then called, with the rest of the city in 1887. These homesteaders built handsome Victorian houses for their large families, and the area remained a quiet, working-class neighborhood until the 1960s and 1970s, when gay men began buying and restoring the charming homes. The neighborhood was renamed for its busiest thoroughfare, Castro Street. The 1978 assassination of the openly gay San Francisco supervisor Harvey Milk and the impact of Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome brought the community together and made an activist of almost everyone; the Castro became not just open but celebratory about its thriving gay Mission Dolores is the oldest building in San Francisco. It was built in 1776. and lesbian population.


family friendly attractions National Parks The Presidio Located within the Golden Gate National Recreation Site, it was once one of the oldest continuously operating military posts in the nation. Over the span of 200 years, three flags flew over the base—Spanish, Mexican, and American. The Presidio’s 1,491 acres of prime real estate next to the Golden Gate Bridge and San Francisco Bay have some of the best views in town. The park offers plenty to do, including miles of hiking trails; signed bike routes; hidden picnic sites; eucalyptus and cypress groves; cannons dating from the late 1700s; a pet cemetery; abandoned barracks where Indian fighters once slept; and guided walking tours through historic military ruins, artillery batteries, and the National Cemetery. Rangers with the National Park Service also lead free tours at Fort Point, a four-tiered brick and granite fortress built between 1853 and 1861, tucked under the south end of the Golden Gate Bridge. The park is open year round and is free to visitors; for more information, visit http://www.presidio.gov.

Maritime National Historic Park Home to the world’s largest collection of historic ships, it includes the 1886 square rigger Balclutha, the 1890 ferryboat Eureka and the steam tug Hercules. Visitors can purchase tickets ($5 per person; children under 16 are free) to board turn-ofthe-century ships at the Hyde Street Pier, tour the museum and learn traditional arts, such as boatbuilding and woodworking. For more information, visit http://www.nps.gov/safr.

Rosie the Riveter WWII Home Front Located in Richmond, California, this National Park Service historic site explores and honors the efforts and sacrifices of American civilians on the World War II home front. An estimated eighteen million women worked in WWII defense industries and support services including steel mills, foundries, lumber mills, aircraft factories, offices, hospitals, and daycare centers. For directions and more information, including hours of operation and admission fees, visit http://www.rosietheriveter .org, or http://www.nps.gov.

sculpture and video, with works dating from the 1730s to the present. The museum exhibits range from a children’s gallery and caricatures to editorial cartoons, the avant-garde and underground comics. The museum is open Tuesday through Sunday from 11:00 am to 5:00 pm. Admission is as follows: $7 for adults, $5 for students and seniors, $3 for children ages six to twelve, and free for children five and younger. For more information, visit http://www.cartoonart.org.

Exploratorium Housed within the Palace of Fine Arts, the Exploratorium offers hundreds of interactive exhibits in the areas of science, art and human perception. Activities include daily demonstrations, numerous exhibits, and guided floor walks. The Exploratorium is open Tuesday through Sunday from 10:00 am to 5:00 pm. Admission is $25 for adults and $19 for children seventeen and younger. For more information, visit http://www.exploratorium.edu.

Cable Car Museum In the Cable Car Barn and Powerhouse, visitors can view the actual cable winding machinery as it reels eleven miles of steel at a steady pace of nine-and-a-half miles per hour. Antique cable cars are also on display, including the first one dating from 1873. Admission is free.

Miscellaneous Attractions San Francisco Zoo Northern California’s largest zoological park houses more than 225 species of animals in naturalistic settings. Highlights include the African Savanna, Lemur Forest, meerkats and prairie dogs, the Feline Conservation Center, Otter River, Eagle Island, Gorilla World, Penguin Island, Sumatran tigers, African wart hog exhibit, and Koala Crossing. The zoo is open daily from 10:00 am to 4:00 pm. Admission is $15 for adults, $12 for seniors, $9 for children ages four to fourteen, and free for children three and younger. For more information, visit http:// www.sfzoo.org.

Guided city walking tours

Museums Cartoon Art Museum The only one of its kind on the West Coast, this museum boasts rotating exhibitions of art from comic books, animated movies, magazines, advertisements, and newspapers, as well as

Join a San Francisco City Guide for a look at local history, architecture and culture. Prowl gold rush streets and alleyways or a neighborhood of grand Victorian houses. Tours are offered daily and are always free. No reservations are necessary unless it’s for a group of eight or more. For more information, visit http://www.sfcityguides.org.

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workshops

Thursday, April 11 Material Culture Workshop : pm to : pm Cost:  How does material and visual culture make the histories of capitalism and democracy tangible, local, and accessible to a wide range of audiences, from students to the general public? This half-day, hands-on workshop will introduce participants to the potential of using material and visual artifacts to document, research, and interpret the tangible histories of capitalism and democracy. The workshop will draw on artifacts from diverse collections at the San Francisco Historical Society and will focus on the changing business, economic, and labor history of the city in a national context. Participants will receive a packet of readings along with a bibliography and list of resources on the theory and practice of visual and material culture. Sponsored by the OAH Public History Committee

Friday, April 12 Oral History: An Introduction to a Methodology : am to : pm Cost:  8:00 am to 8:30 am Continental Breakfast 8:30 am to 11:30 am Oral History: An Introduction to a Methodology This workshop offers an introduction to oral history methodology and theory. The workshop is designed for graduate students and advanced scholars, public historians, and university instructors—anyone wishing to use oral history in the context of research, teaching, and professional life. The workshop will provide an overview of the methodology and will offer practical instruction on

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everything from project planning to public dissemination. The workshop will cover the following topics: ◆ Project design and planning ◆ Ethical and legal issues ◆ Interviewing techniques ◆ Processing and archiving ◆ Recording equipment and technologies ◆ Interview analysis and interpretation ◆ Public programming and research dissemination Workshop attendees will have the opportunity to discuss issues specific to their projects and engage in conversation with seasoned oral historians and other workshop participants. Participants will be given materials that will help them apply what they learn in the workshop to their own oral history projects.

Presenters: ◆ Martin Meeker, Associate Director, Regional Oral History Office, Bancroft Library, University of California, Berkeley ◆ Robin Li, Academic Specialist, Regional Oral History Office, Bancroft Library, University of California, Berkeley ◆ Sam Redman, Academic Specialist, Regional Oral History Office, Bancroft Library, University of California, Berkeley 11:30 am to 12:30 pm Lunch

Oral history is a capacious methodology that plays an important role in public history and academic research alike. In two roundtable discussions, practicing oral historians will describe how diverse and sometimesdivergent audience for oral histories shape planning, implementation, reception, and other aspects of their projects. They will discuss how oral sources have shaped programming for historic sites, museums, and public opinion campaigns, and how their interview projects have expanded our understanding of the history of the arts, science, labor, women, gays and lesbians, and American Indians, among other topics.

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workshops 12:30 pm to 1:45 p.m Public History and Oral Sources

Podcasting: Where the Academic and Public Meet

Presenters: ◆ Lisa Rubens (moderator), Regional Oral History Office, Bancroft Library, University of California, Berkeley ◆ Danny Beagle, Communications Director/Project Manager, California State Employees Association ◆ Basya Petnick, Legacy Oral History Project, Museum of Performance and Design ◆ Isabel Ziegler, Supervisory Museum Curator, Rosie the Riveter WWII Home Front National Historic Park, National Park Service 1:45 pm to 3:00 pm Scholarly Research and Oral Sources

Presenters: ◆ Robin Li (moderator), Academic Specialist, Regional Oral History Office, Bancroft Library, University of California, Berkeley ◆ Robert Keith Collins, American Indian Studies Department, San Francisco State University ◆ Steve Estes, History Department, Sonoma State University ◆ Emily Redman, PhD candidate, History Department, University of California, Berkeley

Community College Workshop

: am to : am Cost: no charge The public history program in the history department at the University of Central Florida has developed two distinct series of podcasts that have bridged the gap between academic and public audiences. Podcasting is a medium where academic expertise and outreach can engage an interested audience outside the campus, professional association, and publishing worlds. Podcasts produced for the Florida Historical Quarterly (FHQ) and the Regional Initiative for Collecting the History, Experiences, and Stories of Central Florida (RICHES) Podcast Documentaries demonstrate that local is global. The FHQ podcast focuses on the scholarship published in the journal. The RICHES podcasts are student-produced audio/video podcasts on local area history. More than 8,000 subscribers and visitors have listened to the entire podcast series, which is integrated on the RICHES Web site and the interactive RICHES Mosaic Interface. The two series attract listeners in North America, Europe, and Asia. This session will discuss the production process, value, and problems of engaging a popular audience through podcasts, as well as the innovative presentation of podcasts through digital projects.

Presenters: ◆ Robert Cassanello, University of Central Florida ◆ Connie L. Lester, University of Central Florida ◆ Daniel Murphree, University of Central Florida

: am to : pm Cost:  The 2013 Community College Workshop will focus on the role of the community college in the larger picture of postsecondary education. The workshop will act as a fact-finding conversation, encouraging discussion of the philosophical issues in community college education. A discussion of trends in student-learning outcomes and program-level outcomes will also be included. Participants will also discuss open-source textbooks, with a focus on the new laws in California. Sponsored by the OAH Committee on Community Colleges

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workshops

Teaching Entangled Histories through Documents : pm to : pm Cost:  Presenters: ◆ ◆ ◆ ◆ ◆

Nancy Hewitt, Rutgers University Steven Lawson, Rutgers University Derek Chang, Cornell University Paul Ortiz, University of Florida Leslie Brown, Williams College

Teachers of history at all levels employ primary sources to engage students and help them understand the complexities of historical interpretation. As American history has expanded to include the perspectives of more diverse populations, however, it is often difficult to incorporate these stories into a manageable documents project. Not only do we want to introduce students to the perspectives of men and women from different racial, ethnic, regional, economic, and religious backgrounds but we also need them to grasp different scales of action— local, state, regional, national, and international—as well as distinct ideological and political views in a specific period or across time.

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The purpose of this workshop is to offer concrete examples of primary-source projects that explore significant issues and incorporate multiple perspectives, using only a select few documents. The five panelists in the workshop have taught a wide range of American history courses at a diverse array of schools, from small liberal arts colleges to private research universities and from state universities focused on undergraduate education to public research universities. Collectively, they have covered both halves of the US history survey as well as African American, Asian American, Chicano/Chicana, Latino/Latina, labor, women’s, and civil rights history. In the workshop we will introduce five document projects that cover a broad swath of American history: the development of commerce and slavery in the eighteenth century; Chinese migration, labor and racial formation in the mid-nineteenth century; pan-Africanism and anti-imperialism at the turn of the twentieth century; teenagers in the post–World War II era; and the long black freedom movement. These projects will incorporate diverse sources, including letters, engravings, pamphlets, newspaper and magazine articles, political cartoons, photographs, speeches, meeting minutes, and political manifestos.

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workshops

Saturday, April 13 Fundamentals of Doing History in the National Park Service: NPS 101 : am to : pm Cost:  Presenters: ◆ Chair: Christine Arato, National Coordinator, War of 1812 Bicentennial National Park Service, Northeast Regional Office, National Park Service ◆ Elaine Jackson-Retondo, architectural historian, Pacific West Regional Office, National Park Service ◆ Cynthia Walton, historian, Southeast Regional Office, National Park Service ◆ Joan Zenzen, Independent Historian, Maryland This workshop, organized by the OAH Committee on National Park Service Collaboration, discusses the basics of history programming in the National Park Service (NPS). The committee seeks to implement a recommendation in the OAH report Imperiled Promise: The State of History in the National Park Service that the organization “ensure that every OAH annual meeting has an NPS 101 workshop to introduce future researchers to NPS opportunities and structures.” Designed to help OAH members interested in public history work and the possibilities of working for the National Park Service, this workshop will focus on the needs of OAH members who are unfamiliar with NPS history programs. Presenters will provide an overview of history programming in the National Park Service, including parks as sites for research and education; the preservation

mission of the NPS; civic engagement efforts within the NPS; opportunities for historians to engage park staff and visitors through formal and informal partnerships; the cooperative agreement between the OAH and the NPS; organizational structures of the NPS; opportunities for interdisciplinary work related to other cultural- and natural-resource programs of the NPS; the NPS Cultural Resources Academy initiative for its staff historians; and basic NPS history study types, their functions and purposes. The workshop will introduce participants to a broad range of opportunities for history work in the national park system. It will also provide helpful advice and information about how to navigate administrative, procedural, and technical considerations involved in NPS history projects and programs. The workshop will also be the setting for conversation about the critiques and recommendations found in Imperiled Promise. That conversation will address the report’s description of NPS tendencies toward “narrow and static conceptions of history’s scope, and . . . timid interpretation” as well as ways to exploit more fully the potential of the NPS as part of the system for history

education in this country. The workshop will embrace the report’s recommendations for increased involvement by academic and independent historians in park history, and for strengthening the skills of the NPS work force engaged in historical work.

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exhibitors COMPANY Alexander Street Press. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Association Book Exhibit . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Bedford/St. Martin’s . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Cambridge University Press . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Cengage Learning . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Center for Jewish History . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . The College Board . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Columbia University Press . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . First Peoples: New Directions in Indigenous Studies. Global Lyceum, Inc. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Harvard University Press . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Indiana University Press. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Johns Hopkins University Press . . . . . . . . . . . . . . LSU Press . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Macmillan . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . McGraw-Hill Higher Education . . . . . . . . . . . . . . M. E. Sharpe, Inc. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Milestone Documents . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Minnesota Historical Society Press . . . . . . . . . . . . NYU Press. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Oxford University Press . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Palgrave Macmillan . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Penguin Group USA . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Perseus Books Group . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Pickering & Chatto Publishers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Princeton University Press . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ProQuest . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Random House, Inc. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Routledge . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Rowman & Littlefield Publishing Group. . . . . . . . . Texas Tech University Press. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . University of Alabama Press . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . University of California Press. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . University of Chicago Press . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . University of Georgia Press. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . University of Illinois Press. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . University of Massachusetts Press . . . . . . . . . . . . University of Missouri Press . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . University of North Carolina Press . . . . . . . . . . . . University of Pennsylvania Press . . . . . . . . . . . . . University of Virginia Press . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . University of Washington Press . . . . . . . . . . . . . . University Press of Kansas . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . University Press of Mississippi . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . W. W. Norton . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Wiley. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Yale University Press . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

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floorplan

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map of the hilton

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sessions How to Have Race in an Epidemic: The Politics of African American AIDS Activism

Thursday, April 11 1:00 pm

Chair: Jennifer Brier, University of Illinois at Chicago

Chair: Laura Kalman, University of California, Santa Barbara ◆ Bruce Schulman, Boston University ◆ David Coleman, University of Virginia ◆ Claudia Anderson, Lyndon Baines Johnson Library and Museum ◆ Regina Greenwell, Lyndon Baines Johnson Library and Museum ◆ Timothy Naftali, Nixon Library ◆ Luke Nichter, Texas A&M University

Imagined Alliances: Anti-Globalization Politics and African-American AIDS Activism Dan Royles, Temple University Making the American Carceral Diaspora: Conservative Politics, AIDS Activists, and the Battle for Public Health during the Rise of the HIV/AIDS Epidemic in Texas Prisons David Villarreal, University of Texas at Austin

thursday

³ Taping History: A Roundtable on Presidential Recordings

Getting to Second Base: Social Capital and Social Identity in the Battle against HIV among Black Men Who Have Sex with Men (MSM) Stephen Inrig, University of Texas Southwestern School of Medicine at Dallas

The Colonial Southeast: Middle Ground, Commentator: Jennifer Brier Borderland, Shatter Zone, What? Chair: Julie Anne Sweet, Baylor University ◆ Joshua Piker, University of Oklahoma ◆ Robbie Ethridge, University of Mississippi ◆ James Taylor Carson, Queen’s University ◆ Alejandra Dubcovsky, Yale University ◆ Kathryn Braund, Auburn University ◆ Alan Gallay, Texas Christian University ◆ Steven Hahn, St. Olaf College

Sponsored by the Committee on the Status of Women in the Historical Profession Chair: Jennifer Morgan, New York University The Interracial Moment in Moral Reform April Haynes, University of Oregon

Connections and Constraints: Technology and Sociability Moderator: Susan Matt, Weber State University ◆ David Henkin, University of California, Berkeley ◆ Richard R. John, Columbia University ◆ Claude Fischer, University of California, Berkeley ◆ Peter C. Baldwin, University of Connecticut SESSION KEY Community College ò State of the Field ÍCareers

Entangled Empowerment: Crossing Race and Space in Early American Women’s History

Teaching ³ Public History

Gendering Transatlantic Black Abolitionism Female: African American Women Perform Freedom Abroad Elizabeth Pryor, Smith College A Choctaw Mother in Slave Country: Molly McDonald and Indian Adoptions in the Post-Revolutionary South Dawn Peterson, New York University Commentator: Barbara Krauthamer, University of Massachusetts Amherst

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thursday

sessions Consequential Representations: The Entangled Images of China and America

◆ Susan Ferber, Oxford University Press ◆ Niels Hooper, University of California Press

Chair: Christopher Jespersen, North Georgia College & State University

Commentator: Philip Ethington

Finger-Traps and Treaties: The Burlingame Treaty (1868) Revisited Eileen P. Scully, Bennington College “A Brief Account of the United States”: Early American Representations of the US in China Dael A. Norwood, Princeton University The New Republic in the Youngest Republic: Chinese Images of American History, 1911–31 Joseph Eaton, National Chengchi University

Ideologies and Identities: Political Movements in the Late Twentieth Century “Massachusetts Liberal”: Challenging a Political Pejorative Lily Geismer, Claremont McKenna College “A Strange Threat to Democracy?” The John Birch Society, 1958–1964 Darren Mulloy, Wilfrid Laurier University

Commentator: Christopher Jespersen

“Keep Hope Alive”: Politics of Race and Place in San Francisco’s Rainbow Coalition, 1980–1988 Eric Shih, University of Michigan

Becoming Mexican American: Twenty-Year Anniversary Discussion

Transcendentalism and Social Reform in Antebellum America

Chair: Bill Deverell, University of Southern California

Sponsored by the Community College Humanities Association

◆ Natalia Molina, University of California, San Diego ◆ George Sanchez, University of Southern California ◆ Robin D. G. Kelley, University of California, Los Angeles ◆ Abigail Rosas, Rice University ◆ Chava Bustamente, Independent Scholar

Moderators: Diane E. Whitley Bogard, Austin Community College (TX); and David A. Berry, Essex County College and Executive Director of the Community College Humanities Association

Globalization and the Nation: Recent Trends in the History of the Early American Republic

◆ Scott Hickle, Blinn College (TX) ◆ Grover Kitchens, Snead Community College (AL) ◆ Heather Mayer, Portland Community College (OR) and University of Portland ◆ Beth Randall Stevens, Pierce College (CA)

Chair: John Demos, Yale University ◆ François Furstenberg, Université de Montréal ◆ Rosemarie Zagarri, George Mason University ◆ David Waldstreicher, Temple University

³ Material Culture Workshop Sponsored by the OAH Public History Committee

Commentator: John Demos

Cost: $20

Í Research and Publishing in the Digital Age

This half-day, hands-on workshop will introduce participants to the potential of using material and visual artifacts to document, research, and interpret the tangible histories of capitalism and democracy.

Chair: Philip Ethington, University of Southern California ◆ Adam Arenson, The University of Texas, El Paso

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sessions Early Republic Borderlands: Indian Removal, Slavery, and Non-State Actors

2:45 pm

Chair: David Waldstreicher, Temple University

Exposed to the Elements Chair: John Kasson, University of North Carolina

“Fraught with Disastrous Consequences for our Country”: Cherokee Removal and Nullification, 1824–1839 Nancy Morgan, Temple University

“Children of the Sun”: Tanning as Race Remedy Catherine Cocks, University of Iowa Press

Women at the Crossroads: The Legal and Political Fight to Reverse Indian Removal in Seneca, 1838–1887 Taylor Spence, Yale University

Nude Beaches, Natural Bodies, and the Eroticized Landscape Sarah Schrank, California State University, Long Beach

Reading Hearts, Not Books: Affective Literacy and Public Sentiment in David Walker’s Appeal Tara Bynum, Towson University

Natural Protest: The Politics of Public Nudity Marguerite Shaffer, Miami University

Commentator: Matthew Dennis, University of Oregon

“To Lie Out-of-Doors”: The Promises and Perils of Camping in the Nineteenth Century Phoebe Young, University of Colorado, Boulder

Faith, Family, and Immigration Reform, 1952–1965

Commentator: John Kasson

thursday

Thursday, April 11

Sponsored by the Immigration and Ethnic History Society Chair: Timothy Meagher, Catholic University of America

Transnational Traditions: New Perspectives on American Jewish History “A Thing of Shreds and Patches”: Cold War, Faith, and Chair: Ellen Eisenberg, Willamette University

Mobilization against Immigration Restriction Maddalena Marinari, St. Bonaventure University

Uncovering “Little Rumania”: Foodways and Jewish Immigrants and Early Twentieth-Century New York City Lara Rabinovitch, New York University

Family-Focused Reform, Family-Oriented Reform, and the National Origins Quotas Yuki Oda, Columbia University

Confluence: American Youth Create Israeli Kibbutzim Ava Kahn, California Studies Center

“Crusade for a Christian and Democratic Attitude toward Immigration”: Education, Enlightenment, and the American Catholic Philosophy on Immigration Reform, 1952–1965 Grainne McEvoy, Boston College

Conflicting a New “Homeland”: Australia, America, and Soviet Jewish Emigration Suzanne Rutland, University of Sydney

Commentator: Timothy Meagher

SESSION KEY Community College ò State of the Field ÍCareers

Teaching ³ Public History

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sessions

thursday

Sex without the City: New Geographies of Sexuality in Modern America Sponsored by the Agricultural History Society

Race, Slavery, and Democracy in the Age of Revolution: Philadelphia as a Crossroads

Chair: James Giesen, Mississippi State University

Chair: Andrew Shankman, Rutgers University, Camden

◆ Beth Bailey, Temple University ◆ Gillian Frank, Stony Brook University ◆ Ryan Lee Cartwright, University of Minnesota ◆ Gabriel Rosenberg, Duke University

Education, Race, and Religion in Antebellum America Chair: Jean O’Brien, University of Minnesota To Perform the Female Part: Religion, Gender, and Civility at an Early Indian Boarding School Maeve Kane, Cornell University

Nationalism and Freedom in a Slaveholding Democracy Padraig Riley, Dalhousie University The Mulatta: Sexual Fusion/Political Confusion in the Revolutionary Atlantic World Carroll Smith-Rosenberg, University of Michigan Commentators: Andrew Shankman, and Samuel Otter, University of California, Berkeley

Ethnic Coalitions, Assimilation, and Conflict in the Valley and the City Chair: Ula Taylor, University of California, Berkeley

“The Bible will be a text book”: Moral and Religious Education at Cincinnati High School, 1844–1854 Kabria Baumgartner, College of Wooster

San Francisco’s Chinatown in Cold War Era Xiaojian Zhao, University of California, Santa Barbara

Clothing Dakota Missions, 1830–1870 Albert Lacson, Grinnell College

Berkeley’s Civil Rights Movement in the 1950s Douglas Daniels, University of California, Santa Barbara

Places of Work: Indigenous Survival Strategies in Northern California, 1860–1930

“Brown Monkeys,” “Enemy Aliens,” and “Fighting Filipinos”: Filipinas/os, Japanese, and World War II in California’s San Joaquin Delta Dawn Mabalon, San Francisco State University

Sponsored by the Labor and Working-Class History Association

ò African American History in the West

Chair: William Bauer, University of Nevada, Las Vegas

Chair: Quintard Taylor, University of Washington

An Indian Marathon on the Redwood Highway: Indians, Roads, and Regional Identity in the 1920s Cathleen Cahill, University of New Mexico

◆ Melissa Stuckey, University of Oregon ◆ Matthew Whitaker, Arizona State University at the Tempe Campus ◆ Tyina Steptoe, University of Washington

Sally Burris at Habematolel, California: Pomo Basket Making on the “Storied Land” Linda M. Waggoner, Independent Historian

Commentator: Albert Broussard, Texas A&M University

The Massacre at Indian Island: Labor, Memory, and Native Identity Michael Karp, Saint Louis University Commentator: William Bauer

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sessions

Thursday, April 11 4:30 pm Chair: Matthew Countryman, University of Michigan ◆ Clayborne Carson, Stanford University ◆ Barbara Ransby, University of Illinois at Chicago ◆ Tera W. Hunter, Princeton University ◆ Scott Kurashige, University of Michigan

thursday

Plenary Session: Freedom Struggles

The year 2013 marks the anniversaries of two major events in the history of black freedom struggles—the March on Washington’s fiftieth and the Emancipation Proclamation’s sesquicentennial. Leading scholars will offer brief reflections on the long history of black freedom movements, their significance to United States history more generally, and their relevance for today.

Thursday, April 11

Thursday, April 11

4:30 pm

6:00 pm

Dessert before Dinner

Opening Night Reception The Immigration and Ethnic History Society (IEHS) in the Exhibit Hall invites attendees to the fourth annual reception for graduate students and early-career scholars. The IEHS promotes the study of the history of immigration to the United States and Canada and the study of ethnic groups in the United States, including regional groups, Native Americans, and forced immigrants.

Join your colleagues for the OAH Annual Meeting Opening Reception and the opening of the OAH Exhibit Hall and Silent Auction. Reconnect with friends and colleagues, make new acquaintances, and browse the exhibits. Enjoy beer, wine, and appetizers before heading out to enjoy San Francisco’s night life.

SESSION KEY Community College ò State of the Field ÍCareers

Teaching ³ Public History

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sessions

Friday, April 12 7:30 am New Members and Graduate Student Breakfast Cost: No charge Start your first full day of the convention with complimentary coffee and a light breakfast at this informal gathering for graduate students and new OAH members. The OAH staff and leadership will be on hand to discuss the benefits of membership in the OAH and ways to get the most out of your time at the meeting.

friday

Friday, April 12 8:00 am Í ³ Oral History: An Introduction to a Methodology Cost: $20 half day; $30 full day 8:00 am to 8:30 am Continental Breakfast

◆ Recording equipment and technologies ◆ Interview analysis and interpretation ◆ Public programming and research dissemination Workshop attendees will have the opportunity to discuss issues specific to their projects and engage in conversation with seasoned oral historians and other workshop participants. Participants will be given materials that will help them apply what they learn in the workshop to their own oral history projects. Presenters:

◆ Martin Meeker, Associate Director, Regional Oral History Office, Bancroft Library, University of California, Berkeley 8:30 am to 11:30 am ◆ Robin Li, Academic Specialist, Regional Oral Oral History: An Introduction to a Methodology History Office, Bancroft Library, University of This workshop offers an introduction to oral history California, Berkeley methodology and theory. The workshop is designed ◆ Sam Redman, Academic Specialist, Regional Oral for graduate students and advanced scholars, public History Office, Bancroft Library, University of historians and university instructors—anyone California, Berkeley wishing to use oral history in the context of research, teaching, and professional life. The workshop will 11:30 am to 12:30 pm provide an overview of the methodology and will Lunch offer practical instruction on everything from project planning to public dissemination. The workshop will 12:30 pm to 3:00 pm Oral History in Practice: Roundtable Discussions on cover the following topics: Using Oral History in Public History and Scholarly ◆ Project design and planning Research ◆ Ethical and legal issues ◆ Interviewing techniques Oral history is a capacious methodology that plays an ◆ Processing and archiving important role in public history and academic research

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sessions alike. In two roundtable discussions, practicing oral historians will describe how diverse and sometimesdivergent audiences for oral histories shape planning, implementation, reception, and other aspects of their projects. They will discuss how oral sources have shaped programming for historic sites, museums, and public opinion campaigns, and how their interview projects have expanded our understanding of the history of the arts, science, labor, women, gays and lesbians, and American Indians, among other topics.

Friday, April 12

12:30 pm to 1:45 p.m Public History and Oral Sources

Chair: Donald L. Critchlow, Arizona State University

Presenters:

Can’t I Be Both? Republican Feminists and the Women’s Movement Julie Berebitsky, The University of the South

1:45 pm to 3:00 pm Scholarly Research and Oral Sources Presenters: ◆ Robin Li (moderator), Academic Specialist, Regional Oral History Office, Bancroft Library, University of California, Berkeley ◆ Robert Keith Collins, American Indian Studies Department, San Francisco State University ◆ Steve Estes, History Department, Sonoma State University ◆ Emily Redman, PhD candidate, History Department, University of California, Berkeley

SESSION KEY Community College ò State of the Field ÍCareers

Teaching ³ Public History

Republican Feminists: From Center to Margin Sponsored by the Committee on the Status of Women in the Historical Profession

Goodbye to the Party of Rockefeller: A Case Study of How the GOP Abandoned Feminist Goals in the 1970s Stacie Taranto, Ramapo College of New Jersey When Republicans Were Feminists: Bipartisanship, Class, and Policy in the Nixon Administration Susan M. Hartmann, The Ohio State University

friday

◆ Lisa Rubens (moderator), Regional Oral History Office, Bancroft Library, University of California– Berkeley ◆ Danny Beagle, Communications Director/Project Manager, California State Employees Association ◆ Basya Petnick, Legacy Oral History Project, Museum of Performance and Design ◆ Isabel Ziegler, Supervisory Museum Curator, Rosie the Riveter WWII Home Front National Historic Park, National Park Service

8:30 am

Commentator: Catherine E. Rymph, University of Missouri

Cultural Crossings and Changing Perceptions of Self: Complex Religious Identities in Early America Chair: Jon Sensbach, University of Florida Wabanaki Women and the Work of Conversion in the Northeastern Borderlands Ann Little, Colorado State University Reviled by All: The Tragic Life of a Christian Mohican Rachel Wheeler, Indiana University–Purdue University Indianapolis Science, Religion, and the Vitalist Materialism of Elihu Palmer Kirsten Fischer, University of Minnesota Commentator: Jon Sensbach

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sessions Navigating Dual Identities: Transnationalism in Early Twentieth-Century America Sponsored by the Immigration and Ethnic History Society Chair: Madeline Hsu, University of Texas at Austin “The Children of Israel Passing Through our Egypt”: Mexican Immigrants and National Identities in Interwar Chicago Michael Innis-Jimenez, University of Alabama

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From “Land of Chrysanthemum” to the Windy City: Japanese Immigrants in Chicago, 1910s–1920s Mayumi Hoshino, Indiana University Imagining Italy: Italian Jewish Immigrants in the United States, 1938–50 Shira Klein, Chapman University Commentator: Diane Vecchio, Furman University

In the Name of Our Children: Moral Panics and Teen/Child Sexuality, 1970–2000 Sponsored by the Committee on the Status of Women in the Historical Profession Chair: Amanda Littauer, Northern Illinois University Too Much Too Young: Adolescent Pregnancy and the Construction of Adulthood in 1970s America Timothy Cole, Temple University American Monsters: The Media and the Creation of the Child Safety Panic, 1975–2000 Sarah Hughes, Temple University True Love Waits: The Southern Baptist Convention and the Protection of Teenage Sexuality, 1970–2000 Krystal Humphreys, Texas Tech University

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Entangled History: Native Race in the Colonial Southeast Chair: Greg O’Brien, University of North Carolina at Greensboro Reversing Their Removal from the Narrative: Native Slavery in Colonial Virginia Kristalyn Shefveland, University of Southern Indiana From Indians to Colored People: Land, Culture, and the Racial Genesis of the Chowanocs of Eastern North Carolina Warren Milteer, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Making Indians “White”: The Judicial Abolition of Indian Slavery in Revolutionary Virginia Gregory Ablavsky, University of Pennsylvania

Managing Knowledge, Managing People, Managing Health Chair: Walter Licht, University of Pennsylvania “An Invisible Prison”: W. Edwards Deming, Quality Management, and the Ideology of Factory Neoliberalism Gabriel Winant, Yale University Managing People and Things at the American Museum of Natural History, 1880–1920 Lukas Rieppel, Harvard University Accounting for Health: Managerial Culture and the Rise of International Epidemiological Surveillance, 1948–1970 Joanna Radin, Yale University Militarizing and Managing Biomedicine: The Special Virus Leukemia Program and the Political Economy of Crisis in Postwar Biomedical Research Robin Scheffler, Yale University Commentator: Walter Licht

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sessions Labor’s Rethinking of the US Political Economy, 1870–1920

ò Historical Scholarship on Racialized Women

Sponsored by the Society for Historians of the Gilded Age and Progressive Era and the Labor and Working-Class History Association

Sponsored by the Committee on the Status of Women in the Historical Profession

Chair: Alan Lessoff, Illinois State University

◆ Francille Rusan Wilson, University of Southern California ◆ Margaret Jacobs, University of Nebraska–Lincoln ◆ Xiaojian Zhao, University of California, Santa Barbara ◆ Deena J. Gonzalez, Loyola Marymont University

The Labor Question and American Social Democracy, 1870–1914 John Enyeart, Bucknell University Returning to Gompers after the New Labor History Rosanne Currarino, Queen’s University, Ontario The Political Economy of the AFL’s Organic Intellectuals in the Gilded Age Richard Schneirov, Indiana State University

ò Environmental History Chair: David Igler, University of California, Irvine ◆ Marsha Weisiger, University of Oregon ◆ Paul Sabin, Yale University ◆ Douglas Cazuax Sackman, University of Puget Sound ◆ Jessica Martucci, Mississippi State University ◆ Matthew Klingle, Bowdoin College

Commentator: Jennifer Hamer, University of Kansas

Images of Identity: Examining Issues of Ethnicity, Race, and Citizenship through the Prism of Visual and Material Culture Chair: Mae M. Ngai, Columbia University Obama and the “Post” of “Post-Civil Rights” Matthew Frye Jacobson, Yale University

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Commentators: Alan Lessoff, and Grace Palladino, The Samuel Gompers Papers (retired)

Chair: Bettye Collier-Thomas, Temple University

Chinos y Mexicanos: Race and Photographic Representations on the US-Mexico Border Verónica Castillo-Muñoz, University of California, Santa Barbara Public Statues and Civic Performance in New York City Wendy Bellion, University of Delaware Commentator: Mae M. Ngai

From Mexican Pueblos, Barrios, to the Racial/Ethnic Borderlands in American Cities, Celebrating Albert Camarillo Moderator: Ana Rosas, University of California, Irvine

SESSION KEY Community College ò State of the Field ÍCareers

Teaching ³ Public History

◆ George Sanchez, University of Southern California ◆ David Gutierrez, University of California, San Diego ◆ Stephen Pitti, Yale University ◆ Monica Perales, University of Houston

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sessions ³ Public History into History ◆ Bob Blackburn, Oklahoma Heritage Center ◆ Philip VanderMeer, Arizona State University at the Tempe Campus ◆ Richard Toon, Arizona State University at the Tempe Campus ◆ Michelle Martin, Discovering History, LLC / Rogers State University

Race and Gender in TransPacific History Sponsored by the Ad Hoc OAH/JAAS Japan Historians Collaborative Committee

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Chair: Danielle McGuire, Wayne State University ◆ Catherine Ceniza Choy, University of California, Berkeley ◆ Rumi Yasutake, Konan University ◆ Fuminori Minamikawa, Ritsumeikan University

Í Community College Workshop Sponsored by the OAH Committee on Community Colleges

Friday, April 12 9:00 am ³ Angel Island: Immigration and Immigrant Detention in the Past and Present Offsite at Angel Island Immigration Station Chair: Erika Lee, University of Minnesota “A Proper Sieve?” A Comparison of Immigration Processing and Detention at Ellis Island and Angel Island Vincent Cannato, University of Massachusetts Boston Connecting People and Places: Interpreting History at Angel Island Immigration Station Daniel Quan, Daniel Quan Design Voices in the Wood House: Angel Island Inscriptions and Immigrant Poetry, 1910–1940 Charles Egan, San Francisco State University

Ports of Exclusion: Ongoing Sites and Technologies of Detention Cost: $20 David Manuel Hernández, University of California, The 2013 Community College Workshop will focus Los Angeles on the role of the community college in the larger picture of postsecondary education. The workshop will act as a fact-finding conversation, encouraging Í Articulate Your Strengths discussion of the philosophical issues in community Learn about strengths and how to articulate yours. college education. A discussion of trends in student Begin translating your skills, abilities, and strengths learning outcomes and program level outcomes will into language an employer can understand and value. also be included. Participants will also discuss open- Broaden your opportunities by understanding where/ source textbooks, with a focus on the new laws in how your strengths can bring value to organizations. Strategize your networking to get better results, so California. employers find you and “get” your value. 8:30 am to 9:00 am Presenter: Kate Duttro, Career Change for Academics Continental Breakfast 9:00 am to 10:30 am The Community College’s Place in Higher Education 10:45 am to 12:15 pm Student and Program Learning Outcomes 12:30 pm to 2:00 pm Luncheon and Keynote Address

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Í ³ Podcasting: Where the Academic and Public Meet ◆ Robert Cassanello, University of Central Florida ◆ Connie L. Lester, University of Central Florida ◆ Daniel Murphree, University of Central Florida

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sessions

Friday, April 12

Entangled Body Politics: Connections and Constraints in US Body History

10:30 am

Chair: Elisabeth Israels Perry, Saint Louis University A Romantic Steroid or a Great Performance?: Visual Culture and the Birth Control Pill (1964–2000) Jamie Wagman, Saint Louis University

ò Foreign Relations and the Cultural Turn Sponsored by the Society for Historians of American Foreign Relations Chair: Joel Isaac, University of Cambridge ◆ Andrew Preston, University of Cambridge ◆ Emily Rosenberg, University of California, Irvine ◆ Andrew Rotter, Colgate University ◆ Petra Goedde, Temple University

Chair: Alex Saragoza, University of California, Berkeley Alonso S. Perales and the Catholic Imaginary: Religion and the Mexican-American Mind Mario T. Garcia, University of California, Santa Barbara Adela Sloss-Vento: Mexican American Woman, Civil Rights Activist, Feminist, Author, and Public Intellectual in South Texas, 1927–1990 Cynthia Orozco, Eastern New Mexico University, Ruidoso George I. Sánchez, the Mexican American Generation, and the Theme of Integration from World War II to the Great Society Carlos K. Blanton, Texas A&M University Commentator: Cristina Mora, University of California, Berkeley

A Sound Mind in a Fit Body: Exercise in American Culture, 1880–1917 Rob Haulton, University of South Carolina Commentator: Kathy Peiss, University of Pennsylvania

The Globalization of African-American Consumer Culture, 1800–Present Chair: Kevin Gaines, University of Michigan Star Power: African-American Cultural Production and the Politics of Global Positioning James Cook, University of Michigan Hip-Hop, Empire, and Transnational AfricanAmerican Entrepreneurship Joshua Clark Davis, Duke University The Global Mission of Elder Lightfoot Solomon Michaux’s Radio Church of God Suzanne Smith, George Mason University The Black Man’s Burden? The Liberian Centennial Commission and the Post–World War II Trade in Black Progress Brenna Greer, Wellesley College

SESSION KEY Community College ò State of the Field ÍCareers

The Geneticization of Obesity and the Politics of Scale, 1959–2003 J. T. Roane, Columbia University

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The Mexican-American Generation and Public Intellectuals, 1930–1960

Making Visual Sense of Jet Magazine, 1955: Emmett Till’s Corpse and an African American Centerfold Elizabeth Schlabach, College of William and Mary

Teaching ³ Public History

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sessions Black/Gay Histories in the Post“Movement” Era Sponsored by the Committee on Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender History and the Committee on the Status of Women in the Historical Profession Chair: Kevin Mumford, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Raids, Racism, and Gay Rights: Racial Segregation in Chicago’s Gay Communities, 1965–1975 Tristan Cabello, Northwestern University

friday

More Than a Moral Victory: Home Rule, The GAA and the Re-Spatialization of Urban Crime in Washington, D.C., 1974–1978 Kwame Holmes, University of Virginia Defending Our “Man Child”: Lesbians of Color, Mothering, and the “Problem” of Boy Children in the 1970s and 1980s Elizabeth Clement, University of Utah

Historian as Protagonist: Howard Zinn, Staughton Lynd, and the Entanglements of Finding a “Usable Past” Sponsored by the Labor and Working-Class History Association Chair: Carl Mirra, Adelphi University Generational Re-Mappings of the US Left: White Radicals in the Black Freedom Movement Ambre Ivol, Université de Nantes North to Vietnam: Lynd and Zinn as Anti-war Protagonists Luke Stewart, University of Waterloo Staughton Lynd: From Accompaniment to Occupation Andrej Grubacic, California Institute of Integral Studies Commentator: Carl Mirra

Queer Law and Order: Sex, Criminality, and Policing in the Age of Mass Incarceration Timothy Stewart-Winter, Rutgers University, Newark Commentator: Kevin Mumford

From Illegal Aliens to Illegal History: A Roundtable Responds to the Return of the Culture Wars in Arizona Chair: Lorena Oropeza, University of California, Davis ◆ Lydia Otero, University of Arizona ◆ Miroslava Chavez-Garcia, University of California, Davis ◆ Milo Alvarez, Bard College at Simon’s Rock ◆ Karen Leong, Arizona State University at the Tempe Campus

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sessions Violent Women: Entangled Histories of Power, Authority, and Vengeance Sponsored by the Committee on Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender History and the Committee on the Status of Women in the Historical Profession Chair: Caryn Neumann, Miami University The Story of a Sadistic Matron and the State Jen Manion, Connecticut College Dimensions of Resistance Lisa Arellano, Colby College

ò American Indian History Chair: Sherry Smith, Southern Methodist University ◆ Paul C. Rosier, Villanova University ◆ Rose Stremlau, University of North Carolina at Pembroke ◆ Matthew Gilbert, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign

New Legal History Perspectives on African Americans, Latina/os, Asian Americans, and Native Americans Sponsored by the OAH Committee on the Status of ALANA Historians and ALANA Histories

Women at War in Colonial New England Emily Romeo, University of Chicago

Race, the Military, and Urban Redevelopment Chair: Carol McKibben, Stanford University The Politics of Inclusion and the Development of a Military Town Carol McKibben Building Democratic Communities: The AFSC and Integrated Housing for Veterans in the Postwar Era Tracy K’Meyer, University of Louisville

◆ Karen Tani, University of California, Berkeley ◆ Tom I. Romero II, University of Denver ◆ Shirley Moore, California State University, Sacramento

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Commentator: Cornelia Dayton, University of Connecticut

Chair: Charles McClain, University of California, Berkeley

Í Real Jobs Outside of Academia for Historians Chair: Peter Sigal, Duke University ◆ Susan Ferber, Oxford University Press ◆ Niles Gilman, Monitor 360 ◆ Andrew Kinney, Harvard University Press ◆ Alex Soojung-Kim Pang, Future2.org ◆ T. J. Stiles, Freelance Author

Tangled Connections and Lost Opportunities Andrew Myers, University of South Carolina Upstate Commentator: James N. Gregory, University of Washington

SESSION KEY Community College ò State of the Field ÍCareers

Teaching ³ Public History

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sessions

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Í ³ Historians in Filmmaking and Documentaries A distinguished group of panelists will explore the roles historians play in bringing history to life through film and documentaries—among them, advising on historical context and accuracy, providing historical analysis on camera, and utilizing their historical training to make unique contributions as filmmakers and producers. What is entailed in the job of serving as a historical consultant for a major motion picture? What skills and strengths do historians bring to the table in helping narrate documentaries? What are the strengths and the limitations of telling history in this medium? How do historians navigate conflicts between the demand for historical accuracy and proper context, and the storytelling and artistic aspects of filmmaking? How can history graduate students prepare for a career that involves working in the field?

Friday, April 12 12:00 pm Society for Historians of American Foreign Relations Luncheon Cost: $25 Presiding: Mark Bradley, University of Chicago, president of the Society for Historians of American Foreign Relations Stuart L. Bernath Memorial Lecture: “Always Take the Cookie: Politics, Ethics, and Writing Histories of the Living” Jeffrey A. Engel, Southern Methodist University

Women in the Historical Profession Luncheon Cost: $45 Keynote Address: “Historians Go to Court: Marriage on Trial” Nancy F. Cott, Jonathan Trumbull Professor of American History, Harvard University George Chauncey, Samuel Knight Professor of History and American Studies, Yale University

Friday, April 12 1:00 pm Teaching Entangled Histories through Documents Chair: Nancy Hewitt, Rutgers University SESSION KEY Community College ò State of the Field ÍCareers

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Teaching ³ Public History

◆ Steven Lawson, Rutgers University ◆ Derek Chang, Cornell University ◆ Paul Ortiz, University of Florida ◆ Leslie Brown, Williams College

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sessions

Friday, April 12

The 1%?: Business Classes and the Transformation of American Capitalism

1:45 pm

Sponsored by the Business History Conference’s Liaison Committee

The Politics of Self-Destruction in Civil War America

Global Networks, Metropolitan Terrains: Finance Capital and Urban Populism in the Era of Reconstruction Noam Maggor, Vanderbilt University

Chair: David Silkenat, North Dakota State University “Bent on Suicide”: The Political Rhetoric of Suicide in Civil War–Era America Diane Miller Sommerville, State University of New York at Binghamton

Corporate Power and the Problem of Politics: Business Elites, Social Policy, and Urban “Democracy” in the Early Twentieth Century Daniel Amsterdam, The Ohio State University

Rather Die Freemen Than Live to Be Slaves: Black Suicide and Militant Abolitionism Richard Bell, University of Maryland

Age Matters: Chronological Age and the Construction of Race, Gender, and Citizenship

Commentator: Terri Snyder, California State University, Fullerton

Sponsored by the Committee on the Status of Women in the Historical Profession

friday

“Lifeless now from Rebel hands”: Suicidal States and the Politics of Emancipation Kathleen Brian, George Washington University

A Grasstops Revolution: Local Business Elites, National Executives, and the Geography of TwentiethCentury Capitalism Elizabeth Shermer, Loyola University of Chicago

Chair: Leslie Paris, University of British Columbia

Through Nineteenth-Century Eyes: Seeing Race, Class, and War in the New York Draft Riots of 1863 Chair: Daniel Czitrom, Mount Holyoke College

“Male Citizens Twenty-One Years of Age”: The Intersection of Gender, Race, and Age in NineteenthCentury Citizenship Corinne Field, University of Virginia

The Unquiet Appearance of Early Nineteenth Century American Working People Jonathan Prude, Emory University

Born Dependent: The Children of Gradual Emancipation and the Laws of Poverty Sarah Levine-Gronningsater, University of Chicago

“Awful scenes of fiendish atrocity”: Racial Violence and the New York Draft Riots in the Pictorial Press Ross Barrett, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

Statutory Marriage Law and the Gendered Construction of Adulthood in the Nineteenth Century Nicholas Syrett, University of Northern Colorado

“Our sketches are all real, not mere imaginary affairs”: The Visual Documentation of the New York Draft Riots Joshua Brown, City University of New York, Graduate Center

Voting Rights and the Politics of Age in the Age of Aquarius Rebecca de Schweinitz, Brigham Young University Commentator: Leslie Paris

Commentator: Leslie Harris, Emory University

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sessions Taking the Scalpel to School: Health and Education in the Progressive Era

Entangled Interior: Identities and Loyalties in the War of 1812 Era

Sponsored by the Society for Historians of the Gilded Age and Progressive Era

Chair: Daniel Usner, Vanderbilt University

Chair: Jennifer Tebbe-Grossman, Massachusetts College of Pharmacy and Health Sciences

Entwined Faith: Interreligious Solidarity and Cultural Exchange in the New Madrid Earthquakes, 1811–1812 Christine Croxall, University of Delaware

Learning to Run the Human Machine: Nutrition Education and Gender in the Progressive Era Megan Elias, City University of New York, Queensborough Community College

Entangled Loyalties: The Problem of Indian Unity in the War of 1812 Jonathan Hancock, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

Reimagining the Female Body: Femininity, Class, and Medical Education, 1870–1920 Carrie Adkins, University of Oregon

A Bishop in the Valley: Imagining and Organizing Catholicism at the American Confluence in 1814 Tangi Villerbu, Université de La Rochelle

“School Diseases”: Health, Deviance, and Class in American School Hygiene Kate Mazza, City University of New York, Graduate Center

Commentator: Stephen Aron, University of California, Los Angeles

Borderline Memories: Remembering Histories of the US-Mexico Borderlands

The Political and Activist Entanglements Chair: Catherine Gudis, University of California, Riverside of Modern Environmentalism Chair: Kevin Marsh, Idaho State University Balancing Aesthetics and Ecology: Suburban Development and the Preservation of the Burling Tract John Spiers, Boston College “The Giddy Rise of the Environmentalists”: Corporate Real Estate Development and Environmental Politics in San Diego, California, 1968–73 Andrew Wiese, San Diego State University Mickey’s Mineral King: Disney, the Sierra Club, and the Forest Service Katrina Lacher, University of Central Oklahoma

Patrolling Immigration Memories: The National Border Patrol Museum and the Immigration Debate of the 1980s Monica Pelayo, University of Southern California Broadening Boundaries of Braceros: Public History and Bracero Communities Mireya Loza, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign From Out of the Shadows of the Corrido: Remembering and Forgetting State and Vigilante Violence against Women in the US-Mexico Borderlands Monica Muñoz Martinez, Yale University

Commentator: Kevin Marsh

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sessions ò American Legal History

Intimacy, Politics, and History

Chair: Michael Willrich, Brandeis University

Sponsored by the Committee on the Status of Women in the Historical Profession

◆ Daniel Hulsebosch, New York University ◆ Ariela Gross, University of Southern California ◆ Andrew Wender Cohen, Syracuse University ◆ William J. Novak, University of Michigan ◆ Jane Dailey, University of Chicago

Beyond and between Empires in the Pacific: Entangled Personal Histories Chair: Andrea Geiger, Simon Fraser University From Kuching to Cucurpe: The Maritime Entanglements of an English Sailor Who Became a Mexican Villager Samuel Truett, University of New Mexico

Contesting Empire: Individuals and Oceanic Space David Igler, University of California, Irvine

◆ Nan Alamilla Boyd, San Francisco State University ◆ Grace Peña Delgado, Penn State University ◆ Mireille Miller Young, University of California, Santa Barbara ◆ Nayan Shah, University of Southern California

Voices from the Classroom: Tachau Precollegiate Teaching Award Recipients Share Their Teaching Experiences Chair: Ron Briley, Sandia Preparatory School ◆ Richard Good, Ladue Horton Watkins High School, Tachau Award Winner 2012 ◆ Mary Connor, Westridge School, Tachau Award Winner 2005 ◆ Doris Meadows, Rochester City School District, Tachau Award Winner 2001 ◆ Gloria Sesso, Half Hallow Hills Central High School East, Tachau Award Winner 1995

friday

Making Geography by Tracing Genealogy: 19th Century Kanaka Maoli Global Geographies Imagined through Kinship David Chang, University of Minnesota

Moderator: Dayo Gore, University of California, San Diego

Commentator: Andrea Geiger

New Race Histories: Color Lines and Freedom Struggles Chair: Thomas Guglielmo, George Washington University ◆ Max Krochmal, Texas Christian University ◆ Mark Brilliant, University of California, Berkeley ◆ Claire Jean Kim, University of California, Irvine ◆ Tom I. Romero II, University of Denver

SESSION KEY Community College ò State of the Field ÍCareers

Teaching ³ Public History

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sessions

Friday, April 12

Friday, April 12

3:30 pm

5:30 pm

Offsite: Mischievous Entanglements: The Embodied Histories of Paul K. Longmore—Scholar, Teacher, Activist

Paul K. Longmore Institute on Disability Reception

friday

Chair: Catherine Kudlick, San Francisco State University ◆ Mary Lou Breslin, Disability Rights Education and Defense Fund ◆ Mary Felstiner, San Francisco State University ◆ Laura Garrett, Tamalpais High School ◆ Victoria Lewis, University of Redlands ◆ Mark McGuinnis, Commission Junction ◆ Susan Schweik, University of California, Berkeley ◆ Lauri Umansky, Suffolk University ◆ Eva Sheppard Wolf, San Francisco State University

Immediately following the 3:30 pm session. Under the leadership of Professor Catherine J. Kudlick, the projects and events at the Paul K. Longmore Institute on Disability challenge prevailing notions that disability can be only a hopeless tragedy by showcasing disabled people’s strength, ingenuity, and originality. The reception will follow the session in the same location at 835 Market Street. Beverages and light hors d’oeuvres will be provided. Visit http:// longmoreinstitute.sfsu.edu for directions and more information about the institute.

Friday, April 12 3:30 pm Plenary Session: Corporations in American Life Chair: Naomi Lamoreaux, Yale University ◆ Richard White, Stanford University ◆ Bethany Moreton, University of Georgia ◆ Karen Ho, University of Minnesota ◆ Peter James Hudson, Vanderbilt University In an age of financial collapse, Occupy Wall Street, the Supreme Court decision in Citizens United, and corporate personhood debates, many Americans struggle to make sense of the proper role of corporations in the political economy of the United States. Leading scholars will reflect on the national and transnational history of corporations in American life and the relevance of that history for today. 50 |

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sessions

Friday, April 12

Friday, April 12

5:30 pm

6:00 pm

OAH Distinguished Members and Donors Reception

Society for Historians of the Gilded Age and Progressive Era Reception

SHGAPE will host a reception for all SHGAPE The OAH is pleased to host an invitation-only members and meeting attendees interested in the reception for our longtime members (25+ years) and study of the Gilded Age and the Progressive Era. major donors. Members who recently reached the SHGAPE was formed in 1989 to encourage innovative fift y-year membership milestone will be honored. and wide-ranging research and teaching on this critical period of historical transformation. SHGAPE OAH International publishes the quarterly Journal of the Gilded Age and Progressive Era and awards book and article prizes for Committee Reception The OAH International Committee welcomes all distinguished scholarship.

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convention attendees interested in faculty and student exchanges and other efforts to promote global ties among American historians. Attendees from countries other than the United States are especially encouraged to attend.

³ Public Historians Reception Sponsored by California Historical Society Offsite at the California Historical Society The California Historical Society (CHS) will host this year’s Public Historians Reception at its museum, located at 678 Mission Street—just a short walk from the Hilton San Francisco. The OAH Committee on Public History invites all public historians and those interested in public history for drinks, refreshments, and the opportunity to view the CHS collections. This reception is a great opportunity to build your professional network and connect with colleagues.

SESSION KEY Community College ò State of the Field ÍCareers

Teaching ³ Public History

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sessions

Saturday, April 13 7:30 am College Board Breakfast Cost: $10 Keynote Speaker: Lynn Dumenil, Occidental College “Teaching the Culture Wars of the 1920s”

Community College Historians Breakfast Cost: no charge Community college historians will gather for the sixth annual OAH Community College Breakfast. The breakfast provides an opportunity for community college historians and members of the OAH Committee on Community Colleges to meet and learn about upcoming workshops and professional development opportunities designed for professors working at community colleges.

Saturday, April 13 saturday

8:30 am

Entangling Gender in the Web of US History: A Roundtable in Honor of Thomas Dublin and Kathryn Kish Sklar Sponsored by the Committee on the Status of Women in the Historical Profession

Film Screening: Criminal Injustice: Death and Politics at Attica Chair: Heather Thompson, Temple University ◆ Christine Christopher, Independent Filmmaker ◆ David Marshall, Independent Filmmaker ◆ Malcolm Bell, Former New York Special Assistant Attorney General ◆ Melvin Marshall, Former Attica Inmate

Chair: Victoria Brown, Grinnell College ◆ Estelle Freedman, Stanford University ◆ Carol Lasser, Oberlin College ◆ Landon Storrs, University of Iowa ◆ John McClymer, Assumption College

Through a Wider Lens: Pacific Views of US History Chair: Don DeBats, Flinders University and University of Virginia

SESSION KEY Community College ò State of the Field ÍCareers

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Teaching ³ Public History

◆ Clare Corbould, Monash University ◆ Don DeBats ◆ David Goodman, University of Melbourne ◆ Ian Tyrrell, University of New South Wales

2 013 OA H A N N UA L M E E T I N G ◆ S A N F R A N C I S C O, C A L I F OR N I A


sessions The Capacity to Be Citizens: Mental Competency and Civil Rights in Gilded Age and Progressive America

The United States at a Distance: Fixing National Borders and Imperial Ambitions in the Pacific World

Chair: Barbara Welke, University of Minnesota

Chair: Bruce Cumings, University of Chicago

Powers of Belief: Insanity Allegations and the Regulation of Religion in the Late Nineteenth Century Kathryn Burns-Howard, Miami University of Ohio

How to Hide an Empire: The US Overseas Territorial System, 1867–1946 Daniel Immerwahr, Northwestern University

Leroy Pitzer—Citizen, Voter, Lunatic Rabia Belt, University of Michigan

The Power of Mutual Understanding: Education and Post-Colonialism in Hawai’i Sarah Miller-Davenport, University of Chicago

Antecedent to All Other Rights: Legal Capacity and Kentucky Inheritance Disputes in the Gilded Age Yvonne Pitts, Purdue University Commentator: Barbara Welke

Hawai’i and the United States: Exceptional Nations in the Age of Revolutions Christine Skwiot, Georgia State University Commentator: Beth Bailey, Temple University

Teaching the Long Civil Rights Movement: Sharing Experiences, Challenges, and Strategies

The Transformation of the American Political Economy during the 1970s

Chair: Clarence Lang, University of Kansas

Chair: Judith Stein, City University of New York, City College and Graduate Center

Using the Civil Rights Movement to Teach Research Skills Renee Romano, Oberlin College

Focusing on Freedom North with Students from Illinois Nathan Brouwer, Rend Lake College

The Information Revolution, the Crisis of Industrial Hegemony, and the American State Zachary Wasserman, Yale University Tracing the Origins of Privatization and State Decentralization Amy C. Offner, University of Pennsylvania

saturday

Teaching a Critical View of the Long Civil Rights Movement Robbie Lieberman, Southern Illinois University Carbondale

The American Economy and the Politics of the 1970s Oil Crisis Victor McFarland, Yale University

The Sparse Historiography of the Asian American Commentator: Judith Stein Movement: Limitation or Opportunity? Diane Fujino, University of California, Santa Barbara Beyond Martin Luther King and Male Leadership: Teaching High School Students to See a Multi-Faceted Movement Kyle Westbrook, Chicago Public Schools

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sessions The United States and Mexico: Closer and Closer Apart

Blurring the Lines: Disability, Race, Gender, and Passing in Modern America

Chair: David Gutierrez, University of California, San Diego

Chair: Felicia Kornbluh, University of Vermont

What Kind of Nation? The Deportation of Mexican Migrants since 1942 Adam Goodman, University of Pennsylvania Urbanization and the (Re)creation of the US-Mexico Border in the Late Nineteenth Century Allison Tirres, DePaul University The Limits of Sovereignty: How the United States Has Policed the Mexican Border since 1993 C. J. Álvarez, University of Chicago Commentator: Geraldo Cadava, Northwestern University

Rethinking Race, Conquest, and the Nation in the Western Hemisphere

saturday

Chair: Juliana Barr, University of Florida

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The Indian Liberating Army: Re-imagining National Identity in Nineteenth-Century Native North America Michael Witgen, University of Michigan Asserting National Sovereignty in Hawai’i: The Hawaiian Monarchy and the Pursuit of National Identity and Authority in Late Nineteenth-Century Hawai’i Rachel St. John, Harvard University

John Howard Griffin, Disability, and the Multiple Layers of Passing in Black Like Me Jeffrey Brune, Gallaudet University “I Made Up My Mind to Act both Deaf and Dumb”: Masquerades of Slave Disability in Antebellum America Dea Boster, Columbus State Community College “Athlete First”: A Note on Passing, Disability, and Sport Michael Rembis, State University of New York at Buffalo

³ Entangled Narratives: The Rewards and Challenges of Doing Oral History with Activists Chair: Katrine Barber, Portland State University Representing Psychiatric Survival and Resistance in Oral Histories Anne Parsons, University of Illinois at Chicago “Trials and Tribulations”: Oral History, the Black Panther Party, and the Efficacy of Armed Struggle Curtis Austin, The Ohio State University Chorus from the City: Placing Native American Voices at the Center of the Urban Relocation Experience Doug Miller, University of Oklahoma

The Coromantee Wars: Diasporic Warfare in Colonial Jamaica, 1760–1761 Vincent Brown, Duke University

Entangled Subjects: Reflections on Doing Oral History with Activists Tamar Carroll, Rochester Institute of Technology

Commentator: Alan Taylor, University of California, Davis

Commentator: Alphine Jefferson, Randolph-Macon College

2 013 OA H A N N UA L M E E T I N G ◆ S A N F R A N C I S C O, C A L I F OR N I A


sessions Race and Law: New Directions in Southern Legal History

ò Children of Fire: Writing African American History in the Age of Obama

Chair: David Lieberman, University of California, Berkeley

Chair: Earl Lewis, Emory University

Grand Jury Presentments in Eighteenth-Century South Carolina Sally Hadden, Western Michigan University The Southern Roots of the Reapportionment Revolution Charles Zelden, Nova Southeastern University Race, Property Rights, and Negotiated Space in the American South: A Reconsideration of Buchanan v. Warley Patricia Minter, Western Kentucky University Commentator: Karen Tani, University of California, Berkeley

How Race Changed in the Post– World War II US: Revisiting African American, Asian American, and Mexican American Histories

Chair: Kimberley Phillips, City University of New York, Brooklyn College ◆ Ellen Wu, Indiana University ◆ Cindy Cheng, University of Wisconsin–Madison ◆ Laurie Green, University of Texas at Austin ◆ Stephen Berrey, University of Michigan

Commentator: Thomas Holt, University of Chicago

ò Asian American Studies Sponsored by the Association for Asian American Studies Chair: David K. Yoo, University of California, Los Angeles ◆ Judy Tzu-Chun Wu, The Ohio State University ◆ Chia Youyee Vang, University of Wisconsin– Milwaukee ◆ Lon Kurashige, University of Southern California Commentator: Gary Okihiro, Columbia University

Approaching the Recent Past in the US History Survey Course Sponsored by the College Board Chair: Lawrence Charap, The College Board ◆ Kevin Byrne, Gustavus Adolphus College ◆ Ted Dickson, Providence Day School

saturday

Sponsored by the Immigration and Ethnic History Society

◆ Khalil Gibran Muhammad, Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture ◆ Leslie Harris, Emory University ◆ Clarence Lang, University of Kansas

SESSION KEY Community College ò State of the Field ÍCareers

Teaching ³ Public History

2 013 OA H A N N UA L M E E T I N G ◆ S A N F R A N C I S C O, C A L I F OR N I A

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sessions

Saturday, April 13 9:00 am Í ³ Fundamentals of Doing History in the National Park Service: NPS 101

Purchasing Power Politics and Consumer Activism in North America from the Depression to the Cold War Sponsored by the Committee on the Status of Women in the Historical Profession Chair: Lawrence Glickman, University of South Carolina

Chair: Christine Arato, National Park Service ◆ Elaine Jackson-Retondo, Pacific West Regional Office, National Park Service ◆ Cynthia Walton, Southeast Regional Office, National Park Service ◆ Joan Zenzen, Independent Historian and National Park Service Consultant

Saturday, April 13 10:30 am

saturday

Revisiting the “American Century”: Cultural Internationalisms between World War and Empire Chair: Paul Kramer, Vanderbilt University Robert Taft: Global Commitments and Conservative Isolationism Christopher Nichols, Oregon State University Wendell Willkie, Popular Internationalism, and Empire in the Postwar Moment Samuel Zipp, Brown University Sam Greenlee and the Specter of Black Internationalism Adriane Lentz-Smith, Duke University International Affairs: Louise Bryant, William Bullitt, and Americans’ Emotional Engagements with the World, 1920s–1930s Jenifer Van Vleck, Yale University Commentator: Paul Kramer

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Shopping for Justice: Challenging Sweatshops through Solidarity Activism, 1935–1945 Beth Robinson, University of Wisconsin–Milwaukee “Getting Rich Out of This War:” Congress and the Politics of Price Control During World War II Nancy Young, University of Houston “A Gestapo of Volunteer Housewives”: Price Control and Consumer Activism in the United States and Canada during World War II Joseph Tohill, York University Canada’s Radical Consumer Movement and the Struggle for Postwar Price Controls Julie Guard, University of Manitoba Commentator: Lawrence Glickman

Everyday People: Some of the Many Shades of Social Justice Movements in the San Francisco Bay Area Sponsored by the Labor and Working-Class History Association Chair: Waldo Martin, University of California, Berkeley “Civil Rights Unionism” on the Embarcadero and in West Oakland: Race Relations in and around Local 10, International Longshore and Warehouse Union (ILWU) Peter Cole, Western Illinois University The United Farm Workers and the Black Freedom Struggle in the San Francisco Bay Area, 1965–1973 Lauren Araiza, Denison University

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sessions Toward a New World Consciousness: Excavating the Praxis and Possibilities of the 1968 Third World Strike at San Francisco State Jason Ferreira, San Francisco State University

America’s War of Religion: The Cold War on the Home Front

Commentator: Waldo Martin

“Freedom under God”: Corporations, Christianity, and the Revolt against the New Deal Kevin Kruse, Princeton University

Black Women’s Internationalism: Contesting the Global Color Line, 1928–1970 Chair: Tiffany Gill, University of Delaware “One World or No World”: Mary McLeod Bethune in the Diaspora Moment Grace Leslie, Brandeis University Fellowship among Many Races: Juliette Derricotte Contemplates Her Journey around the World Lauren Kientz Anderson, University of Kentucky

Chair: Mary Dudziak, Emory University

The Legacy of Cold War Religious Extremism: How the Christian Crusade Paved the Way for the New Christian Right Heather Hendershot, Massachusetts Institute of Technology “People Are People the World Over”: The Cold War and Judeo-Christian Multiculturalism Mia Bruch, University of Michigan Commentator: Darren Dochuk, Purdue University

Protecting Manhood: The Influence of Hegemonic Masculinity in Pediatrics

“Confraternity Among all Dark Races”: The (Inter)nationalist Politics of Mittie Maude Lena Gordon Keisha Blain, Princeton University

Chair: Liz Watkins, University of California, San Francisco

Commentator: Tiffany Gill

“We can end dwarfism!” The Promise of Cadaver Human Growth Hormone Therapy in the US Aimee Medeiros, City College of San Francisco and University of California, San Francisco Defend, Labor, Multiply: Mumps Vaccination and Male Citizenship in the U.S. Elena Conis, Emory University

saturday

“What That Meant to Me”: SNCC Women, Africa, and Black Internationalism Julia Erin Wood, Texas A&M University

Holt, Gesell, and Spock: Apostles of Masculinity in Twentieth-Century American Pediatrics Hamilton Cravens, Iowa State University Commentator: Jessica Weiss, California State University, East Bay SESSION KEY Community College ò State of the Field ÍCareers

Teaching ³ Public History

2 013 OA H A N N UA L M E E T I N G ◆ S A N F R A N C I S C O, C A L I F OR N I A

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sessions Teaching the Civil War in the 8th Grade: The History Blueprint Approach

Remembering Immigration Historian Jon Gjerde

Chair: Shennan Hutton, University of California, Davis

Sponsored by the Immigration and Ethnic History Society

Academic Collaboration on Teaching the Civil War Ari Kelman, University of California, Davis The History Blueprint Approach to Teaching the Civil War in the 8th Grade Tuyen Tran, University of California, Davis Experiencing the Civil War Jah-Yee Woo, Oakland Unified School District, and Angela La Torre, Valley View Middle School

Changing Notions of Race, Place and Freedom among Blacks in the US, 1850–1940 Chair: Daina Ramey Berry, University of Texas at Austin

saturday

I, Too, Am American: Migrations and Citizenship Status in Black New York City, 1890–1930s Janira Teague, University of California, Los Angeles “From dat minute I started prayin’ for freedom. All de rest o’ de women done de same”: Enslaved Women, Family and the Experience of Freedom in the First Decades following the Civil War Brenda Stevenson, University of California, Los Angeles Westward to Freedom?: African Americans in Los Angeles during the Second Half of the Nineteenth Century Marne Campbell, Loyola Marymount University

Chair: Erika Lee, University of Minnesota Jon Gjerde and the Maturation of Immigration History Jon Butler, Yale University Jon Gjerde, the Ethnic Turnerians, and the Minnesota School of Immigration and Refugee Studies Donna Gabaccia, University of Minnesota Moving Forward and Looking Back: A Student’s Perspective on the Legacies of Jon Gjerde S. Deborah Kang, California State University, San Marcos Jon Gjerde and the Berkeley Community David Hollinger, University of California, Berkeley

ò Mass Incarceration: New Directions in the Study of Race and Punishment in Modern American Life Chair: Kelly Lytle Hernández, University of California, Los Angeles ◆ Sarah Haley, University of California, Los Angeles ◆ Donna Murch, Rutgers University ◆ Khalil Gibran Muhammad, Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture ◆ Heather Thompson, Temple University

Commentator: V. P. Franklin, University of California, Riverside

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sessions Eric Foner’s Reconstruction Turns Twenty-Five

Remembering Cesar Chavez and the Farm Workers Movement

Chair: Kate Masur, Northwestern University

Sponsored by the Labor and Working-Class History Association Offsite at the California Historical Society

◆ Heather Andrea Williams, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill ◆ Gregory P. Downs, City College and Graduate Center, City University of New York ◆ Eric Foner, Columbia University ◆ Thavolia Glymph, Duke University ◆ Steve Hahn, University of Pennsylvania

Í ³ Non-Tenure-Track Historians: A Conversation about Past and Present Moderator: Donald Rogers, Central Connecticut State University ◆ Arlene Lazarowitz, California State University, Long Beach ◆ Elizabeth Hohl, Fairfield University ◆ Alexandra Nickliss, City College of San Francisco ◆ John P. Lloyd, California State Polytechnic University, Pomona ◆ Jennifer Helton, Independent Historian

Chair: Matthew Garcia, Arizona State University ◆ Miriam Pawel, Independent Scholar ◆ Gilbert Padilla, cofounder of the United Farm Workers of America ◆ Jerry Cohen, Former Head of UFW Union’s Legal Team ◆ Chava Bustamente, Independent Scholar ◆ Elaine Elinson, UFW Boycott Veteran and Author ◆ Jerry Brown, Founding Professor, Florida International University

The Business of War: Production, Consumption, and Destruction, 1860–2013 Chair: Andrew Zimmerman, George Washington University

Photographs as Historical Evidence: Teenie Harris, Twentieth-Century Pittsburgh, and the Nation

saturday

◆ Meredith H. Lair, George Mason University ◆ Christopher Capozzola, Massachusetts Institute of Technology ◆ Brian DeLay, University of California, Berkeley

Chair: Deborah Willis, New York University ◆ Constance Schulz, University of South Carolina ◆ Colleen McDannell, University of Utah ◆ Sam Stephenson, Duke University Commentator: Louise Lippincott, Carnegie Museum of Art SESSION KEY Community College ò State of the Field ÍCareers

Teaching ³ Public History

2 013 OA H A N N UA L M E E T I N G ◆ S A N F R A N C I S C O, C A L I F OR N I A

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sessions

Saturday, April 13 12:00 pm Focus on Teaching Luncheon Cost: No charge Keynote Speaker: Sam Wineburg, Stanford University

Women and Social Movements Luncheon Cost: Reserve a seat by emailing tdublin@binghamton.edu. Keynote Address: “What’s New and Upcoming on the Women and Social Movements Web Sites” Kathryn Kish Sklar, Binghamton University Thomas Dublin, Binghamton University

Urban History Association Luncheon Cost: $45 Keynote Speaker: Ananya Roy, University of California, Berkeley

Labor and Working-Class History Association Luncheon

saturday

Cost: $45 Keynote Address: “No Race-Baiting, Red-Baiting or Queer-Baiting!”: Allan Bérubé’s History of the Marine Cooks and Stewards Union Estelle Freedman, Stanford University

Society for Historians of the Gilded Age and Progressive Era Luncheon Cost: $45 Distinguished Historian Address: “Integrating African American History into Master US Historical Narratives” Pero Gaglo Dagbovie, Michigan State University

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sessions Towards a Politics of Uplift: McAdoo’s Jubilee Singers and McAdoo’s Minstrels in South Africa, 1890–1898 Chinua Thelwell, Allegheny College

Saturday, April 13 1:00 pm

Intimate Matters at 25: Reflections on the History of US Sexuality

Í Online Visibility, Resumés and Interviews What people see of you online has an enormous effect on the way people think of you, perhaps even more than resumes. Richard Bolles (author of What Color Is Your Parachute?) says, “There is a new resume in town, and it’s called Google.” Learn what you need to know about this, how it affects resumes, and how you can bring your strengths to interviews. Presenter: Kate Duttro, Career Change for Academics

Sponsored by the Committee on Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender History and the Committee on the Status of Women in the Historical Profession Chair: Joanne Meyerowitz, Yale University ◆ John D’Emilio, University of Illinois at Chicago ◆ Margot Canaday, Princeton University ◆ Nayan Shah, University of California, San Diego ◆ Thomas Foster, DePaul University ◆ Cynthia Blair, University of Illinois at Chicago

Saturday, April 13

Raceball: Shifting Currents in the Historiography of Sports

1:45 pm

Chair: Adrian Burgos, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign

Chair: Penny Von Eschen, University of Michigan Transmitting Race: Broadcasting African-American Music in Francophone Africa, 1956–66 Celeste Moore, University of Chicago Youth Subversive Consumption: Kwanza Unit and the Impact of the “Golden Era” on the Early History of Tanzanian Hip-Hop and Culture, 1985–1994 Seth Markle, Trinity College

Commentator: Rob Ruck, University of Pittsburgh

ò Rethinking Working-Class Suburbia Sponsored by the Labor and Working-Class History Association Chair: Becky Nicolaides, University of California, Los Angeles ◆ Jerry Gonzalez, University of Texas at San Antonio ◆ Alexandra Murphy, Princeton University ◆ Elaine Lewinnek, California State University, Fullerton Commentator: Robert Lewis, University of Toronto

SESSION KEY Community College ò State of the Field ÍCareers

◆ David K. Wiggins, George Mason University ◆ Louis Moore, Grand Valley State College ◆ Lisa Alexander, Wayne State University

saturday

Globalizing African-American Music: The Transmission, Translation, and Travel of Black American Musical Traditions in Africa, 1890–1994

Teaching ³ Public History

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sessions Internationalizing US History with the Online Archive: “Women and Social Movements, International—1840 to the Present” Sponsored by the Committee on the Status of Women in the Historical Profession Chair: Thomas Dublin, Binghamton University The International Labor Organization: Women’s Networks and the Making of the Woman Worker, 1931–1975 Eileen Boris, University of California, Santa Barbara American Women Missionaries, 1818–1927: A Century of Organizing Denominationally, Ecumenically, Transnationally Barbara Reeves-Ellington, Siena College The International World of May Wright Sewall and the International Council of Women, 1880–1920 Karen Offen, Stanford University

saturday

Commentator: Nancy Cott, Harvard University

ò Histories of the Americas: Borderlands, Hemispheric, and Global Perspectives Chair: Erika Lee, University of Minnesota Reconstructing North America: Slavery, Civil War, and Nation Building in the US-Mexico Borderlands Karl Jacoby, Brown University From Pacific Rim to the Hemispheric Perspective: The Origins of Bolton’s History of the Americas Albert Hurtado, University of Oklahoma “Border Studies in a Comparative Perspective” or “Comparative Border Studies?” Claudia Sadowski-Smith, Arizona State University

Hopeful and Fraught with Anxiety: Black Americans and their Relationships to Haiti, 1800–1865 Chair: Manisha Sinha, University of Massachusetts Amherst Envisioning the Possibilities of Haiti and the United States in the Work of Robert Douglass, Jr. Aston Gonzalez, University of Michigan The Cradle of Hope: African Americans and the Fight for the Recognition of Haitian Independence Leslie Alexander, The Ohio State University Hope in a Land Away from Home: The Historiography of Haitian Influence on African American Political Discourse in the Nineteenth Century Kellie Carter Jackson, Harvard University Commentator: Maurice Jackson, Georgetown University

Tri-National Considerations: Writing Indigenous Microhistories of the USCanadian Borderlands Chair: Nicole St-Onge, University of Ottawa Bordered Lives: Francis Assikinack, Andrew J. Blackbird, and Odawa History Susan Gray, Arizona State University Entangled Borders: Using the 49th Parallel to Secure Metis Rights and Freedoms in the 1840s–50s Carolyn Podruchny, York University Buffalo Paths and Paper Trails: Reconstructing Borderland Metis Communities Michel Hogue, Carleton University John L. Clarke and the Blackfeet Reservation as a Bordered-Land, 1900–1950 Andrew Graybill, Southern Methodist University

Boycott Grapes! Cold War Connection and Disconnection in UFW and Chile Solidarity Struggles in the United States Heidi Tinsman, University of California, Irvine

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sessions Recasting the Civil Rights Era Chair: Leon Litwack, University of California, Berkeley “Get Up! Stand Up!” The Southern Negro Youth Congress, The Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee, and the History of Twentieth-Century African American Youth Activism Waldo Martin, University of California, Berkeley Brown, “A Black Cultural Product”: Robert L. Carter and the Struggle for Education Equality, 1942–1968 Patricia Sullivan, University of South Carolina Commentators: Robin D. G. Kelley, University of California, Los Angeles; Margaret Burnham, Northeastern University; and Kimberley Phillips, Brooklyn College

“The Christian Spirit in the Gilded Age”: Revisiting Herbert Gutman’s Article (Almost) 50 Years Later Sponsored by the Labor and Working-Class History Association Chair: Leon Fink, University of Illinois at Chicago

Chair: Daisy Martin, Roy Rosenzweig Center for History & New Media, George Mason University Using Document-Based Performance Assessments with Sixth and Eleventh Graders in New York City Schools Daisy Martin, Roy Rosenzweig Center for History & New Media, George Mason University Assessment in the Revised Advance Placement US History Course Timothy Thurber, Virginia Commonwealth University Connecting Historical Thinking Standards to Classroom Practice: The Oakland, California, Assessment Experience Stanley Pesick, Oakland Unified School District Creating History Assessments for the Twenty-first Century: Using the Library of Congress’s Digital Resources to Go Beyond the Bubble Sam Wineburg, Joel Breakstone, and Mark Smith, Stanford University Commentator: Katherine Suyeyasu, Oakland Unified School District

Barack Obama, Islam, and Africa: The First Term Lansiné Kaba’s paper will serve as the focus of this panel. The paper will be circulated electronically in March to attendees who indicate an interest. Visit http://annualmeeting.oah.org for more information.

saturday

◆ Heath Carter, University of Notre Dame ◆ Janine Giordano Drake, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign ◆ Edward Blum, San Diego State University ◆ Jarod Roll, University of Sussex

Assessing Students’ Historical Thinking: Revisioning and Refashioning History Assessments

Chair: James T. Campbell, Stanford University Barack Obama, Islam, and Africa: The First Term Lansiné Kaba, Carnegie Mellon University–Qatar Commentator: Laurence Glasco, University of Pittsburgh

SESSION KEY Community College ò State of the Field ÍCareers

Teaching ³ Public History

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sessions Internationalizing Mexican American Civil & Human Rights Struggles Chair: Benjamin H. Johnson, University of Wisconsin–Milwaukee Justice across Borders: Reis López Tijerina Internationalizes the New Mexico Land Grants Movement as a Human Rights Struggle Zaragosa Vargas, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Dying for Democracy: Mexican Nationals in the US Army and US-Mexico Wartime Diplomacy, 1940–1945 Neil Foley, Southern Methodist University Commentator: Benjamin H. Johnson

Saturday, April 13

All OAH members are encouraged to attend the OAH Business Meeting to participate in the governance of the organization. Proposals for action by the OAH should be made in writing to OAH Executive Director Katherine M. Finley at the OAH Executive Office.

4:00 pm OAH Awards Ceremony The Organization of American Historians sponsors annual awards and prizes given in recognition of scholarly and professional achievements in the field of American history. Please join the OAH in congratulating the award and prize winners during the ceremony immediately preceding the Presidential Address.

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Sponsored by the OAH Committee on Public History Chair: Aidan Smith, Organization of American Historians ◆ Rebecca Conard, Middle Tennessee State University ◆ Anne Mitchell Whisnant, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill ◆ Pero Dagbovie, Michigan State University ◆ Charlene Mires, Rutgers University

5:00 pm Presidential Address: Navigating Segregated Life in America’s Racial Borderhoods Albert Camarillo, Stanford University

5:30 pm to 7:00 pm Closing Recption Join the OAH in thanking OAH President Albert Camarillo for his service to the organization and the profession at a reception in his honor at the Hilton Union Square.

Sponsored by the California Historical Society

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Linda A. Cicero / Stanford News Service

saturday

3:30 pm OAH Business Meeting

³ Working with the National Park Service: Perspectives of Academic Historians


sessions

sample

Forging US-Global Connections in the Early Twentieth Century: Immigration, Foreign Aid, and Foreign Policy

Sunday, April 14 8:30 am

Sponsored by the Society for Historians of the Gilded Age and Progressive Era and the Society for Historians of American Foreign Relations

“Sighting” Migration Policy History: Chair: Julie Greene, University of Maryland Methodology and Theoretical Perspectives from Local to Transnational Repatriation Debates: Defining Puerto Ricans and Chair: Donna Gabaccia, University of Minnesota The International White Slavery Panic and the Moral Turpitude Clause: Using Archival Sources to Illuminate Women’s Lives, Global Relations, and Deportation Policy Deirdre Moloney, Princeton University Recording the International Side of Deportation Torrie Hester, Saint Louis University “No Moral or Legal Obligation”: Border Security and Refugee Migration along the US-Mexico Border during the Mexican Revolution, 1910–1917 Evan Taparata, University of Minnesota Commentator: Kelly Lytle Hernández, University of California, Los Angeles

Mexicans in the 1920s and 1930s Robert McGreevey, The College of New Jersey Catastrophic Connections: Responses to Foreign Natural Disasters in the Progressive Era United States Julia Irwin, University of South Florida Transnational Women’s Health Activism: American Women’s Hospitals and Modern Nursing in Greece, 1920–1935 Virginia Metaxas, Southern Connecticut State University Making the Monroe Doctrine Global Christopher Nichols, Oregon State University Commentator: Julie Greene

Community College ò State of the Field ÍCareers

Teaching ³ Public History

2 013 OA H A N N UA L M E E T I N G ◆ S A N F R A N C I S C O, C A L I F OR N I A

sunday

SESSION KEY

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sessions Religious Faith and Same-Sex Desire in the Early Twentieth Century Sponsored by the Committee on the Status of Women in the Historical Profession

Race and State Violence across the Pacific Moon-Ho Jung, University of Washington

The Last Heretics: Excommunication and Identity in Early Twentieth-Century Christianity Kathryn Lofton, Yale University

Progressive Era Social Activism and the Rise of the National Security State Jennifer Fronc, University of Massachusetts Amherst

“From Father in Me”: Celibacy and Same Sex-Desire across the Color Line in Father Divine’s Peace Mission Movement Judith Weisenfeld, Princeton University

The Grange and Legacies of Gilded Age Reform in the Progressive Era Charles Postel, San Francisco State University, University of Heidelberg

Winnifred Wygal’s Flock: Polyamory, Same-Sex Desire, and Christian Faith in the Twentieth Century Kathi Kern, University of Kentucky

Reconceiving the Age of Reform Robyn Muncy, University of Maryland

Commentator: Bruce Dorsey

The Pacific West’s Urban Crossroads: Exploring Local, National & Global Connections Sponsored by the Urban History Association

Chair: Shelley Lee, Oberlin College

Chair: Shelley Lee, Oberlin College

Rethinking Citizenship: American Migrants in Japan, 1920–1950 Michael Jin, University of California, Santa Cruz

A Not So Global Affair: San Diego’s 1915 PanamaCalifornia Exposition and Urban Identity in the Pacific West John Putman, San Diego State University

Eugenics in the Classroom: Stanford University’s Intelligence Testing of Japanese Americans, 1920–1935 David Palter, University of California, Santa Cruz Globalizing the Local: The Sunagawa Anti-Base Protests, 1955–1957 Jennifer Miller, University of Wisconsin–Madison

sunday

Chair: Robert Cherny, San Francisco State University

Chair: Bruce Dorsey, Swarthmore College

Trans-Pacific Citizens: US-Japanese Encounters from 1920 to 1960

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Rethinking the Long Progressive Era

Trans-Pacific Localism: Terminal Island Japanese from Taiji, Wakayama Prefecture Yuko Konno, University of Southern California Commentator: Naoko Shibusawa, Brown University

Centroamérica in San Francisco: Historicizing the Central American Presence on the Pacific Coast Eduardo Contreras, City University of New York, Hunter College Itinerant Entanglements: Urban Indigenous Histories from the Pacific West to the Centre of Empire Coll Thrush, University of British Colombia Commentator: Barbara Berglund, University of South Florida

2 013 OA H A N N UA L M E E T I N G ◆ S A N F R A N C I S C O, C A L I F OR N I A


sessions Incorporating Women: The Pursuit of Equality in the Working World, 1964–1995

“What a Tangled Web We Weave”: Ideals and Realities of Religion in the American Nation

Sponsored by the Labor and Working-Class History Association and the Committee on the Status of Women in the Historical Profession

Chair: Sarah Barringer Gordon, University of Pennsylvania

Chair: Eileen Boris, University of California, Santa Barbara

The Invention of Religious Freedom as an American Ideal, 1789–1835 Tisa Wenger, Yale University

A “Cooperative Venture”: Corporate Feminists and Corporate Management Elizabeth More, Harvard University Class and Class Action: Women’s Legal Activism at the New York Times, 1969–1976 Katherine Turk, University of Texas at Dallas and Indiana University Maurer School of Law From Personnel to HR: Clerical Workers and the Consequences of Formalizing Corporate Policy Allison Elias, University of Virginia Commentator: Eileen Boris

Reinventing Civil Liberties: The Jehovah’s Witnesses’ Street Provocations Leah Weinryb Grohsgal, Emory University “Without Distinction of Creed”: Military Chaplains and Religious Experimentation in the 1930s and 40s Ronit Stahl, University of Michigan

(The) Class(room) Is Everywhere: Teaching Labor and Working-Class History in the Age of Occupy Sponsored by the Labor and Working-Class History Association

Native Nationalism and Red Power: Historicizing the 1969 Alcatraz Occupation

Chair: Cindy Hahamovitch, College of William and Mary

Moderator: Sherry Smith, Southern Methodist University ◆ Kent Blansett, University of Minnesota, Morris ◆ Elizabeth Castle, University of South Dakota ◆ Troy Johnson, California State University, Long Beach ◆ Craig A. Glassner, National Park Ranger, Interpretation

◆ Emily E. LaBarbera Twarog, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign ◆ David Goldberg, Wayne State University ◆ Sarita Gupta, Jobs with Justice ◆ Jennifer Luff, Georgetown University ◆ Jacob Remes, State University of New York at Empire State College ◆ Jeffrey Helgeson, Texas State University–San Marcos

Community College ò State of the Field ÍCareers

Teaching ³ Public History

2 013 OA H A N N UA L M E E T I N G ◆ S A N F R A N C I S C O, C A L I F OR N I A

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sessions Asylum and Sovereignty in the 1970s and 1980s

Using Oral History for Social Justice Activism

Chair: Jana Lipman, Tulane University

Chair: Candace Falk, University of California, Berkeley

Homefront of the Hostage Crisis: The Contested Status of Iranian Students in the US Yael Schacher, Harvard University Implementing Asylum: The 1980 Refugee Act and Immigration Cause Lawyers Rebecca Hamlin, Grinnell College

◆ Barbara Winslow, City University of New York, Brooklyn College ◆ Mark D. Naison, Fordham University, Principal Investigator, Bronx African American History Project ◆ Oscar Rosales Castaneda, El Comite ◆ Trevor Griffey, Evergreen State College

Offshore Refugee Processing and the Origins of the Guantanamo Model Jeffrey Kahn, University of Chicago

Sunday, April 14

Commentator: Philip Wolgin, Center for American Progress

10:30 am

Taking and Shaping the Land: Mexican/ American California, 1769–2000

Making the Familiar Strange: Transnational Readings of Iconic American Texts

Chair: Eric Avila, University of California, Los Angeles The “Land Grab”: A View from Urban History Alison Isenberg, Princeton University Taking the Land to Make the City: San Francisco, 1769–1860 Mary Ryan, The Johns Hopkins University

sunday

Mapping Reactionary Los Angeles: The Geohistorical Inscription of Urban Power and Injustice, 1840s-1940s Philip Ethington, University of Southern California

Chair: Mark Bradley, University of Chicago ◆ Brian Rouleau, Texas A&M University ◆ Brooke Blower, Boston University ◆ Frank Costigliola, University of Connecticut ◆ Melani McAlister, George Washington University Commentator: Fredrik Logevall, Cornell University

Commentator: Eric Avila

Beyond Slave Labor: Exploring Shifting Sources of Unfree Labor in the Colonial Americas after 1700

ò Histories of the US State

Sponsored by the Labor and Working-Class History Association

Chair: William J. Novak, University of Michigan ◆ James Sparrow, University of Chicago ◆ Rachel St. John, Harvard University ◆ Cybelle Fox, University of California, Berkeley Commentator: William J. Novak

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Sponsored by the Society for Historians of American Foreign Relations

Chair: Roger Ekirch, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University Masters, Servants, and Slaves: Female Servant Relationships in Colonial Virginia, 1700–1780 Allison Madar, Rice University

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sessions Untangling the History of Convicts and Indentured Servants Jennie Jeppesen, University of Melbourne

Re-assessing the Relations between Protestant Thought and Postwar Liberalism

“Dangerous” Slaves, “Lazy” Peasants, and “Industrious” White Immigrants: Retooling Labor in the Sugar Industry of Spanish Colonial Puerto Rico, 1835–1860 Jorge Chinea, Wayne State University

Chair: Jill Gill, Boise State University

Commentator: Roger Ekirch

Color and Conscience: The Transformation of Protestant Attitudes toward Race in the World War II Era Gene Zubovich, University of California, Berkeley

Rethinking the Impact of Third-Party Politics in Nineteenth-Century America Chair: Amy Greenberg, Penn State University Antislavery Third Parties and the Transformation of Antebellum Politics Corey Brooks, York College of Pennsylvania Local Focos: The Equal Rights Party and Its Influence on National Politics Joshua Greenberg, Bridgewater State University

“An Issue that Needs Re-thinking”: Christian Realists Confront the Supreme Court, 1947–1963 Christopher Hickman, University of North Florida

Theodore Meyer Greene, Religion, and Postwar Liberalism Ethan Schrum, University of Virginia Commentator: Jill Gill

Naming Intellectual Movements: Who Gets to Be an “-ism”? Chair: David Hollinger, University of California, Berkeley

The Knights of Labor and the Third-Party Movement in Texas, 1886–1896 Matthew Hild, University of West Georgia and Georgia Institute of Technology

Before “Social Darwinism”: Darwin and Spencer in the United States Henry Cowles, Princeton University

Commentator: Charles Postel, San Francisco State University, University of Heidelberg

The Wittgenstein Vogue in Postwar America Joel Isaac, University of Cambridge Freud and Freudians in the Postwar United States Elizabeth Lunbeck, Vanderbilt University Commentator: Jennifer Ratner-Rosenhagen, University of Wisconsin–Madison

Community College ò State of the Field ÍCareers

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2 013 OA H A N N UA L M E E T I N G ◆ S A N F R A N C I S C O, C A L I F OR N I A

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sessions Tangled Metaphors: Writing and Reading Gender and Sexual Identity in Twentieth-Century Anglo-American Mass Culture Sponsored by the Committee on the Status of Women in the Historical Profession Chair: Leisa D. Meyer, College of William and Mary Looking for “It”: Elinor Glyn and the Production of Modern Heterosexuality Hilary Hallett, Columbia University “Cockroaches and Gigolos”: The Gender Politics of Mid-Twentieth-Century Gossip Reporting Kathleen Feeley, University of Redlands Hidden in Plain Sight: The Parable of Catherine “Kitty” Genovese and the “38 Witnesses” Marcia Gallo, University of Nevada, Las Vegas Commentator: Alice Echols, University of Southern California

Race, Nation, and Citizenship in a Transnational World Sponsored by the Immigration and Ethnic History Society Chair: Barbara M. Posadas, Northern Illinois University

sunday

“Members of the National Family”: Asian Americans and Citizenship Loss in Twentieth-Century United States Kritika Agarwal, State University of New York, Buffalo

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“Exit the Filipino”: Migration, Marriage, and Transnational Filipino American Families during the 1935 Repatriation Act Maria Paz G. Esguerra, University of Michigan “The Fluidity of Race”: Hybridized Ideas in the Philippines and United States, 1900–1945 Nicholas Trajano Molnar, Rutgers University

The Politics of Animal Entertainment: Race, Nation, and Conflict in American History Chair: Brett Mizelle, California State University, Long Beach “Try Telling That to the Polar Bears”: Rationing and Resistance at the Wartime Zoo John Kinder, Oklahoma State University Tough Men, Tender Meat: The Growing Visibility of Pain Management in Professional Rodeo Jeannette Vaught, University of Texas at Austin Entanglements on the Tracks: Reframing the Debate over Greyhound Racing Gwyneth Thayer, Tennessee State Library & Archives “An Affront to Civilization”: The Bullfight as a Crucible for American Exceptionalism at Home and Abroad Janet Davis, University of Texas at Austin

Frontiers and Borders in the American South and West: Comparative Approaches to Gender and Marriage in the Eighteenth and Nineteenth Centuries Sponsored by the Committee on the Status of Women in the Historical Profession Chair: Catherine Clinton, Queen’s University Belfast “Like in Yankeedom”: Marital Roles in a NineteenthCentury Southern Border City Allison Fredette, University of Florida British and American Gentleman Hunters in the American West, 1865–1914 Gregory Kosc, Tarrant County College The Family Romance of the American Revolution: Political Separatism, Divorce Law, and the Crisis of Union in the Early National West Honor Sachs, College of Charleston Commentator: Fay Yarbrough, University of Oklahoma

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sessions Harriet Tubman: Crossings and Commemoration Moderator: Lois Horton, George Mason University ◆ Kristen Oertel, The University of Tulsa ◆ Kate Clifford Larson, Simmons College ◆ Quraysh Lansana, Chicago State University ◆ Anthony Cohen, The Menare Foundation

Histories and Futures of Laborlore: A Roundtable in Memory of Archie Green Chair: Sean Burns, University of California, Berkeley ◆ Daniel Gilbert, University of Illinois at UrbanaChampaign ◆ Kieran Taylor, The Citadel ◆ Catherine Powell, San Francisco State University ◆ Adam Machado, Arhoolie Records

Native American and Indigenous Studies Association (NAISA): A Global Gathering Place for Indigenous Studies Sponsored by the Native American and Indigenous Studies Association Chair: Philip Deloria, University of Michigan ◆ Jean O’Brien, University of Minnesota ◆ K. Tsianina Lomawaima, University of Arizona ◆ Robert Warrior, University of Illinois at UrbanaChampaign

Ronald L. Lewis and the Transformation of Historical Scholarship on the Appalachian Region Chair: Joe William Trotter, Carnegie Mellon University

When the World of Goods Goes Bad: Drugs as Intolerable Commodities

◆ Kevin Barksdale, Marshall University ◆ Dwight Billings, University of Kentucky ◆ Sandra Barney, Lock Haven State University

Chair: Liz Watkins, University of California, San Francisco

Commentator: Ronald L. Lewis, West Virginia University

No Such Thing as a Generic Drug? The Contested Commodification of Late Twentieth-Century Therapeutics Jeremy Greene, The Johns Hopkins University “Not in Good Faith”: Illicit Prescribing and the Moral Economy of Medicines David Herzberg, University of Buffalo Snake Oil Revisited Susan Strasser, University of Delaware Commentator: Joseph Gabriel, Florida State University

Border Wars/History Wars: Teaching Mexican-American History in the K–12 Classroom in the US-Mexico Borderlands Chair: Gary B. Nash, University of California, Los Angeles ◆ Carlos Vélez-Ibáñez, Arizona State University at the Tempe Campus ◆ Nicole Guidotti-Hernández, University of Texas at Austin

Community College ò State of the Field ÍCareers

Teaching ³ Public History

2 013 OA H A N N UA L M E E T I N G ◆ S A N F R A N C I S C O, C A L I F OR N I A

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participants A Ablavsky, Gregory 40 Adkins, Carrie 48 Agarwal, Kritika 70 Alexander, Leslie 62 Alexander, Lisa 61 Álvarez, C. J. 54 Alvarez, Milo 44 Amsterdam, Daniel 47 Anderson, Claudia 33 Anderson, Lauren Kientz 57 Andrew Kinney 45 Araiza, Lauren 56 Arato, Christine 29, 56 Arellano, Lisa 45 Arenson, Adam 34 Aron, Stephen 48 Austin, Curtis 54 Avila, Eric 68

B Babal, Marianne 23 Bailey, Beth 36, 53 Baldwin, Peter C. 33 Barber, Katrine 54 Barksdale, Kevin 71 Barney, Sandra 71 Barrett, Ross 13, 47 Barr, Juliana 54 Bauer, William 36 Baumgartner, Kabria 36 Beagle, Danny 27, 39 Bell, Malcolm 52 Bell, Richard 13, 47 Bellion, Wendy 41 Belt, Rabia 53 Berebitsky, Julie 39 Berglund, Barbara 66 Berrey, Stephen 55 Berry, Daina Ramey 58 Berry, David A. 34 Billings, Dwight 71 Blackburn, Bob 42 Blain, Keisha 57

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Blair, Cynthia 61 Blansett, Kent 67 Blanton, Carlos K. 43 Blower, Brooke 68 Blum, Edward 63 Bogard, Diane E. Whitley 34 Borgwardt, Elizabeth 44 Boris, Eileen 62, 67 Boster, Dea 54 Bourn, Drew 24 Boyd, Nan Alamilla 49 Bradley, Mark 68 Braund, Kathryn 33 Breslin, Mary Lou 50 Brian, Kathleen 13, 47 Brier, Jennifer 33 Briley, Ron 49 Brilliant, Mark 49 Brooks, Corey 69 Broussard, Albert 36 Brouwer, Nathan 53 Brown, Jerry 59 Brown, Joshua 13, 47 Brown, Leslie 28, 46 Brown, Victoria 52 Brown, Vincent 54 Bruch, Mia 57 Brune, Jeffrey 54 Burgos, Adrian 61 Burnham, Margaret 63 Burns, Sean 71 Burns-Howard, Kathryn 53 Bustamente, Chava 34, 59 Butler, Jon 58 Bynum, Tara 35 Byrne, Kevin 55

C Cabello, Tristan 44 Cadava, Geraldo 54 Cahill, Cathleen 36 Campbell, James T. 63 Campbell, Marne 58 Canaday, Margot 61 Cannato, Vincent 42

Capozzola, Christopher 59 Carroll, Tamar 54 Carson, James Taylor 33 Carter, Heath 63 Cartwright, Ryan Lee 36 Cassanello, Robert 27, 42 Castaneda, Oscar Rosales 68 Castillo-Muñoz, Verónica 41 Castle, Elizabeth 67 Chang, David 49 Chang, Derek 28, 46 Charap, Lawrence 55 Chavez-Garcia, Miroslava 44 Cheng, Cindy 55 Cherny, Robert 21, 66 Chin, Charlie 21 Chinea, Jorge 69 Choy, Catherine Ceniza 42 Choy, Phillip P. 21 Christopher, Christine 52 Clement, Elizabeth 44 Clinton, Catherine 70 Cocks, Catherine 35 Cohen, Andrew Wender 49 Cohen, Anthony 71 Cohen, Jerry 59 Cole, Peter 56 Cole, Timothy 40 Coleman, David 33 Collier-Thomas, Bettye 41 Collins, Robert Keith 27, 39 Conard, Rebecca 64 Conis, Elena 57 Connor, Mary 49 Contreras, Eduardo 66 Cook, James 43 Corbould, Clare 52 Costigliola, Frank 68 Cott, Nancy 62 Cowles, Henry 69 Cravens, Hamilton 57 Critchlow, Donald L. 39 Croxall, Christine 48 Cumings, Bruce 53

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Currarino, Rosanne 41 Czitrom, Daniel 13, 47

D Dagbovie, Pero 64 Dailey, Jane 49 Daniels, Douglas 36 Davis, Janet 70 Davis, Joshua Clark 43 Dayton, Cornelia 45 DeBats, Don 52 DeLay, Brian 59 Delgado, Grace Peña 49 Deloria, Philip 71 D’Emilio, John 61 Demos, John 34 Dennis, Matthew 35 Deverell, Bill 34 Dickson, Ted 55 Dochuk, Darren 57 Dorsey, Bruce 66 Downs, Gregory P. 13, 59 Drake, Janine Giordano 63 Dubcovsky, Alejandra 33 Dublin, Thomas 62 Dudziak, Mary 57 Duttro, Kate 42, 61

E Eaton, Joseph 34 Echols, Alice 70 Egan, Charles 42 Eisenberg, Ellen 35 Ekirch, Roger 68 Elias, Allison 67 Elias, Megan 48 Elinson, Elaine 59 Enyeart, John 41 Eschen, Penny Von 61 Esguerra, Maria Paz G. 70 Estes, Steve 27, 39 Ethington, Philip 34, 68 Ethridge, Robbie 33


participants F Falk, Candace 68 Feeley, Kathleen 70 Felstiner, Mary 50 Ferber, Susan 34, 45 Ferreira, Jason 57 Field, Corinne 47 Fink, Leon 63 Fischer, Claude 33 Fischer, Kirsten 39 Foley, Neil 64 Foner, Eric 13, 59 Foster, Thomas 61 Fox, Cybelle 68 Frank, Gillian 36 Franklin, V. P. 58 Fredette, Allison 70 Freedman, Estelle 52 Fronc, Jennifer 66 Fujino, Diane 53 Furstenberg, François 34

G Gabaccia, Donna 58, 65 Gabriel, Joseph 71 Gaines, Kevin 43 Gallay, Alan 33 Gallo, Marcia 70 Garcia, Mario T. 43 Garcia, Matthew 59 Garrett, Laura 50 Geiger, Andrea 49 Geismer, Lily 34 Giesen, James 36 Gilbert, Daniel 71 Gilbert, Matthew 45 Gill, Jill 69 Gill, Tiffany 57 Gilman, Niles 45 Glasco, Laurence 63 Glassner, Craig A. 67 Glickman, Lawrence 56 Glymph, Thavolia 13, 59 Goedde, Petra 43

Goldberg, David 67 Gonzalez, Aston 62 Gonzalez, Deena J. 41 Gonzalez, Jerry 61 Good, Richard 49 Goodman, Adam 54 Goodman, David 52 Gordon, Sarah Barringer 67 Gore, Dayo 49 Gray, Susan 62 Graybill, Andrew 62 Green, Laurie 55 Greenberg, Amy 69 Greenberg, Joshua 69 Greene, Jeremy 71 Greene, Julie 65 Greenwell, Regina 33 Greer, Brenna 43 Gregory, James N. 45 Griffey, Trevor 68 Grohsgal, Leah Weinryb 67 Gross, Ariela 49 Grubacic, Andrej 44 Guard, Julie 56 Gudis, Catherine 48 Guglielmo, Thomas 49 Guidotti-Hernández, Nicole 71 Gupta, Sarita 67 Gutierrez, David 41, 54

Helgren, Jennifer 44 Helton, Jennifer 59 Hendershot, Heather 57 Henkin, David 33 Hernández, David Manuel 42 Hernández, Kelly Lytle 58, 65 Herzberg, David 71 Hester, Torrie 65 Hewitt, Nancy 28, 46 Hickle, Scott 34 Hickman, Christopher 69 Hild, Matthew 69 Ho, Karen 50 Hogue, Michel 62 Hohl, Elizabeth 59 Hollinger, David 58, 69 Holmes, Kwame 44 Holt, Thomas 55 Honeck, Mischa 44 Hooper, Niels 34 Horton, Lois 71 Hoshino, Mayumi 40 Hsu, Madeline 40 Hudson, Peter James 50 Hughes, Sarah 40 Hulsebosch, Daniel 49 Humphreys, Krystal 40 Hurtado, Albert 62 Hutton, Shennan 13, 58

H

I

Hadden, Sally 55 Hahamovitch, Cindy 67 Hahn, Steve 13, 59 Hahn, Steven 33 Haley, Sarah 58 Hallett, Hilary 70 Hamer, Jennifer 41 Hamlin, Rebecca 68 Hancock, Jonathan 48 Harris, Leslie 13, 47, 55 Hartmann, Susan M. 39 Haulton, Rob 43 Haynes, April 33 Helgeson, Jeffrey 67

Igler, David 41, 49 Immerwahr, Daniel 53 Innis-Jimenez, Michael 40 Inrig, Stephen 33 Irwin, Julia 65 Isaac, Joel 43, 69 Isenberg, Alison 68 Ivol, Ambre 44

Kaba, Lansiné 63 Kahn, Ava 35 Kahn, Jeffrey 68 Kalman, Laura 33 Kane, Maeve 36 Kang, S. Deborah 58 Karp, Michael 36 Kasson, John 35 Kelley, Robin D. G. 34, 63 Kelman, Ari 13, 58 Kern, Kathi 66 Kim, Claire Jean 49 Kinder, John 70 Kitchens, Grover 34 Klein, Shira 40 Klingle, Matthew 41 K’Meyer, Tracy 45 Konno, Yuko 66 Kornbluh, Felicia 54 Kosc, Gregory 70 Kramer, Paul 56 Krauthamer, Barbara 33 Krochmal, Max 49 Kruse, Kevin 57 Kudlick, Catherine 50 Kurashige, Lon 55

J

L

Jackson, Kellie Carter 62 Jackson, Maurice 62 Jackson-Retondo, Elaine 29, 56 Jacobs, Margaret 41

Lacher, Katrina 48 Lacson, Albert 36 Lair, Meredith H. 59 Lamoreaux, Naomi 50

Jacobson, Matthew Frye 41 Jacoby, Karl 62 Jefferson, Alphine 54 Jeppesen, Jennie 69 Jespersen, Christopher 34 Jin, Michael 66 John, Rachel St. 54, 68 John, Richard R. 33 Johnson, Benjamin H. 64 Johnson, Troy 67 Jung, Moon-Ho 66

K

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participants Lang, Clarence 53, 55 Lansana, Quraysh 71 Larson, Kate Clifford 71 Lasser, Carol 52 Lawson, Steven 28, 46 Lazarowitz, Arlene 59 Lee, Erika 42, 58, 62 Lee, Shelley 66 Lee, Sue 21 Lentz-Smith, Adriane 56 Leong, Karen 44 Leslie, Grace 57 Lessoff, Alan 41 Lester, Connie L. 27, 42 Levine-Gronningsater, Sarah 47 Lewinnek, Elaine 61 Lewis, Earl 55 Lewis, Robert 61 Lewis, Ronald L. 71 Lewis, Victoria 50 Li, Robin 26, 27, 38, 39 Licht, Walter 40 Lieberman, David 55 Lieberman, Robbie 53 Lipman, Jana 68 Lippincott, Louise 59 Littauer, Amanda 40 Little, Ann 39 Litwack, Leon 63 Lloyd, John P. 59 Lofton, Kathryn 66 Logevall, Fredrik 68 Lomawaima, K. Tsianina 71 Loza, Mireya 48 Luff, Jennifer 67 Lunbeck, Elizabeth 69

M Mabalon, Dawn 36 Machado, Adam 71 Madar, Allison 68 Maggor, Noam 47 Manion, Jen 45 Marinari, Maddalena 35

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Markle, Seth 61 Marsh, Kevin 48 Marshall, David 52 Marshall, Melvin 52 Martin, Daisy 63 Martin, Michelle 42 Martin, Waldo 56, 57, 63 Martinez, Monica Muñoz 48 Martucci, Jessica 41 Masur, Kate 13, 59 Matt, Susan 33 Mayer, Heather 34 Mazza, Kate 48 McAlister, Melani 68 McClain, Charles 45 McClymer, John 52 McDannell, Colleen 59 McEvoy, Grainne 35 McFarland, Victor 53 McGreevey, Robert 65 McGuinnis, Mark 50 McGuire, Danielle 42 McKibben, Carol 45 Meadows, Doris 49 Meagher, Timothy 35 Medeiros, Aimee 57 Meeker, Martin 26, 38 Metaxas, Virginia 65 Meyer, Leisa D. 70 Meyerowitz, Joanne 61 Miller, Doug 54 Miller, Jennifer 66 Miller-Davenport, Sarah 53 Milteer, Warren 40 Minamikawa, Fuminori 42 Minter, Patricia 55 Mires, Charlene 64 Mirra, Carl 44 Mizelle, Brett 70 Molina, Natalia 34 Molnar, Nicholas Trajano 70 Moloney, Deirdre 65 Moore, Celeste 61 Moore, Louis 61

Moore, Shirley 45 Mora, Cristina 43 More, Elizabeth 67 Moreton, Bethany 50 Morgan, Jennifer 33 Morgan, Nancy 35 Muhammad, Khalil Gibran 55, 58 Mulloy, Darren 34 Mumford, Kevin 44 Muncy, Robyn 66 Murch, Donna 58 Murphree, Daniel 27, 42 Murphy, Alexandra 61 Myers, Andrew 45

N Naftali, Timothy 33 Naison, Mark D. 68 Nash, Gary B. 71 Neumann, Caryn 45 Ngai, Mae M. 41 Nichols, Christopher 56, 65 Nicholson, Bryan 44 Nichter, Luke 33 Nickliss, Alexandra 59 Nicolaides, Becky 61 Norwood, Dael A. 34 Novak, William J. 49, 68

O O’Brien, Greg 40 O’Brien, Jean 36, 71 Oda, Yuki 35 Oertel, Kristen 71 Offen, Karen 62 Offner, Amy C. 53 Okihiro, Gary 55 Oropeza, Lorena 44 Orozco, Cynthia 43 Ortiz, Paul 28, 46 Otero, Lydia 44 Otter, Samuel 36

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P Padilla, Gilbert 59 Palladino, Grace 41 Palter, David 66 Pang, Alex Soojung-Kim 45 Paris, Leslie 47 Parsons, Anne 54 Pawel, Miriam 59 Peiss, Kathy 43 Pelayo, Monica 48 Perales, Monica 41 Perry, Elisabeth Israels 43 Pesick, Stanley 63 Peterson, Dawn 33 Petnick, Basya 27, 39 Phillips, Kimberley 55, 63 Piker, Joshua 33 Pitti, Stephen 41 Pitts, Yvonne 53 Podruchny, Carolyn 62 Posadas, Barbara M. 70 Postel, Charles 66, 69 Powell, Catherine 71 Preston, Andrew 43 Prude, Jonathan 13, 47 Pryor, Elizabeth 33 Putman, John 66

Q Quan, Daniel 42

R Rabinovitch, Lara 35 Radin, Joanna 40 Ratner-Rosenhagen, Jennifer 69 Redman, Emily 27, 39 Redman, Sam 26, 38 Reeves-Ellington, Barbara 62 Rembis, Michael 54 Remes, Jacob 67 Rieppel, Lukas 40 Riley, Padraig 36 Roane, J. T. 43 Robinson, Beth 56


participants Rogers, Donald 59 Roll, Jarod 63 Romano, Renee 53 Romeo, Emily 45 Romero, Tom I. 45, 49 Rosas, Abigail 34 Rosas, Ana 41 Rosenberg, Emily 43 Rosenberg, Gabriel 36 Rosier, Paul C. 45 Rotter, Andrew 43 Rouleau, Brian 68 Royles, Dan 33 Rubens, Lisa 27, 39 Ruck, Rob 61 Rutland, Suzanne 35 Ryan, Mary 68 Rymph, Catherine E. 39

S Sabin, Paul 41 Sachs, Honor 70 Sackman, Douglas Cazuax 41 Sadowski-Smith, Claudia 62 Sanchez, George 34, 41 Saragoza, Alex 43 Schacher, Yael 68 Scheffler, Robin 40 Schlabach, Elizabeth 43 Schneirov, Richard 41 Schrank, Sarah 35 Schrum, Ethan 69 Schulman, Bruce 33 Schulz, Constance 59 Schweik, Susan 50 Schweinitz, Rebecca de 47 Scribner, Campbell 44 Scully, Eileen P. 34 Sensbach, Jon 39 Sesso, Gloria 49 Shaffer, Marguerite 35 Shah, Nayan 49, 61 Shankman, Andrew 36 Shefveland, Kristalyn 40 Shermer, Elizabeth 47

Shibusawa, Naoko 66 Shih, Eric 34 Sigal, Peter 45 Silkenat, David 13, 47 Sinha, Manisha 62 Skwiot, Christine 53 Smith, Aidan 64 Smith, Sherry 45, 67 Smith, Suzanne 43 Smith-Rosenberg, Carroll 36 Snyder, Terri 13, 47 Sommerville, Diane Miller 13, 47 Sparrow, James 68 Spence, Taylor 35 Spiers, John 48 Stahl, Ronit 67 Stein, Judith 53 Stephenson, Sam 59 Steptoe, Tyina 36 Stevens, Beth Randall 34 Stevenson, Brenda 58 Stewart, Luke 44 Stewart-Winter, Timothy 44 Stiles, T. J. 45 St-Onge, Nicole 62 Storrs, Landon 52 Strasser, Susan 71 Stremlau, Rose 45 Stuckey, Melissa 36 Sullivan, Patricia 63 Suyeyasu, Katherine 63 Sweet, Julie Anne 33 Syrett, Nicholas 47

T Tani, Karen 45, 55 Taparata, Evan 65 Taranto, Stacie 39 Taylor, Alan 54 Taylor, Kieran 71 Taylor, Quintard 36 Taylor, Ula 36 Teague, Janira 58 Tebbe-Grossman, Jennifer 48

Thayer, Gwyneth 70 Thelwell, Chinua 61 Thompson, Heather 52, 58 Thrush, Coll 66 Thurber, Timothy 63 Tinsmen, Heidi 62 Tirres, Allison 54 Tohill, Joseph 56 Toon, Richard 42 Torre, Angela La 13 Tran, Tuyen 13, 58 Trotter, Joe William 71 Truett, Samuel 49 Turk, Katherine 67 Twarog, Emily E. LaBarbera 67 Tyrrell, Ian 52

U Umansky, Lauri 50 Usner, Daniel 48

V VanderMeer, Philip 42 Vang, Chia Youyee 55 Vargas, Zaragosa 64 Vaught, Jeannette 70 Vecchio, Diane 40 Vélez-Ibáñez, Carlos 71 Villarreal, David 33 Villerbu, Tangi 48 Vleck, Jenifer Van 56

W Waggoner, Linda M. 36 Wagman, Jamie 43 Waldstreicher, David 34, 35 Walton, Cynthia 29, 56 Warrior, Robert 71 Wasserman, Zachary 53 Watkins, Liz 57, 71 Weisenfeld, Judith 66 Weisiger, Marsha 41 Weiss, Jessica 57 Welke, Barbara 53

Wenger, Tisa 67 Westbrook, Kyle 53 Wheeler, Rachel 39 Whisnant, Anne Mitchell 64 Whitaker, Matthew 36 White, Richard 50 Wiese, Andrew 48 Wiggins, David K. 61 Williams, Heather Andrea 13, 59 Willis, Deborah 59 Willrich, Michael 49 Wilson, Francille Rusan 41 Winant, Gabriel 40 Wineburg, Sam 63 Winslow, Barbara 68 Witgen, Michael 54 Wolf, Eva Sheppard 50 Wolgin, Philip 68 Woo, Jah-Yee 13, 58 Wood, Julia Erin 57 Wu, Ellen 55 Wu, Judy Tzu-Chun 55

Y Yarbrough, Fay 70 Yasutake, Rumi 42 Yoo, David K. 55 Young, Mireille Miller 49 Young, Nancy 56 Young, Phoebe 35

Z Zagarri, Rosemarie 34 Zelden, Charles 55 Zenzen, Joan 29, 56 Zhao, Xiaojian 36, 41 Ziegler, Isabel 27, 39 Zimmerman, Andrew 59 Zipp, Samuel 56 Zubovich, Gene 69

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distinguished members

Please join the OAH in congratulating the following members who are celebrating membership milestones in 2013.  year members (Joined in ) Elliott Robert Barkan Michael C. Batinski Ross W. Beales Jr. Maxine F. Benson Frederick J. Blue Carl B. Boyd Jr. John H. Bracey Jr. Vernon S. Braswell Ballard C. Campbell David M. Chalmers Thomas L. Charlton Michael Churchman William Cohen Lewis H. Cresse Charles Burgess Dew William E. Foley Frank K. Foulds Frank A. Friedman Richard T. Fry Larry R. Gerlach Kenneth J. Grieb Robert M. Ireland Richard Jensen Jack J. Johnson Manfred Jonas Steven Karges Bruce L. Larson Robert W. Larson Daniel Leab John F. Marszalek Robert N. Mathis William L. McCorkle Christopher McKee Craig C. Murray Paul H. Nieder Jesse L. Nutt Jr. Keith W. Olson

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Robert C. Olson Lewis C. Perry Peter L. Petersen Jon A. Peterson Jerrald K. Pfabe Noel Harvey Pugach Harry W. Readnour William C. Reuter Moses Rischin Ingrid W. Scobie William G. Shade David Thelen Bryant F. Tolles Jr. William M. Tuttle Jr. David A. Walker Frank A. Warren Harold D. Woodman James E. Wright Robert L. Zangrando Robert H. Zieger

 year members (Joined in ) David F. Allmendinger Joyce Appleby Michael L. Barton John Francis Bauman Mark K. Bauman Michael Les Benedict Robert H. Berlin Stuart Blumin Brian C. Boland Douglas E. Bowers John J. Broesamle John David Buenker Robert D. Bulkley Jr. Martin J. Butler Peter M. Buzanski Rolfe G. Buzzell

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John H. Churchman Malcolm C. Clark Dennis Hugh Conway Edward M. Cook Jr. Frank C. Costigliola Peter Randolph Decker Richard W. Etulain Vincent J. Falzone David R. Farrell Richard M. Fried Robert M. Gorin Jr. Robert B. Grant Adolph H. Grundman Laurence M. Hauptman Robert P. Hay Don L. Hofsommer Kenneth W. Keller Linda K. Kerber Alice Kessler-Harris Thomas Kessner William A. Koelsch Sally Gregory Kohlstedt David W. Krueger Kathleen Smith Kutolowski Steven F. Lawson Melvyn P. Leffler Robert E. May Thomas K. McCraw Dennis N. Mihelich Randall M. Miller Philip W. Parks William Beatty Pickett Lawrence Nelson Powell Edgar Frank Raines Jr. Edwin A. Reed Robert C. Ritchie John Roach Charles E. Roberts Kenneth P. Scheffel John Schroeder


distinguished members Henry J. Silverman Arthur W. Simpson Judith Stein Neil T. Storch Frank P. Vazzano Timothy Walch Allan Richard Whitmore Leonard Weiss Williams

 year members (Joined in ) George E. Allen Richard Aquila Jo Ann E. Argersinger Cindy S. Aron Steven Mark Avella Norma Basch Howard Philip Bodner Peter Boyle William Brinker John J. Bukowczyk Bruce I. Bustard John H. Colhoun Stephen J. Cox John Edgar Crawford Ruth C. Crocker William J. Cronon Gary A. Glovins John J. Grabowski Jeffrey S. Gurock Gunnar Haeggmark Thomas D. Hamm Jerry Berl Hopkins Kathryn Allamong Jacob Kathleen W. Jones Douglas Clark Kinder Susan E. Klepp Gary J. Kornblith Naomi Raboy Lamoreaux Carol Lasser Gediminas Leonas Susan B. Levine Walter M. Licht Terrence J. Lindell James M. Lindgren Stephen L. Longenecker George Albert Miles Patrick B. Miller Kenneth P. O’Reilly

Theda Perdue Richard W. Pointer Lincoln C. Rolling Marion Winifred Roydhouse Richard Scheiber Kevin D. Sexton S. C. Shepherd Jr. Jean R. Soderlund Paul R. Spickard L. L. Stevenson Marcia G. Synnott Harold Donald Tallant Richard S. Taylor Marilyn Tobias Christopher L. Tomlins Nancy Bernkopf Tucker Linda M. Tulloss John J. Waters William F. Willingham Stephanie G. Wolf

 year members (Joined in ) Jean-Christophe Agnew Anthony V. Baltakis James R. Barrett Jesse F. Battan Anthony Bernier Holly Brewer Jeff Broadwater Jonathan M. Bryant Susan K. Cahn Jonathan Cedarbaum Jane Turner Censer Joyce E. Chaplin James C. Clark Stephanie J. Coontz Mary E. Corey Richard O. Davies Robert Dale Dean Betty A. Dessants Tim Dodge Glenn T. Eskew David Farber Ferdinando F. Fasce Andrea Friedman Gunlog Fur Victor William Geraci Lynne Getz

James N. Green William H. Greer Jr. Sally Hadden Klaus J. Hansen Yoshikatsu Hayashi Ellen Herman Elizabeth Cobbs Hoffman Ira Katznelson Terence P. Kehoe William Howland Kenney Jeffrey Kolnick Isabelle Lehuu Gerald Leonard Judith A. Luckett Nikki Mandell Rafael Medoff Dennis Merrill Steve Messer Kristie Miller William J. Morison Priscilla Murolo Paul V. Murphy Lisa A. Norling Susan Oliver Nelson Ouellet Michael D. Pierson Jacques Portes John Clinton Putman Steven Dale Reschly Susan M. Reverby Phil J. Roberts David R. Roediger Howard J. Romanek Linda M. Schloff Thomas M. Sciamanna Gregory E. Smoak Jonathan M. Soffer Mark Solovey Nicholas A. Spilotro Harry Stein Jeffrey Louis Sturchio Tamara Plakins Thornton Anthony Troncone Richard Eyring Turley Jr. Ian R. Tyrrell David J. Vaught Robert E. Walls Jill Watts John Welckle Sharon E. Wood

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distinguished members

Please join the OAH in congratulating those members who have achieved more than 50 years of membership (joined during or prior to 1962). C. Blythe Ahlstrom Thomas G. Alexander Clarence J. Attig Arthur H. Auten John W. Bailey Jr. James M. Banner Jr. Lois W. Banner Henry F. Bedford Edward M. Bennett James M. Bergquist Eugene H. Berwanger Roger E. Bilstein Frederick M. Binder John Porter Bloom Allan Bogue James R. Boylan Mary Ann Brady Roger D. Bridges David Brody Norman D. Brown Richard D. Brown Richard H. Brown Michael J. Brusin O. L. Burnette Jr. Rand Burnette Desmond X. Butler Jack J. Cardoso Jo Ann Carrigan Frank Chalk William E. Christensen Stanley Coben Bruce S. Cohen Ronald D. Cohen Paul Keith Conkin James L. Cooper Roger W. Corley

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Theodore R. Crane James B. Crooks William H. Cumberland Leonard P. Curry Harl A. Dalstrom Roger Daniels Gerald Danzer Allen F. Davis Calvin D. Davis David Brion Davis Donald G. Davis Jr. Rodney Owen Davis Kenneth E. Davison Carl N. Degler Merton L. Dillon Leonard Dinnerstein Justus Drew Doenecke Lyle W. Dorsett Melvyn Dubofsky Tom G. Edwards E Duane Elbert Sister Mary Elizabeth CHS Richard N. Ellis George B. Engberg Conrad J. Engelder Stanley Lawrence Falk Roger J. Fechner James F. Findlay Jr. Walden S. Freeman Patrick J. Furlong Mary O. Furner Larry Gara Frank Otto Gatell Richard Allen Gerber D. R. Gerlach Gordon Gillson

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Harvey Goddard Lawrence B. de Graaf Alan Graebner George D. Green Victor R. Greene David Grimsted Gerald N. Grob D. Harland Hagler Alonzo L. Hamby Samuel B. Hand Craig R. Hanyan Peter T. Harstad Hugh D. Hawkins Samuel P. Hays Willard M. Hays William D. Hechler Nathaniel J. Henderson James E. Hendrickson John W. Hillje Harwood P. Hinton Wayne K. Hinton Abraham Hoffman Paul S. Holbo Jack M. Holl Melvin G. Holli David Hollinger Ari Hoogenboom Walter R. Houf H. Larry Ingle Travis Beal Jacobs David P. Jaffee Herbert F. Janick Dwight W. Jessup Dorothy E. Johnson James E. Johnson Jacob Judd


distinguished members Richard M. Judd John T. Juricek William Kamman Stanley N. Katz Thomas M. Keefe Lawrence C. Kelly Ralph Ketcham Peter J. King Richard S. Kirkendall Richard H. Kohn Paul A. C. Koistinen Harold E. Kolling Richard N. Kottman Walter La Feber Howard R. Lamar Daniel Lane Jr. Harold D. Langley Lawrence H. Larsen Catherine Grollman Lauritsen John L. LeBrun R. Alton Lee Jesse Lemisch Richard W. Lenk Jr. William E. Leuchtenburg David Saul Levin Leon F. Litwack Charles A. Lofgren Anne Carol Loveland Richard Coke Lower Frederick C. Luebke John G. Macnaughton Gloria L. Main James C. Maroney William C. Marten Charles Howard McCormick John J. McCusker Gerald W. McFarland Larry A. McFarlane William S. McFeely Michael McGiffert James M. McPherson Samuel T. McSeveney Ronald E. Mickel Robert L. Middlekauff Edwin A. Miles Mary Emily Miller

J. Paul Mitchell Raymond A. Mohl Edmund S. Morgan Robert K. Murray John M. Murrin Edward J. Muzik James W. Neilson John Kendall Nelson Charles E. Neu Roger L. Nichols Walter Nugent Arnold A. Offner George B. Oliver Herbert Samuel Parmet Robert D. Parmet William E. Parrish Justus F. Paul Samuel C. Pearson William H. Pease Loren E. Pennington Allan Peskin William W. Phillips Donald K. Pickens John F. Piper Jr. Hermann K. Platt Mark A. Plummer Charles P. Poland Jr. Norris W. Preyer Sr. Francis Paul Prucha SJ Carroll W. Pursell Fred D. Ragan Robert L. Reid David Morgan Reimers Robert V. Remini Raymond Robinson Earl M. Rogers Malcolm J. Rohrbough William E. Rooney Donald M. Roper F Duane Rose Elliot Alfred Rosen Dorothy Ross William D. Rowley John E. Saffell John A. Salmond Harry N. Scheiber

Frederick Schult Jr. Roy V. Scott Ronald E. Seavoy Richard H. Sewell Paul Siff Joel H. Silbey Melvin Small Paul H. Smith Richard W. Smith Wilson Smith Harvey Snitiker Winton U. Solberg James K. Somerville Richard Sonderegger John M. Spencer Raymond Starr Bruce M. Stave Ivan D. Steen John William Steiger Harry H. Stein Ray Stephens Harry A. Stokes Brit Allan Storey Ralph A. Storm Richard W. Strattner Arvarh E. Strickland Jack Tager Robert Polk Thomson Eckard V. Toy Jr. Eugene P. Trani Robert L. Tree Melvin I. Urofsky David E. Van Deventer James S. Van Ness Alden T. Vaughan William J. Wade Paul W. Wehr Sydney Stahl Weinberg Robert M. Weir Harold J. Weiss Jr. Robert F. Wesser James W. Whitaker John E. Wickman Sarah W. Wiggins William Henry Wilson Gordon S. Wood

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distinguished members

Please join the OAH in congratulating those members who have achieved between 26 and 49 years of membership (joined during the period of 1964 to 1987). Terrie Aamodt Carl J. Abbott Mark Abbott Douglas Carl Abrams Robert H. Abzug George R. Adams Elizabeth Jane Aikin Norio Akashi Michele L. Aldrich John K. Alexander June G. Alexander Keith J. Alexander Kenneth Gerald Alfers Sharon Z. Alter Glenn Altschuler Lloyd E. Ambrosius Charles F. Ames Tyler G. Anbinder David L. Anderson Douglas Firth Anderson Fred W. Anderson James D. Anderson James L. Anderson Margo Anderson Paul Gerard Anderson Terry Howard Anderson Virginia DeJohn Anderson Bethany Andreasen Dee E. Andrews Robert E. Ankli Jacob A. Antoninis Abraham Aponte Peter H. Argersinger Susan Marie Armeny Susan H. Armitage Thom M. Armstrong Douglas M. Arnold

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Raymond O. Arsenault Natsuki Aruga Tadashi Aruga Stephen Vaughan Ash Douglas M. Astolfi Annette Atkins Jeanie Attie Frederick John Augustyn Jr. Allan D. Austin Michael K. Averbach Allan Marshall Axelrad Edward L. Ayers Fred A. Bailey W. David Baird Dean P. Baker Jean H. Baker Richard Allan Baker Gordon Morris Bakken Wesley G. Balla Jack Stokes Ballard Helen M. Bannan Charles Pete Banner-Haley Brady M. Banta Kenneth A. Barber William L. Barney Michael Barnhart Dean O. Barnum Alwyn Barr Hal S. Barron Robert G. Barrows Daniel William Barthell Keith M. Barton James L. Baughman James L. Baumgardner Douglas Cameron Baynton Thomas R. Beazley Bruce Becker

William B. Bedford Janet Rose Bednarek Benjamin R. Beede Joel Howard Beezy Robert L. Beisner John M. Belohlavek Doron Ben-Atar Thomas Bender Pamela J. Bennett William A. Benton Philip J. Bergan Hyman Berman William C. Berman George Berndt David Bernstein Michael A. Bernstein Mary F. Berry Charlene Bangs Bickford W. E. Bigglestone Darrel E. Bigham William Roger Biles Terry D. Bilhartz George A. Billias Kenneth J. Bindas Michael Birkner Richard J. Blackett Robert M. Blackson Karen J. Blair William Alan Blair Thomas Edward Blantz Martin Blatt Burton J. Bledstein David W. Blight Robert M. Bliss Avital H. Bloch Jack S. Blocker Peter J. Blodgett

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Jo Tice Bloom Daniel Bluestone Barbara Blumberg Kenneth J. Blume Louis H. Blumengarten John Bodnar W. Jeffrey Bolster Roselyn Bologna Boneno Marianne Bonner Rochelle Bookspan Stephanie Elise Booth Eileen Boris Gabor S. Boritt Elizabeth C. Bouvier Lawson H. Bowling Virginia R. Boynton T. Dwight Bozeman Mark Philip Bradley Betty Jane Brandon Allan M. Brandt James D. Bratt Mary C. Brennan Lynn Brenneman Elaine G. Breslaw Howard Brick Lynne T. Brickley Elwood L. Bridner Jr. Kaye Briegel Ron F. Briley Alan Brinkley Margaret Brinsley Nancy Kathleen Bristow Euline Brock John L. Brooke Albert S. Broussard Jeffrey P. Brown Joshua Brown


distinguished members T. Beckley Brown Theodore Brown Jr. Victoria Bissell Brown William G. Brown Jr. Blaine A. Brownell Dickson Davies Bruce Jr. Joan Jacobs Brumberg David Brundage Mary Lynn M. Bryan Peter H. Buckingham Walter L. Buenger Mari Jo Buhle George D. Bullock Nicholas C. Burckel Alex Burckin James MacGregor Burns Edwin G. Burrows Orville Vernon Burton Jon Butler Kevin B. Byrne Patricia H. Byrne Nancy Jean Cade William Patrick Cady Stanley Caine Charles W. Calhoun Albert M. Camarillo Ross J. Cameron D’Ann Campbell Karl E. Campbell W. E. Campbell Philip L. Cantelon Dominic Joseph Capeci Jr. Charles Capper Robert B. Carey David Lee Carlton Clifton Carmon Mark C. Carnes Simone M. Caron E. Wayne Carp Marius M. Carriere Charles F. Carroll David Joseph Carroll P. Thomas Carroll Rosemary F. Carroll Clayborne Carson Dan T. Carter Virginia Paganelli Caruso Richard J. Carwardine Charles D. Cashdollar James Caskey

Scott E. Casper Pedro Castillo Andrew R. Cayton Mary Kupiec Cayton William H. Chafe George Chalou John Whiteclay Chambers II Robert Chandler Robert W. Cherny Michael B. Chesson William R. Childs Lawrence O. Christensen Jonathan Moseley Chu Paul A. Cimbala John Cimprich Clifford E. Clark Jr. Daniel Clark Christopher S. Clarke Sally H. Clarke Robert H. Claxton Paul G. E. Clemens Douglas Holt Cline Kenton J. Clymer Charles Coate James C. Cobb Dorothy Sue Cobble Peter Coclanis Luca Codignola-Bo Edward M. Coffman Charles Lloyd Cohen Howard D. Cohen Lizabeth Ann Cohen Miriam J. Cohen Patricia Cline Cohen Donald B. Cole Stephen Cole Michael C. Coleman Dale Collins Rebecca Conard Richard H. Condon Joseph Anthony Conforti Patrick T. Conley Margaret Connell-Szasz James R. Connor Peter Francis Coogan Blanche Wiesen Cook Cita Cook Frank Alan Coombs Terry Arnold Cooney Gail Cooper

William James Cooper Jr. Steven Cord Nicholas J. Cords Janet D. Cornelius Cecilia S. Cornell Wallace Cory Janet L. Coryell George B. Cotkin Nancy F. Cott Robert James Cottrol David Todd Courtwright Francis G. Couvares Robert Coven Bruce Craig Douglas B. Craig Edward Crapol Hamilton Cravens Suzanne J. Crawford Janet W. Crouse Maurice A. Crouse Jeffrey J. Crow William L. Crozier Jon A. Cucinatto David H. Culbert Charles T. Cullen Robert Emmett Curran James Tyson Currie Daniel F. Curtin George H. Curtis Peter H. Curtis Susan Curtis Everette Wayne Cutler Robin R. Cutler William W. Cutler III Daniel Czitrom Kathleen M. Dalton David B. Danbom Pete Daniel Douglas Henry Daniels E. J. Danziger Jr. Sheri Iris David Andrew J. Davidson Cullom Davis Lawrence B. Davis Stephen K. Davis Thomas H. Davis III Thomas J. Davis Cornelia Hughes Dayton David De Leon Jane S. Dehart

Stephen G. DelSordo L. Steven Demaree John A. D’Emilio Matthew Dennis Michael Aaron Dennis John d’Entremont Alan Derickson Ileen A. DeVault James E. Devries Steven Deyle Thomas V. Dibacco John D. Dibbern Dennis C. Dickerson Duane N. Diedrich Thomas A. Dietz Anne P. Diffendal C. G. Dilworth Hasia Rena Diner Bruce J. Dinges Robert J. Dinkin Michael D’Innocenzo John Dittmer John M. Dobson Donald B. Dodd Helen Dodson Jay P. Dolan James F. Donnelly James P. Donohue Jr. Jacob H. Dorn Erika L. Doss Gregory Dowd Dennis B. Downey Michael J. Dubin Thomas Dublin Ellen Carol DuBois James H. Ducker Faye E. Dudden Mary L. Dudziak Ann Patricia Duff y Ronald P. Dufour Lynn Dumenil Andrew J. Dunar Thomas R. Dunlap Colleen A. Dunlavy Durwood Dunn Doris D. Dwyer Terrence E. Dwyer David L. Dykstra Mary Ann Dzuback

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distinguished members  to  Years (continued) Eileen M. Eagan Charles W. Eagles Larry J. Easterling Dean Eberly Michael H. Ebner Alfred E. Eckes Jerome E. Edwards Lillie Johnson Edwards Owen Dudley Edwards Daun van Ee Douglas R. Egerton William G. Eidson Robin Einhorn Peter Eisenstadt Richard Ellis Curtis W. Ellison Lucius F. Ellsworth Martin I. Elzy Carroll Engelhardt Michael E. Engh Thomas Robert English Robert F. Engs Rosemary Kolks Ennis Claude Curtis Erb Lewis A. Erenberg Daniel R. Ernst Joyce Mason Evans Sara M. Evans Ann V. Fabian Ena L. Farley Elizabeth Victoria Faue Donald Faugno Drew Faust Ronald L. Feinman James E. Fell Jr. Daniel Feller Laura Janet Feller Anita Clair Fellman William Michael Ferraro Norman B. Ferris Mark T. Fiege Marvin Fieman Terry J. Fife Robert Wallace Filby Paul Finkelman Roy E. Finkenbine James Thomas Finnigan

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Claude S. Fischer Leslie E. Fishbein John J. Fitzgerald Michael W. Fitzgerald John J. Fitzpatrick Susan Flader Maureen Anne Flanagan John H. Flannagan Jr. Monika S. Fleming Thomas Fleming Marvin E. Fletcher John Brooks Flippen William Albert Foley Jr. Joyce C. Follet J. K. Folmar Eric Foner Elizabeth Fones-Wolf Kenneth Fones-Wolf George B. Forgie R. P. Formisano Lee W. Formwalt Gaines M. Foster Lawrence Foster Mark S. Foster John J. Fox Stephen Russell Fox Grover C. Franklin V. P. Franklin John B. Frantz James W. Fraser Peter J. Frederick Richard G. Frederick Linda S. Freed Estelle B. Freedman William W. Freehling Joshua Freeman Lawrence J. Friedman Oris D. Friesen Richard H. Frost Fumiko Fujita Richard P. Fuke Michael Francis Funchion Donna R. Gabaccia Nancy Gabin Robert Gabrick James P. Gaffey Patrick Gagnon Louis Galambos Mark Allen Galbreath Gary W. Gallagher

Alan Gallay Wendy Gamber James B. Gardner Lloyd C. Gardner Thomas Mayhew Gaskin Jane Ellen Gastineau George Geib Mariane B. Geiger Suzanne Geissler-Bowles David A. Gerber Gary L. Gerstle Louis Saxton Gerteis Ralph V. Giannini Michael D. Gibson William W. Giffin James N. Giglio James B. Gilbert Glen A. Gildemeister Timothy J. Gilfoyle Paul A. Gilje John S. Gilkeson Jr. Howard F. Gillette Jr. Steven Michael Gillon Brian M. Gilpin Lori Ginzberg Vincent A. Giroux Jr. David H. Glassberg J Philip Gleason John M. Glen Myra C. Glenn Susan A. Glenn Carol Gluck Stanly Godbold Jr. Nathan Godfried John C. Gogliettino Joyce S. Goldberg Robert Goldberg Janet Lynne Golden David R. Goldfield Joanne Goldman Robert M. Goldman Steve Golin Evelyn Gonzalez Joyce D. Goodfriend Brian Gordon Edward E. Gordon Ian Lewis Gordon James Wice Gordon Linda Gordon Martin K. Gordon

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James L. Gormly Cathy Gorn Robert J. Gough Terrence James Gough William Graebner Harvey J. Graff Henry F. Graff Carl Russell Graves Susan E. Gray Susan W. Gray Barbara Graymont Howard L. Green Michael Scott Green Brian Elliot Greenberg Cheryl L. Greenberg Kenneth S. Greenberg Julie Greene Larry A. Greene Charles Grench John Reich Grieser Jim Griffin Michael Dennis Griffith Anthony Gronowicz Laurence F. Gross Robert A. Gross Michael Grossberg James R. Grossman Carl J. Guarneri Karen Guenther Gayle Gullett Joan R. Gundersen Jeffrey R. Gunderson David Gurowsky Gerald Lee Gutek David G. Gutierrez Ramón A. Gutiérrez Roland L. Guyotte A. Turner Gyory Edward F. Haas John R. Habjan S.M. Sheldon Hackney Robert W. Haddon Joseph Haebler Peter L. Hahn Steven Hahn Jacquelyn Dowd Hall Mitchell Hall Van Beck Hall Carl V. Hallberg Martin Halpern


distinguished members  to  Years (continued) David E. Hamilton Jack L. Hammersmith Arthur A. Hansen Bert Hansen Joyce A. Hanson James Hantula Jerry Harder David E. Harley Sandra D. Harmon J. William Harris Marc L. Harris Paul William Harris Robert L. Harris Jr. Stanley Harrold William D. Harshaw William F. Hartford Susan M. Hartmann Hendrik Hartog Larry Hartzell Gretchen Harvey Mark William Harvey Larry J. Hasse Ph.D. Adele Hast Donald Teruo Hata Alan R. Havig James F. Hawk Gregory J. Hawkins Ellis W. Hawley Robert J. Haws Mary Florence Hayes Richard S. Haynes David F. Healy Douglas A. Hedin Jean Heffer Mary Ann Heiss Mary Ann C. Hellrigel Douglas Helms William L. Helton Joseph Phillips Helyar John B. Hench Gary Hermalyn Dan Hermann Dean Herrin Theodore Hershberg Nancy A. Hewitt John C. Heyeck Elizabeth S. Higginbotham

Evelyn Brooks Higginbotham Robin Higham Hayumi Higuchi James Alan Hijiya Michael R. Hill James Walter Hilty Darlene Clark Hine William C. Hine Peter P. Hinks Susan E. Hirsch Joseph P. Hobbs Sheldon Hochheiser Martha Hodes Graham Russell Hodges James A. Hodges Pete Hoefer David Hoeveler Joan Hoff Peter Charles Hoffer Ronald Hoffman Warren R. Hofstra Michael J. Hogan J. William Holland Peter C. Holloran William F. Holmes Michael F. Holt Harold Holzer Michael Homel Michael Keith Honey Adrienne D. Hood Clifton D. Hood Karen E. Hoppes Gerald C. Horne Daniel Horowitz Helen Lefkowitz Horowitz Thomas A. Horrocks Masahiro Hosoya Richard F. Houston Daniel Walker Howe John Howe Stanley R. Howe Charles Francis Howlett Frederick E. Hoxie Suellen Hoy Randal L. Hoyer James K. Huhta Carol Sue Humphrey R. Douglas Hurt James L. Huston Robert S. Huston

Reed Hutner Heather Huyck Anne Hyde Thomas L. Hyder Raymond M. Hyser John William Ifkovic Anna R. Igra Robert Joseph Imholt Richard H. Immerman Thomas Neil Ingersoll Owen S. Ireland Nancy Gale Isenberg Fred L. Israel William H. Issel Howard Jablon Thomas J. Jablonsky Robert Carl Jackle Kenneth T. Jackson Shelley A. Jacobson Steven H. Jaffe Kenneth R. Janken Glen S. Jeansonne Alphine W. Jefferson Julie Roy Jeffrey John W. Jeffries Lawrence J. Jelinek William D. Jenkins Joan M. Jensen Kimberly Jensen John B. Jentz Wayne H. Jiles Raymond Joseph Jirran Edward P. Johanningsmeier Richard R. John Ben F. Johnson Carolyn W. Johnson John W. Johnson Marilynn Johnson Mark L. Johnson Michael P. Johnson Owen V. Johnson Reinhard O. Johnson Thekla Ellen Joiner Arnita A. Jones David A. Jones Jacqueline Jones James H. Jones Kenneth MacDonald Jones Daniel P. Jordan

Frederick W. Jordan William L. Joyce Charles Joyner Richard W. Judd Mary Cecilia Jurasinski OSBM Karl Kabelac Carl Frederick Kaestle Laura Kalman Jane N. Kamensky Michael G. Kammen S Francis Daniel Kammer Walter D. Kamphoefner Harvey Kantor Ronald Dale Karr Peter Karsten Amalie M. Kass John F. Kasson Joy S. Kasson Michael B. Katz Sherry Katz Polly Welts Kaufman Beth Kava Yasuhide Kawashima Michael Kazin William R. Keagle Ann Durkin Keating Oliver Keels Charles A. Keene Mary C. Kelley Robin D. Kelley Margaret M. R. Kellow David H. Kelly Dennis P. Kelly M. Ruth Kelly David M. Kennedy Lawrence William Kennedy Paul Kens Robert C. Kenzer Kathi Kern Elizabeth Augusta Kessel Daniel J. Kevles Alexander Keyssar Richard B. Kielbowicz Chong-Gil Kim Doris E. King Martha J. King William M. King Amy J. Kinsel George B. Kirsch

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distinguished members  to  Years (continued) Harvey Klehr Rachel N. Klein S. Jay Kleinberg Anne M. Klejment James T. Kloppenberg James C. Klotter Thomas Allen Klug John T. Kneebone Stephen John Kneeshaw George W. Knepper Louise W. Knight Dale T. Knobel Peter Kolchin Clayton R. Koppes Andrea Kornbluh Virginia Sanchez Korrol Robert Korstad J. Morgan Kousser Knud U. Krakau Carl Edward Kramer Alan M. Kraut John D. Krugler Rebecca Kugel Bruce Kuklick Bruce R. Kuniholm Regina G. Kunzel Karen Kupperman Kenneth L. Kusmer Judy Kutulas Peter J. Kuznick Anthony Kuzniewski S.J. David E. Kyvig Virginia Jeans Laas Barbara E. Lacey Molly Ladd-Taylor Lester C. Lamon George R. Lamplugh Gerald F. Lange James C. Lanier Donald Phillip Lankiewicz Vincent Anthony Lapomarda Virginia Lashley Margaret Latimer Richard Latner Terry S. Latour Roger D. Launius

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Bruce Laurie Alan Lawson Jama Lazerow Dimitri Daniel Lazo Thomas Jackson Lears Judith W. Leavitt Carl B. Lechner Matthew C. Lee Mark H. Leff Timothy Lehman Kurt E. Leichtle James L. Leloudis Gretchen J. Lemke Elizabeth D. Leonard Janice M. Leone Gerda Lerner W. Bruce Leslie Alan H. Lessoff H. A. Leventhal Ralph B. Levering Bruce Levine Peter Barbin Levy David Rich Lewis Gene D. Lewis Jan Ellen Lewis Tab Wayne Lewis Douglas A. Ley Allan J. Lichtman Richard K. Lieberman David L. Lightner Patricia Nelson Limerick Kriste Ann Lindenmeyer Janet Moore Lindman Lawrence M. Lipin Charles H. Lippy Julia E. Liss James A. Litle Judy Barrett Litoff John E. Little Daniel C. Littlefield Steven D. Livengood Jeffery C. Livingston Robert E. Long Barbara Loomis Albert O. Louer Odd S. Lovoll Richard Lowitt Nancy C. Luebbert David E. Luellen Ralph E. Luker

Elizabeth Lunbeck Jonathan Lurie Maxine N. Lurie Karen Lystra Mark H. Lytle Richard S. Macha Thomas C. Mackey William P. MacKinnon Elizabeth Kimball MacLean Nancy MacLean David I. Macleod Jack P. Maddex Jr. James H. Madison Michael F. Magliari Pauline Maier Dennis J. Maika Rachel P. Maines Stephen Maizlish Sarah S. Malino Peter C. Mancall Matthew Mancini Robert Glen Mangrum Bruce H. Mann Kent L. Mann Michelle Mannering Richard L. Manser Joseph S. Marcum Alan I. Marcus Maeva Marcus Robert P. Markman Carol A. Marsh Margaret S. Marsh James Marten Charles H. Martin James Kirby Martin Robert F. Martin Waldo Emerson Martin Jr. Kenneth C. Martis F. Michael Mase Takeshi Mashimo Donald G. Mathews Takeshi Matsuda Glenna Matthews Allen Joseph Matusow John A. Matzko John C. Maxwell Elaine Tyler May Lary L. May Holly A. Mayer Michael Mayer

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Edith P. Mayo Richard T. von Mayrhauser George T. Mazuzan Judith N. McArthur Delores N. McBroome Joseph A. McCartin Laurene Wu McClain Robert McColley William T. McCue Dennis K. McDaniel Terrence J. McDonald Michael E. McGerr Robert E. McGlone Daniel J. McInerney James S. McKeown Blaine E. McKinley Patrick E. Mclear Robert James McMahon Robert C. McMath Sally G. McMillen Linda O. McMurry Richard M. McMurry John A. Meador Doris Marguerite Meadows Thomas B. Mega Jeffrey L. Meikle Philip J. Mellinger Martin V. Melosi Thomas Ronald Melton Robert M. Mennel Bernard Mergen Paul E. Mertz Stephen Meyer Joanne J. Meyerowitz William C. Miceli Sr. Edward H. Michels Char Miller Deborah Lynn Miller Guy Howard Miller J. Donald Miller Janice J. Miller John E. Miller Kerby A. Miller Leonard G. Miller Linda Karen Miller M. Catherine Miller Wilbur R. Miller Frederick V. Mills Sr. Clyde A. Milner II Jeffrey Mirel


distinguished members  to  Years (continued) Wilson D. Miscamble Gregory Lamont Mixon Nina Mjagkij Ole O. Moen James C. Mohr Haskell Monroe Dee Ann Montgomery Margaret J. Moody Patricia Mooney-Melvin David T. Moore David W. Moore Deborah Dash Moore Leonard J. Moore James H. Moorhead Suzanne E. Moranian Regina A. Morantz-Sanchez Stephanie A. Morris Geoffrey Fahy Morrison Michael A. Morrison Charles Thomas Morrissey Wilson J. Moses George Donelson Moss Earl F. Mulderink III Michael Joseph Mullin William H. Mullins Lucy Eldersveld Murphy G. Patrick Murray Peter C. Murray Alfred F. Myers Richard J. Myers Pamela S. Nadell David Nasaw Gary B. Nash Victor S. Navasky Natalie A. Naylor James M. Neal Humbert S. Nelli Anne Kusener Nelsen Bruce Nelson T. K. Nenninger John C. Nerone John L. Nethers Lois Nettleship Robert D. Neuleib John J. Newman Roger K. Newman

Michael L. Nicholls Marilyn Wenzke Nickels Alexandra Marie Nickliss Fredrick H. Nielsen Stephen Nissenbaum Monica Lynne Niznik Gregory H. Nobles Margie Noel Thomas John Noer Mark A. Noll Steven Noll David P. Nord Diane M. T. North Debra Lynne Northart Mary Beth Norton Stephen H. Norwood Joel Robert Novick Charles B. Nuckolls Jr. Ronald L. Numbers Maureen Murphy Nutting Elizabeth I. Nybakken Mary J. Oates Barbara Oberg James Warren Oberly James P. O’Brien Jean M. O’Brien Michael O’Brien Michael G. O’Brien Stephen J. Ochs Carol O’Connor Broeck N. Oder Richard J. Oestreicher William Off utt Paul F. O’Keefe Gary Y. Okihiro Patricia Oldham Otto H. Olsen Richard J. Orsi Grey Osterud Jeffrey Ostler C. H. O’Sullivan Alan M. Osur James M. O’Toole Katherine Ott Dominic Anthony Pacyga Joanne R. Walroth Page Patricia A. Palmieri Hong-Kyu Park T. Michael Parrish John W. Partin

Elaine Weber Pascu Sue C. Patrick James Tyler Patterson Arnold Marc Pavlovsky Elizabeth Anne Payne William David Pederson Robert H. Peebles Thomas R. Pegram Kathy Peiss Gary Pennanen Frank Pereira Edwin J. Perkins Michael Perman Elisabeth Israels Perry Jeffrey B. Perry Robert K. Peters C. H. Peterson Gale E. Peterson Joyce S. Peterson Larry R. Peterson Paula E. Petrik Fred D. Pfening E. Harrell Phillips Charles K. Piehl G. Kurt Piehler Preston E. Pierce Doris H. Pieroth Victor M. Pilson Dwight T. Pitcaithley Mark A. Pittenger Harold Platt Elizabeth H. Pleck Brenda G. Plummer Edward J. Pluth Anne Marie Pois Keith Ian Polakoff Eunice G. Pollack Fred E. Pollock Daniel Pope David L. Porter Susan L. Porter Barbara M. Posadas Steve Potts Virginia Pratt William C. Pratt William S. Pretzer Ben Procter Jonathan Prude Linda Przybyszewski Allan Purcell

Edward A. Purcell Jr. Diane T. Putney John M. Pyne Louis N. Pyster John W. Quist Martin H. Quitt Stephen G. Rabe George C. Rable John C. Raby Peter J. Rachleff Benjamin G. Rader Gail Radford Bruce A. Ragsdale R. Lynn Rainard Jack N. Rakove Charles E. Rankin Michael Gerald Rapp Stephen L. Raskin Gerda W. Ray Elizabeth Raymond Leslie J. Reagan Patrick D. Reagan Marcus Rediker William J. Reese Thomas V. Reeve II William W. Register Gary W. Reichard Donald E. Reid John P. Reid Janice L. Reiff John T. Reilly Michael Reilly Marguerite Renner John Phillips Resch Julie Reuben John Francis Reynolds C. Thomas Rezner Benjamin D. Rhodes Leo Paul Ribuffo Myra L. Rich Paul Rich Tom Richter Janet A. Riesman Steven A. Riess Kathleen L. Riley Paul T. Ringenbach Donald A. Ritchie James L. Roark William G. Robbins Jere William Roberson

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distinguished members  to  Years (continued) Priscilla Roberts Rita J. Roberts Andrew Whitmore Robertson Nancy Marie Robertson Jo Ann Ooiman Robinson George L. Robson Jr. Robert Allen Rockaway Daniel T. Rodgers Laurie A. Rofini Donald W. Rogers Naomi Rogers Richard Carlton Rohrs William J. Rorabaugh Roberta Rorke David J. Roscoe Mark Howard Rose Vivien E. Rose Christine Meesner Rosen David A. Rosenberg Emily S. Rosenberg Joseph Rosenberg Morton M. Rosenberg Susan Rosenfeld Nancy G. Rosoff Richard J. Ross Rodney A. Ross Rodney J. Ross Steven Joseph Ross Steven Rosswurm Morey David Rothberg Marc Rothenberg Mary Logan Rothschild Edward Anthony Rotundo Dennis C. Rousey Carl Milton Rowan John Kenneth Rowland Leslie S. Rowland E. Scott Royce Joan Shelley Rubin Thomas Michael Ruddy John W. Rudie Vicki L. Ruiz Leila J. Rupp Thomas G. Ruth Carmelita S. Ryan Henry Butterfield Ryan

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James Gilbert Ryan Mary P. Ryan Richard W. Sadler Jeffrey J. Safford Nancy Sahli Sharon Salinger Neal E. Salisbury Nick Salvatore George Joseph Sanchez Jonathan D. Sarna John Erwin Sauer Julie Saville Jennifer Rose Scanlon C. E. Schabacker Ronald Schaffer Michael Schaller F. H. Schapsmeier Virginia J. Scharff Ronald W. Schatz William O. Scheeren Kenneth Alan Scherzer Richard R. Schieffelin Lillian Schlissel John T. Schlotterbeck Ronald A. Schlundt Janet L. Schmelzer Gregory G. Schmidt Leigh Eric Schmidt Loretta L. Schmidt David F. Schmitz Gerald M. Schnabel Dorothee Schneider Eric C. Schneider James C. Schneider John C. Schneider Thomas D. Schoonover Ellen Schrecker Alan Max Schroder Carl R. Schulkin Bruce J. Schulman Constance B. Schulz David Schuyler Thomas A. Schwartz Thomas F. Schwartz Neil Schwartzbach Loren L. Schweninger Anne Firor Scott Howard P. Segal Terry Lee Seip John Gregory Selby

Gustav L. Seligmann Jr. Robert Michael Senkewicz Gloria Sesso Byron E. Shafer Carole Shammas Gardiner Humphrey Shattuck Jr. Barton C. Shaw Jack O. Shaw Stephanie J. Shaw Marianne Sheldon Richard N. Sheldon Michael Stephen Sherry Johanna N. Shields Charles J. Shindo Linda Shopes Francis Robert Shor Barbara Sicherman Stephen Nicholas Siciliano Mary Corbin Sies Philip T. Silvia Jr. Christina Clare Simmons Roger D. Simon William M. Simons Daniel Joseph Singal Ralph B. Singer Jr. Suzanne Sinke George H. Skau Bradley Skelcher William B. Skelton Kathryn Kish Sklar Douglas Slaybaugh Robert Slayton Richard S. Slotkin Michael Smiddy Barbara Clark Smith Elbert B. Smith Gregory A. Smith Jeffery Alan Smith John David Smith Judith Ellen Smith Merritt Roe Smith Sherry Lynn Smith Susan L. Smith W. Wayne Smith Raymond W. Smock Susan Smulyan John G. Snetsinger James B. Snyder Pamela Sodhy

2 013 OA H A N N UA L M E E T I N G ◆ S A N F R A N C I S C O, C A L I F OR N I A

Rayman L. Solomon James Martin SoRelle David W. Southern Daniel Soyer Nita R. Spangler Paul S. Sperry Kurt R. Spillmann Donald Spivey PhD Luther W. Spoehr Denise S. Spooner Margaret Spratt Judith Spraul-Schmidt Ph.D. Carole Srole John C. Anderson Stagg Patricia Y. Stallard Judith Margaret Stanley George Staples Darwin H. Stapleton J. Barton Starr Samuel N. Stayer J. E. Stealey III Peter N. Stearns David Lawler Stebenne Mark J. Stegmaier David Steigerwald Stephen J. Stein Jerry G. Stephens Lester D. Stephens Errol Stevens Lewis Tomlin Stevens C. Evan Stewart M. Mark Stolarik Mark A. Stoler Steven M. Stowe William M. Stowe Jr. Susan Strasser Renate Strelau Margaret Strobel Marian E. Strobel Shelton Stromquist Harvey Strum Nancy L. Struna Thomas J. Sugrue C. Kenneth Sullivan William Joseph Sullivan Sara Jane Sundberg Eric J. Sundquist Martha H. Swain John A. Sylvester Robert P. Tabak


distinguished members  to  Years (continued) Duane A. Tananbaum Jane J. Tannenbaum Brent Tarter Leah Marcile Taylor Rosalyn Terborg-Penn Thomas E. Terrill James L. Thane Jr. Gerald E. Thomas Richard J. Thomas Robert D. Thomas Jr. John A. Thompson Wayne W. Thompson Jerry J. Thornbery J. Mills Thornton III Bert H. Thurber Craig Thurtell David M. Tiffany Joseph R. Timko Barbara L. Tischler Dorothy C. Tobin Eugene Marc Tobin Bruce Tobis Nancy Jane Tomes Vincent F. Torigian David S. Trask Sandra G. Treadway Joseph Trent William Trollinger Jr. Joe Trotter George Wesley Troxler Hiroshi Tsunematsu Tim Tucker William Alan Tully John Anthony Turcheneske Jr. I. Bruce Turner Thomas R. Turner Mark Tushnet John W. Tyler Marie Tyler-McGraw Reed Ueda Laurel Thatcher Ulrich Stanley J. Underdal Jeffery S. Underwood Nancy C. Unger Wayne J. Urban Daniel H. Usner Carroll Van West

Sandra F. VanBurkleo Philip R. VanderMeer Stephen L. Vaughn Diane Vecchio Robert W. Venables Nadia Venturini Martha H. Verbrugge Charles Vincent Maris A. Vinovskis Peter Virgadamo John F. Votaw Sr. Louis A. Vyhnanek Theodore R. Wachs Louise C. Wade Clarence E. Walker J. Samuel Walker William O. Walker III Daniel J. Walkowitz Peter Wallenstein James A. Walsh Jr. Lorena S. Walsh Ronald G. Walters John R. Waltrip Daniel Franklin Ward Harry M. Ward Susan W. Ware John H. Warner Gordon H. Warren Wilson J. Warren Margaret Washington Deborah D. Waters Harry L. Watson John S. Watterson Robert M. Weible Paul Owen Weinbaum Lynn Y. Weiner Gene Weinstein Robert Weisbrot Stephen G. Weisner Richard Weiss Nancy J. Weiss Malkiel Lowell E. Wenger Richard H. Werking Thomas R. Wessel Robert B. Westbrook Robert R. Weyeneth Mervin B. Whealy E. Milton Wheeler Joanne E. Wheeler Gerald J. White

Kevin Francis White Richard White Roger S. White Shane White Henry O. Whiteside Michael N. Wibel Keith Robert Widder William M. Wiecek Jonathan M. Wiener Jacqueline Sarah Wilkie Frederic M. Williams James C. Williams James H. Williams Lillian S. Williams Patrick George Williams Richard H. Williams Susan R. Williams Deirdre Williamson Joel R. Williamson James Frederick Willis David W. Wills Daniel J. Wilson Lisa Hall Wilson Terry P. Wilson Julie Patricia Winch Joseph Edward Windham Samuel S. Wineburg Barbara C. Wingo Allan M. Winkler Kenneth H. Winn Herbert C. Winnik Barbara Winslow Cary D. Wintz Richard L. Wixon Susan Wladaver-Morgan Victoria Saker Woeste Kelly A. Woestman Marianne S. Wokeck Margaret Ripley Wolfe Henry J. Wolfinger Glenn L. Wollam Nancy Woloch Peter H. Wood Richard E. Wood Roger J. Wood Nan E. Woodruff Randall Bennett Woods Michael V. Woodward John F. Wukovits Donald Yacovone

Virginia Yans-McLaughlin John Yarbrough Allen L. Yarnell Shirley Jo-Ann Yee Donald A. Yerxa Ryo Yokoyama Arthur P. Young Eugene Zandona Joanna Schneider Zangrando Richard A. Zansitis Charles Anthony Zappia David Zarefsky Robert F. Zeidel John F. Zeugner William Larry Ziglar James A. Zimmerman Joseph G. Zitomersky Gary P. Zola David A. Zonderman Warren Zuger

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distinguished members

Please join the OAH in recognizing our patron and life members. Patron Members Brian Q. Cannon Hal S. Chase Ruth C. Crocker Gwendolyn M. Hall Kenneth T. Jackson Linda K. Kerber Patricia Nelson Limerick Elizabeth Anne Payne Ben Procter Jeffrey T. Sammons Donald Spivey Lola Van Wagenen

Life Members C. Blythe Ahlstrom Norio Akashi Michele L. Aldrich George E. Allen Glenn Altschuler James D. Anderson James L. Anderson Robert E. Ankli Jacob A. Antoninis Abraham Aponte Joyce Appleby Tadashi Aruga Douglas M. Astolfi Clarence J. Attig Arthur H. Auten Fred A. Bailey John W. Bailey Jr. W. David Baird Gordon Morris Bakken William L. Barney Michael Barnhart Dean O. Barnum Alwyn Barr Hal S. Barron Beth T. Bates

88 |

Ross W. Beales Jr. Henry F. Bedford Doron Ben-Atar Edward M. Bennett William A. Benton Philip J. Bergan James M. Bergquist Robert H. Berlin William C. Berman David Bernstein Mary F. Berry Eugene H. Berwanger Terry D. Bilhartz Roger E. Bilstein Richard J. Blackett Joab L. Blackman Jr. Robert M. Blackson John Porter Bloom Jo Tice Bloom Louis H. Blumengarten Allan Bogue Eileen Boris Tim Borstelmann Douglas E. Bowers Carl B. Boyd Jr. Peter Boyle T. Dwight Bozeman John H. Bracey Jr. Mary Ann Brady Vernon S. Braswell Lynn Brenneman Lynne T. Brickley Euline Brock Nwabueze W. Brooks Richard D. Brown William G. Brown Jr. Michael J. Brusin Jonathan M. Bryant Cecelia F. Bucki Mari Jo Buhle George D. Bullock

Nicholas C. Burckel O. L. Burnette Jr. Rand Burnette James MacGregor Burns Orville Vernon Burton Bruce I. Bustard Martin J. Butler Desmond X. Butler Peter M. Buzanski Stanley Caine Ross J. Cameron D’Ann Campbell Charles F. Carroll P. Thomas Carroll Clayborne Carson Dan T. Carter Charles D. Cashdollar Jonathan Cedarbaum William H. Chafe Frank Chalk David M. Chalmers George Chalou Robert W. Cherny Michael B. Chesson William E. Christensen Lawrence O. Christensen Manduk Chung Constance Areson Clark Stanley Coben Dale Collins Patrick T. Conley James L. Cooper Steven Cord Roger W. Corley Wallace Cory Nancy F. Cott Theodore R. Crane Lewis H. Cresse William J. Cronon James B. Crooks Jon A. Cucinatto

2 013 OA H A N N UA L M E E T I N G ◆ S A N F R A N C I S C O, C A L I F OR N I A

Charles T. Cullen Leonard P. Curry George H. Curtis Harl A. Dalstrom David B. Danbom Pete Daniel E. J. Danziger Jr. James West Davidson Richard O. Davies David Brion Davis Calvin D. Davis Cullom Davis Lawrence B. Davis Thomas H. Davis III Thomas J. Davis Kenneth E. Davison Carl N. Degler John A. D’Emilio Alan Derickson Sarah Deutsch Charles Burgess Dew John R. Dichtl Duane N. Diedrich Merton L. Dillon C. G. Dilworth Leonard Dinnerstein John M. Dobson Donald B. Dodd Helen Dodson Jay P. Dolan James P. Donohue Jr. Jacob H. Dorn James H. Ducker Dean Eberly Alfred E. Eckes Owen Dudley Edwards Tom G. Edwards William G. Eidson E Duane Elbert Sister Mary Elizabeth CHS Richard N. Ellis


distinguished members Martin I. Elzy Yasuo Endo George B. Engberg Conrad J. Engelder Glenn T. Eskew Richard W. Etulain David R. Farrell Drew Faust Roger J. Fechner Yvonne C. von Fettweis Paul Finkelman Norbert Finzsch John J. Fitzgerald Michael W. Fitzgerald Susan Flader Marvin E. Fletcher Eric Foner Mark S. Foster Frank K. Foulds Grover C. Franklin Rachel Franklin-Weekley William W. Freehling Walden S. Freeman Richard M. Fried Frank A. Friedman Mary O. Furner Donna R. Gabaccia James P. Gaffey Cheryl R. Ganz Frank Otto Gatell Larry R. Gerlach Gary L. Gerstle David M. Gerwin Ralph V. Giannini Glen A. Gildemeister Timothy J. Gilfoyle Gordon Gillson Harvey Goddard Nancy M. Godleski Brian Gordon Martin K. Gordon Lawrence B. de Graaf Alan Graebner William Graebner George D. Green Julie Greene Victor R. Greene William H. Greer Jr. Kenneth J. Grieb

John Reich Grieser David Grimsted James R. Grossman Jeffrey R. Gunderson Ramón A. Gutiérrez Hamsey Habeich Barton C. Hacker Robert W. Haddon Gunnar Haeggmark Alonzo L. Hamby Samuel B. Hand Bert Hansen James Hantula Robert L. Harris Jr. Peter T. Harstad Susan M. Hartmann Hugh D. Hawkins Robert P. Hay Willard M. Hays William D. Hechler Douglas Helms Nathaniel J. Henderson James E. Hendrickson Gary Hermalyn Theodore Hershberg Evelyn Brooks Higginbotham Darlene Clark Hine Harwood P. Hinton Joan Hoff Paul S. Holbo Melvin G. Holli William F. Holmes Jerry Berl Hopkins James O. Horton Walter R. Houf Frederick E. Hoxie James K. Huhta Carol Sue Humphrey Robert S. Huston Heather Huyck Haruo Iguchi H. Larry Ingle Suzanne Fellman Jacob Travis Beal Jacobs John P. Jenkins Richard Jensen Wayne H. Jiles Dorothy E. Johnson

James E. Johnson Jack J. Johnson Marilynn Johnson Arnita A. Jones James H. Jones Daniel P. Jordan Richard M. Judd Laura Kalman William Kamman Michael G. Kammen Steven Karges Peter Karsten Stanley N. Katz Charles A. Keene William Henry Kellar Robin D. Kelley Lawrence C. Kelly Benjamin N. Kightlinger William M. King Wilma King Richard S. Kirkendall Rachel N. Klein Anne M. Klejment Timothy E. Kline James T. Kloppenberg William A. Koelsch Sally Gregory Kohlstedt Richard H. Kohn Harold E. Kolling Clayton R. Koppes Gary J. Kornblith Richard N. Kottman J. Morgan Kousser Aileen S. Kraditor Alan M. Kraut John D. Krugler Fumiaki Kubo Bruce R. Kuniholm Judy Kutulas George W. Kyte Lester C. Lamon Daniel Lane Jr. Gerald F. Lange Harold D. Langley Bruce L. Larson Virginia Lashley Catherine Grollman Lauritsen Alan Lawson

Daniel Leab John L. LeBrun Francis L. Led II R. Alton Lee Mark H. Leff Richard W. Lenk Jr. Gerda Lerner William E. Leuchtenburg H. A. Leventhal David Saul Levin Allan J. Lichtman John E. Little Daniel C. Littlefield Leon F. Litwack Steven D. Livengood Nancy C. Luebbert Frederick C. Luebke David E. Luellen Karen Lystra Carol MacGregor Richard S. Macha David I. Macleod John G. Macnaughton James H. Madison Pauline Maier Nancy J. Weiss Malkiel William C. Marten Takeshi Mashimo Takeshi Matsuda John C. Maxwell Richard T. von Mayrhauser George T. Mazuzan William L. McCorkle Thomas K. McCraw William T. McCue Gerald W. McFarland Michael McGiffert Patrick E. Mclear Linda O. McMurry Richard M. McMurry James M. McPherson Samuel T. McSeveney John A. Meador Robert M. Mennel Joanne J. Meyerowitz Ronald E. Mickel Dennis N. Mihelich Edwin A. Miles Mary Emily Miller

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distinguished members Life Members (Continued) J. Paul Mitchell Haskell Monroe Margaret J. Moody Joseph Robert Morel Edmund S. Morgan John H. Morris Stephanie A. Morris Roland M. Mueller Laura Kathryn Munoz Craig C. Murray Peter C. Murray Robert K. Murray Edward J. Muzik Alfred F. Myers Gary B. Nash Natalie A. Naylor Humbert S. Nelli Anne Kusener Nelsen Clifford M. Nelson John L. Nethers Robert D. Neuleib John J. Newman Roger L. Nichols Alexandra Marie Nickliss Margie Noel Mary Beth Norton Jesse L. Nutt Jr. James Oakes James P. O’Brien Michael O’Brien Patrick G. O’Brien Akiko Ochiai George B. Oliver Otto H. Olsen Lorena Oropeza Richard J. Orsi C. H. O’Sullivan Alan M. Osur Philip W. Parks John W. Partin June O. Patton William H. Pease Robert H. Peebles Loren E. Pennington Frank Pereira

90 |

Lewis C. Perry Lawrence A. Peskin Allan Peskin Robert K. Peters Gale E. Peterson Larry R. Peterson Fred D. Pfening Christopher Phelps Richard B. Pierce II Mark A. Plummer Stephen Ross Porter William C. Pratt Francis Paul Prucha SJ Edward A. Purcell Jr. Allan Purcell Carroll W. Pursell George C. Rable John C. Raby Fred D. Ragan R. Lynn Rainard Harry W. Readnour Edwin A. Reed Thomas V. Reeve II Willis G. Regier Donald E. Reid John P. Reid Robert L. Reid John T. Reilly C. Thomas Rezner Paul Rich Steven A. Riess William A. Riley Paul T. Ringenbach Robert C. Ritchie Priscilla Roberts Kenneth G. Robison George L. Robson Jr. A. Rogers Earl M. Rogers Robert D. Ronsheim William E. Rooney Roberta Rorke Vivien E. Rose Christine Meesner Rosen Joseph Rosenberg Susan Rosenfeld Rodney A. Ross Rodney J. Ross Steven Rosswurm

Leslie S. Rowland Thomas G. Ruth Carmelita S. Ryan Richard W. Sadler Nancy Sahli C. E. Schabacker Ronald Schaffer Michael Schaller Edward L. Schapsmeier F. H. Schapsmeier Harry N. Scheiber Loretta L. Schmidt Johanna Schoen Thomas D. Schoonover John Schroeder Ingrid W. Scobie Anne Firor Scott Ronald E. Seavoy Gustav L. Seligmann Jr. Shelby Shapiro Richard N. Sheldon S. C. Shepherd Jr. James F. Shigley Paul H. Smith Wilson Smith Richard Sonderegger John M. Spencer Kurt R. Spillmann Carole Srole J. Barton Starr Raymond Starr Samuel N. Stayer Mark J. Stegmaier Jerry G. Stephens Ray Stephens L. L. Stevenson Jeffrey C. Stewart Mark A. Stoler Edwin Joseph Stolns Brit Allan Storey Ralph A. Storm Richard W. Strattner Shigeru Sugiyama John A. Sylvester Yoshiko Takita David Thelen Gerald E. Thomas Richard J. Thomas Robert D. Thomas Jr.

2 013 OA H A N N UA L M E E T I N G ◆ S A N F R A N C I S C O, C A L I F OR N I A

Jerry J. Thornbery Bert H. Thurber Vincent F. Torigian Eckard V. Toy Jr. Robert L. Tree Joseph Trent Joe Trotter Hiroshi Tsunematsu Nancy Bernkopf Tucker Tim Tucker Robert W. Unger James S. Van Ness Sandra F. VanBurkleo James R. Voelz David A. Walker Peter Wallenstein Gordon H. Warren John J. Waters Paul W. Wehr Sydney Stahl Weinberg Harold J. Weiss Jr. Richard Weiss Lowell E. Wenger E. Milton Wheeler James W. Whitaker Gerald J. White Roger S. White Henry O. Whiteside Michael N. Wibel Sarah W. Wiggins James C. Williams Lillian S. Williams Joel R. Williamson Terry P. Wilson Wayne Wilson William Henry Wilson Allan M. Winkler Richard L. Wixon Susan Wladaver-Morgan Kelly A. Woestman Yujin Yaguchi John Yarbrough Rafia Zafar Eugene Zandona John F. Zeugner William Larry Ziglar James A. Zimmerman


A CALL FOR PROPOSALS

2014 OAH Annual Meeting " 5 - " / 5 " ( & 0 3 ( * " t " 1 3 * - ĹŤ

Centennial Olympic Park, Atlanta. (Creative Commons photo, Kay Gaensler)

The theme for the 2014 OAH Annual Meeting will

5IF 0") 1SPHSBN $PNNJUUFF TFFLT B CSPBE

be “Crossing Borders.� The history of the United

wide-ranging program that treats the rich expanse of

States is a product of migrations—internal and

the American experience, from the pre-Columbian era

international. Along with people, goods and ideas

to the twenty-first century, and the thematic breadth

crossed these borders, reshaping the composition

that defines the work of contemporary historians. The

and character of the American people. Sometimes

committee encourages proposals from all practitioners

the borders and boundaries were physical, as

of American history. Submissions will be accepted

when international migrants crossed oceans and

CFHJOOJOH +BOVBSZ

continents, or when large numbers of individuals migrated from one region of the country to another, or when the lure of wealth and influence led to foreign invasions and conquests. Those on the

The deadline for proposals is Friday, February 15, 2013. To read the complete call for proposals, visit http://annualmeeting.oah.org/.

move were accompanied by bacteria or viruses, microorganisms whose migration across borders also shaped human experience. Borders were also framed by culture—racial, ethnic, class, and gender differences that perennially redefined our population and social order. The theme seeks to examine, in all its complexity, a broad array of border crossings and “encounters� in U.S. history.

ÂŽ 2 013 OA H A N N UA L M E E T I N G â—† S A N F R A N C I S C O, C A L I F OR N I A

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advertisers Alexander Street Press . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 117

Simon & Schuster . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 115, 124

Bloomsbury . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 148

Stanford University Press . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 154

California Historical Society . . . . . . . . . . . .157

Temple University Press . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .147

Cambridge University Press . . . . . . . . . . . .149

Texas Tech University Press . . . . . . . . . . . . .114

Canadian Historical Review. . . . . . . . . . . . .151

The Kent State University Press . . . . . . . . .120

Center for Jewish History. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 109

The University of Alabama Press . . . . . . . .150

Columbia University Press. . . . . . . . . . . . . .142

University of California Press . . . . . . . . . . . .97

Cornell University Press . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .121

University of Chicago Press. . . . . . . . .110, 111

First Peoples: New Directions in Indigenous Studies . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 104

University of Georgia Press . . . . . . . . . . 94, 95

Harvard University Press . . . . . . . . . . 102, 103 Indiana University Press . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .129

92 |

University of Illinois Press . . . . . . . . . 106, 107 University of Massachusetts, Amherst. . .128

Johns Hopkins University Press . . . . . . . . 105

University of Massachusetts Press . . . . . .122

Knopf Doubleday Academic. . . . . . . 118, 119

University of Missouri Press. . . . . . . . . . . . .123

LSU Press. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .113

University of Nebraska Press. . . . . . . 125, 155

Macmillan . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .116

University of North Carolina Press . 136–139

M.E. Sharpe, Inc. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 108

University of Pennsylvania Press . . . 152, 153

Milestone Documents . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 112

University of Toronto Press . . . . . . . . . . . . .151

NYU Press . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .96

University of Virginia Press . . . . . . . . . . . . . .93

Ohio University Press . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .125

University of Washington Press . . . . . . . . .158

Oxford University Press . . . . . . . . . . . 130–133

University Press of Kansas . . . . . . . . . 144, 145

Penguin Group . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .143

University Press of Kentucky. . . . . . . . . . . .156

Pennsylvania Historical Association . . . . 154

University Press of Mississippi . . . . . . . . . .156

Perseus Books Group . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 98–100

W.W. Norton . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 126, 127

Princeton University Press . . . . . . . . . . . . . 140 ProQuest . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .155

Western Historical Association/Western Historical Quarterly . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .157

Random House, Inc.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 134

Wiley Blackwell . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 146

Routledge . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .141

Yale University Press . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .101

2 013 OA H A N N UA L M E E T I N G ◆ S A N F R A N C I S C O, C A L I F OR N I A


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Creolization and Contraband Curaçao in the Early Modern Atlantic World Linda M. Rupert “This exploration of localized sociocultural mixing and extensive, illicit commerce on a Dutch Caribbean island makes for a fascinating study of colonial agency. The Antilles was the most dynamic site of creolization and contraband in the early modern world. Anyone interested in Atlantic history will want to read this excellent book.” —Philip D. Morgan, author of Slave Counterpoint A collaborative series supported b y t h e A n d r e w W. Mellon Foundation

Ordinary Lives in the Early Caribbean Religion, Colonial Competition, and the Politics of Profit Kristen Block “Block’s case studies of ordinary men and women in the Caribbean, and her creative use of the fragmentary sources they left, illuminate the ways in which they negotiated the spaces within and between empires, and their use of religious identification in those negotiations. By taking religion seriously and looking across colonial empires, she has produced a study that will be must reading for everyone interested in the early modern Atlantic.”—Karen Ordahl Kupperman, New York University

Race and Rights Fighting Slavery and Prejudice in the Old Northwest, 1830–1870 Dana Elizabeth Weiner The founding of the Northwest Territory sparked heated debates over race and civil rights in the early United States. Race and Rights revisits these debates to shed new light on slavery and social activism as they were practiced in the Midwest during the nineteenth century.

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In the Shadow of the Greatest Generation The Americans Who Fought the Korean War

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Selected and edited by renowned women’s historian Carol Berkin, these brief biographies are designed for use in undergraduate courses. Rather than a comprehensive approach, each biography focuses instead on a particular aspect of a woman’s life that is emblematic of her time, or which made her a pivotal figure in the era. The emphasiss is on a “good read,” featuring accessible writing and compelling narratives, without sacrificing sound scholarship and academic integrity. Primary sources at the end of each biography reveal the subject’s perspective in her own words. Study Questions and an Annotated Bibliography support the student reader. Each volume: Retail price $20.00.

Margaret Sanger Freedom, Controversy, and the Birth Control Movement ESTHER KATZ

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A History of America’s Wars and Those Who Fought Them JAMES WRIGHT PublicAffairs, May 2013, 368 pages 9781610392440, $16.99, pb Available now in Hardcover: 9781610390729, $28.99, hc, 368 pages

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Grant’s Final Victory Ulysses S. Grant’s Heroic Last Year CHARLES BRACELEN FLOOD Da Capo Press, October 2012, 320 pages 9780306821516, $17.50, pb

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FDR’s Extraordinary World War II Presidential Campaign STANLEY WEINTRAUB Da Capo Press, July 2012, 336 pages 9780306821134, $26.00, hc PUBLICAFFAIRS and DA CAPO PRESS are members of the Perseus Books Group. For more information on these and other American History books, visit us at www.perseusacademic.com.


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1940 FDR, Willkie, Lindbergh, Hitler— the Election amid the Storm Susan Dunn

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Americans After the American Century Patrick Smith

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Create the perfect custom reader for your course by choosing from primary documents, secondary sources, and chapters from America, Ninth Edition, or Give Me Liberty!, Third Edition. The Norton Mix: American History gives you greater flexibility in course design and lets you control the price. New and Forthcoming in Hardcover Darkest America

Civil War Sketch Book

The Measure of Manhattan

black minstrelsy from slavery to hip-hop

drawings from the battlefront

Yuval Taylor

Harry L. Katz

Jake Austen

Vincent Virga

the tumultuous career and surprising legacy of john randel, jr., cartographer, surveyor, inventor Marguerite Holloway

Prairie Fever

Flagrant Conduct

british aristocrats in the american west, 1830–1890

Freedom National the destruction of slavery in the united states, 1861–1865

the story of lawrence vs. texas

Peter Pagnamenta

James Oakes

New from Liveright

Dale Carpenter

The Long Road to Antietam The Fourteenth Day

how the civil war became a revolution

jfk and the aftermath of the cuban missile crisis

Richard Slotkin

David G. Coleman

New and Forthcoming in Paperback Ethan Allen

Pacific Crucible

Fortunate Sons

his life and times

war at sea in the pacific, 1941–1942

the 120 chinese boys who came to america, went to school, and revolutionized an ancient civilization

Willard Sterne Randall

Ian W. Toll

From Bible Belt to Sunbelt Plain-Folk Religion, Grassroots Politics, and the Rise of Evangelical Conservatism

Railroaded the transcontinentals and the making of modern america

Darren Dochuk

Mightier Than the Sword uncle tom’s cabin and the battle for america David S. Reynolds

Liel Leibovitz Matthew Miller

David Crockett the lion of the west Michael Wallis

Richard White

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Almost Worthy

The Poor, Paupers, and the Science of Charity in America, 1877-1917 Brent Ruswick 4LMPERXLVSTMG ERH 2SRTVS½X 7XYHMIW cloth 978-0-253-00634-9 $37.00 ebook 978-0-253-00638-7 $32.99

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(The North’s Civil War)

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The Oxford Handbook of Food History Edited by Jeffrey M. Pilcher 2012 Hardback $150.00

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2012 Paperback $18.00 A Fordham University Press Publication

New Bedford’s Civil War Earl F. Mulderink III 2012 Hardback

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of one or all of these online resources and learn how they can aid in your research and be used in the classroom Oxford Bibliographies www.oxfordbibliographies.com Developed cooperatively with scholars and librarians worldwide, Oxford Bibliographies offers researchers exclusive, authoritative thorit ti e research guides to the best available scholarship in the field of History.

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The War of 1812 and the Rise of the U.S. Navy

NEW IN HARDCOVER

BOOTH #506

Out of Order

The Color of War

By Mark Collins Jenkins and David Taylor

How One Battle Broke Japan and Another Changed America By James Campbell

Foreword by Douglas Brinkley

Stories from the History of the Supreme Court By Sandra Day O’Connor

National Geographic | Hardcover | 978-1-4262-0933-8 280pp. | $30.00/$34.00 Can.

Random House | Hardcover | 978-0-8129-9392-9 | 256pp. | $26.00/$31.00 Can. e-Book: 978-0-8129-9393-6 | $12.99/$14.99 Can.

The Liberator

Who Stole the American Dream?

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Eighty Days Nellie Bly and Elizabeth Bisland’s History-Making Race Around the World By Matthew Goodman Ballantine Books | Hardcover | 978-0-345-52726-4 480pp. | $28.00/$32.00 Can. Audio: 978-0-385-35971-9 | $25.00/$29.95 Can. e-Book: 978-0-345-52728-8 | $13.99/$15.99 Can.

A History, a Crisis, a Movement By David Graeber Spiegel & Grau | Hardcover | 978-0-8129-9356-1 | 320pp. | $26.00/$31.00 Can. Audio: 978-0-385-36041-8 | $17.50/$20.50 Can. e-Book: 978-0-679-64600-6 | $13.99/$15.99 Can.

The True Story of the Original Tom Sawyer— and of the Mysterious Fires That Baptized Gold Rush-Era San Francisco By Robert Graysmith Crown | Hardcover | 978-0-307-72056-6 | 288pp. | $26.00/$31.00 Can. e-Book: 978-0-307-72058-0 | $12.99/$14.99 Can.

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NOW IN PAPERBACK The Stammering Century By Gilbert Seldes Introduction by Greil Marcus

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The Fall of an Empire and the Making of America’s Vietnam By Fredrik Logevall

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Thomas Jefferson

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THE MAKING OF BLACK DETROIT IN THE AGE OF HENRY FORD Beth Tompkins Bates 360 pages $45.00 cloth

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JOSEPHUS DANIELS

His Life and Times

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DISPOSSESSION

Discrimination Against African American Farmers in the Age of Civil Rights

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DOCTORING FREEDOM

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KENNESAW MOUNTAIN

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A Transnational History

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HENRY WALLACE’S 1948 PRESIDENTIAL CAMPAIGN AND THE FUTURE OF POSTWAR LIBERALISM Thomas W. Devine 352 pages $39.95 cloth

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REMEMBERING THE CIVIL WAR

Reunion and the Limits of Reconciliation

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BLACK SLAVES, INDIAN MASTERS

WAR ON THE WATERS

The Union and Confederate Navies, 1861-1865

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Rare Kodachrome Photographs of Japanese American Incarceration in World War II

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Slavery, Emancipation, and Citizenship in the Native American South

With photographs by Bill Manbo

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ATLANTA, CRADLE OF THE NEW SOUTH

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The Pennsylvania P Historical Association CONGRATULATIONS TO THE 2012 KLEIN BOOK PRIZE WINNER A Town in Between: Carlisle, Pennsylvania and the Early Mid-Atlantic Interior By Judith Ridner (University of Pennsylvania Press, 2010)

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Upcoming OAH Annual Meetings

2013 — San Francisco, CA Thursday, April 11 to Sunday, April 14, Hilton San Francisco

2014 — Atlanta, GA Thursday, April 10 to Sunday, April 13, Hilton Atlanta

2015 — St. Louis, MO Thursday, April 16 to Sunday, April 19 Renaissance St. Louis Grand Hotel and America’s Center

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registration Preregistration Form Please submit the completed form and registration fee to: OAH Preregistration, Meetings Department, 112 N. Bryan Avenue, Bloomington, IN 474084141. Registration forms must be received by April 1, 2013. Convention materials will not be mailed, but can be picked up at the OAH registration counter in the Hilton San Francisco Union Square. All registration cancellation requests must be submitted in writing by April 1, 2013, to receive a refund, less a $25 processing fee.

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The Bedford Series in History and Culture Advisory Editors: Lynn Hunt, University of California, Los Angeles; David W. Blight, Yale University; Bonnie G. Smith, Rutgers University; Natalie Zemon Davis, Princeton University

For twenty years, the Bedford Series in History and Culture has made primary sources available and affordable for use in a wide range of history courses. Visit our Web site at bedfordstmartins.com/history/series to see a full list of available books. Thank you for your continued support and interest in the Bedford Series in History and Culture!

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Everything you need to get your students doing history Exploring American Histories A Brief Survey with Sources Nancy A. Hewitt, Rutgers University Steven F. Lawson, Rutgers University

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