The Leblanc Collection Is Only Partially Cataloged. This Is a Listing of Our Leblanc Dime Novel Holdings That Have Not Yet Made It Into the Library's Catalog
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Music and the American Civil War
“LIBERTY’S GREAT AUXILIARY”: MUSIC AND THE AMERICAN CIVIL WAR by CHRISTIAN MCWHIRTER A DISSERTATION Submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in the Department of History in the Graduate School of The University of Alabama TUSCALOOSA, ALABAMA 2009 Copyright Christian McWhirter 2009 ALL RIGHTS RESERVED ABSTRACT Music was almost omnipresent during the American Civil War. Soldiers, civilians, and slaves listened to and performed popular songs almost constantly. The heightened political and emotional climate of the war created a need for Americans to express themselves in a variety of ways, and music was one of the best. It did not require a high level of literacy and it could be performed in groups to ensure that the ideas embedded in each song immediately reached a large audience. Previous studies of Civil War music have focused on the music itself. Historians and musicologists have examined the types of songs published during the war and considered how they reflected the popular mood of northerners and southerners. This study utilizes the letters, diaries, memoirs, and newspapers of the 1860s to delve deeper and determine what roles music played in Civil War America. This study begins by examining the explosion of professional and amateur music that accompanied the onset of the Civil War. Of the songs produced by this explosion, the most popular and resonant were those that addressed the political causes of the war and were adopted as the rallying cries of northerners and southerners. All classes of Americans used songs in a variety of ways, and this study specifically examines the role of music on the home-front, in the armies, and among African Americans. -
Myth and Memory: the Legacy of the John Hancock House
MYTH AND MEMORY: THE LEGACY OF THE JOHN HANCOCK HOUSE by Rebecca J. Bertrand A thesis submitted to the Faculty of the University of Delaware in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Arts in American Material Culture Spring 2010 Copyright 2010 Rebecca J. Bertrand All Rights Reserved MYTH AND MEMORY: THE LEGACY OF THE JOHN HANCOCK HOUSE by Rebecca J. Bertrand Approved: __________________________________________________________ Brock Jobe, M.A. Professor in charge of thesis on behalf of the Advisory Committee Approved: __________________________________________________________ J. Ritchie Garrison, Ph.D. Director of the Winterthur Program in American Material Culture Approved: __________________________________________________________ George H. Watson, Ph.D. Dean of the College of Arts and Sciences Approved: __________________________________________________________ Debra Hess Norris, M.S. Vice Provost for Graduate and Professional Education ACKNOWLEDGMENTS Every Massachusetts schoolchild walks Boston’s Freedom Trail and learns the story of the Hancock house. Its demolition served as a rallying cry for early preservationists and students of historic preservation study its importance. Having been both a Massachusetts schoolchild and student of historic preservation, this project has inspired and challenged me for the past nine months. To begin, I must thank those who came before me who studied the objects and legacy of the Hancock house. I am greatly indebted to the research efforts of Henry Ayling Phillips (1852- 1926) and Harriette Merrifield Forbes (1856-1951). Their research notes, at the American Antiquarian Society in Worcester, Massachusetts served as the launching point for this project. This thesis would not have been possible without the assistance and guidance of my thesis adviser, Brock Jobe. -
Bibliography of American Newspapers, 1690-1820
128 American Antiquarian Society. [April, BIBLIOGRAPHY OF AMERICAN NEWSPAPERS, 1690-1820 PART III ' MARYLAND TO MASSACHUSETTS (BOSTON) COMPILED BY CLARENCE S. BRIGHAM The following bibliography attempts, first, to present a historical sketch of every newspaper printed in the United States from 1690 to 1820; secondly, to locate all files found in the various libraries of the country; and thirdly, to give a complete check list of the issues in the library of the American Antiquarian Society. The historical sketch of each paper gives the title, the date of establishment, the name of the editor or publisher, the fre- quency of issue and the date of discontinuance. It also attempts to give the exact date of issue when a change in title or name of publisher or frequency of publication occurs. In locating the files to be found in various libraries, no at- tempt is made to list every issue. In the case of common news- papers which are to be found in many libraries, only the longer files are noted, with a description of their completeness. Rare newspapers, which are known by only a few scattered issues, are minutely listed. The check list of the issues in the library of the American Antiquarian Society follows the style of the Library of Con- gress "Check List of Eighteenth Century Newspapers," and records all supplements, missing issues and mutilations. The arrangement is alphabetical by states and towns. Towns are placed according to their present State location. For convenience of alphabetization, the initial "The" in the titles of papers is disregarded. Papers are considered to be of folio size, unless otherwise stated. -
Gaining Ground FINAL CONFORMED & ANNOTATED
Gaining Ground FINAL CONFORMED & ANNOTATED SCRIPT 3/20/12 GAINING GROUND 00:18 Opening scene: Aerial zoom out of empty lots JULIO HENRIQUEZ, V/O: When we moved here as a family, the whole community was just really devastated.1 LOWER THIRD: Boston DUDLEY NEIGHBORHOOD, 1980s Archival shots of devastation JOHN BARROS, V/O and O/C: The neighborhood was dealing with arson for profit, white flight from the city, uh, increase in crime and illegal dumping2. JULIO HENRIQUEZ, O/C and V/O: This vacant parcel here was just littered. And back of the house, that was a car graveyard. They used to steal cars and just dump ‘em there. CARLOS HENRIQUEZ, O/C and V/O: At nine or ten years old, all these blocks were vacant3, I was in the window, I would come home and if I was doing my homework, I might stop and take a break, and see a truck pull up to go dump a refrigerator and I would run out and I would write down the license plate number, give it to him to make sure people were cited for doing that. 01:10 Archival of protest march and community organizing 1 Medoff, Peter, and Holly Sklar. Streets of Hope: The Fall and Rise of an Urban Neighborhood. Boston, MA: South End Press, 1994. Print. 2 City of Boston Arson Prevention Commission, Report to the Boston Redevelopment Authority on the Status of Arson in Dudley Square, September 4, 1985, pp1-2. Print; Time.com. Education White Flight Continued. September 29, 1975. Web; Boston and Its Neighborhoods. -
Wendell Phillips Wendell Phillips
“THE CHINAMAN WORKS CHEAP BECAUSE HE IS A BARBARIAN AND SEEKS GRATIFICATION OF ONLY THE LOWEST, THE MOST INEVITABLE WANTS.”1 For the white abolitionists, this was a class struggle rather than a race struggle. It would be quite mistaken for us to infer, now that the civil war is over and the political landscape has 1. Here is what was said of the Phillips family in Nathaniel Morton’s NEW ENGLAND’S MEMORIAL (and this was while that illustrious family was still FOB!): HDT WHAT? INDEX WENDELL PHILLIPS WENDELL PHILLIPS shifted, that the stereotypical antebellum white abolitionist in general had any great love for the welfare of black Americans. White abolitionist leaders knew very well what was the source of their support, in class conflict, and hence Wendell Phillips warned of the political danger from a successful alliance between the “slaveocracy” of the South and the Cotton Whigs of the North, an alliance which he termed “the Lords of the Lash and the Lords of the Loom.” The statement used as the title for this file, above, was attributed to Phillips by the news cartoonist and reformer Thomas Nast, in a cartoon of Columbia facing off a mob of “pure white” Americans armed with pistols, rocks, and sticks, on behalf of an immigrant with a pigtail, that was published in Harper’s Weekly on February 18, 1871. There is no reason to suppose that the cartoonist Nast was failing here to reflect accurately the attitudes of this Boston Brahman — as we are well aware how intensely uncomfortable this man was around any person of color. -
LCD Historic Sites and Programming/Event Assets 1. “Poe Returning to Boston”
LCD historic sites and programming/event assets 1. “Poe Returning to Boston” sculpture (unveiled October 5, 2014), corner of Charles and Boylston Streets. 2. The Colored American Magazine, 5 Park Square (address no longer exists but would be just where the The Trolley Shop and Leather World are situated). First monthly publication targeting an exclusively African American readership, 3. Grave of Charles Sprague, the banker-poet of Boston in the 1800s, Central Burying Ground on Boston Common off Boylston Street. 4. Ploughshares at Emerson College120 Boylston Street. Influential literary magazine. 5. Emerson College’s Colonial Theatre, 106 Boylston Street. Rodgers and Hammerstein literally wrote the title song to Oklahoma! in the lobby there and later won a special Pulitzer for the play. 6. The Long Path, stretching through the Common from the corner of Boylston and Tremont Streets to Joy Street, immortalized by Oliver Wendell Holmes in his Autocrat of the Breakfast Table. (Boston Common, the country’s oldest public park, is also a spot that Ralph Waldo Emerson grazed cows as a child. And Poe, who had a distaste for the transcendentalists, dismissed them as frogpondians, for the Common’s Frog Pond on which people ice skate during the winter.) 7. Fannie Farmer Cookbook, 174 Tremont Street (exact address no longer exists). Began as the Boston Cooking-School Cook Book. The Boston Cooking School stood at 174 Tremont. 8. Jacob Wirth Restaurant, 31 Stuart Street. Written about by poet Jack Kerouac. Patrons have also included Spencer for Hire writer Robert Parker. 9. Brattle Book Shop , 9 West Street. Specializes in used and rare books. -
THE TEXTUALITY of the CONSTITUTION and the ORIGINS of ORIGINAL INTENT a Dissertation Presented to the Faculty of the Graduate Sc
THE TEXTUALITY OF THE CONSTITUTION AND THE ORIGINS OF ORIGINAL INTENT A Dissertation Presented to the Faculty of the Graduate School of Cornell University In Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree of Doctor of Philosophy by Simon Joseph Gilhooley January 2014 © 2014 Simon Joseph Gilhooley ! THE TEXTUALITY OF THE CONSTITUTION AND THE ORIGINS OF ORIGINAL INTENT Simon Joseph Gilhooley, Ph. D. Cornell University 2014 In this dissertation, I engage issues associated with the particular nature of the American Constitution, seeking why and how Americans have come so strongly to identify with the Constitution as a text, and with the framers of that document as authors of that text. This identification remains a central part of American political culture, placing limits upon what is ideologically permissible within the polity. Examining newspapers accounts, I trace the historical origins of the close association of the American Constitution with its “framers” – an idea that has currency through popular constitutional interpretation via “framer intent.” I locate the genesis of this idea within three ideational environments within the early American Republic. These are (1) the emergence of the Author figure as a method of ordering texts, (2) the veneration of the founders and their association with the Constitution, and (3) the divergence of legal and non-elite constitutional interpretations. Each of these developmental strands contributed in forming a constellation within which claims of framer intent could come to carry weight. The final component of the dissertation explores the culmination of these processes within the debates over abolition with the District of Columbia in the 1830s, and the resultant turn to constitutional understandings predicated upon beliefs as to the framers’ intentions rather than the text of the Constitution. -
Edmund Quincy Sewall, Jr., the Gentle Boy Hdt What? Index
EDMUND QUINCY SEWALL, JR., THE GENTLE BOY HDT WHAT? INDEX EDMUND QUINCY SEWALL, JR. THE GENTLE BOY 1692 September 22, Thursday (Old Style): Magistrate Samuel Sewall –the progenitor of the Edmund Quincy Sewall, Jr. of Scituate in the Bay Colony who would begin to attend the Concord Academy in Concord in June 1839 and of the Ellen Devereux Sewall to whom Henry Thoreau would propose– was involved in the offing of 19 women of Salem for being in league with Satan. On this one day Martha Corey, Margaret Scott, Mary Towne Estey or Easty (whose sister, Goodwife Rebecca Towne Nurse, had already been taken to the gallows), Alice Parker, Ann Pudeator, Wilmott Redd, Samuel Wardwell, and Mary Parker were hanged. FINAL EXECUTIONS Jo. Wilkinson of Sowerby and final beheadings on the famous Halifax Gibbet December 30, 1648 Anthony Mitchell Martha Corey, Margaret Scott, hanged for witchcraft in the American colonies Mary Towne Estey or Easty, “...what a sad thing it is to see Eight Firebrands of September 22, 1692 Alice Parker, Ann Pudeator, Hell hanging there” Wilmott Redd, Samuel Wardwell, and Mary Parker last person to get actually hanged in England, for 1709 Henry Young being judged to have been defeated by his oppo- nent in a Trial by Combat Mary Towne Easty: “...if it be possible no more innocent blood be shed... ...I am clear of this sin.” The Reverend Nicholas Noyes: “What a sad thing to see eight firebrands of hell hanging there.” HDT WHAT? INDEX EDMUND QUINCY SEWALL, JR. THE GENTLE BOY William Hathorne’s son John Hathorne (1641-1717), a chip off the old block, a Colonel in the Massachusetts Militia and a deputy to the General Court in Boston, was a Magistrate during this episode in which in addition to the hangings of this day one woman had a short time before been tortured to death.1 WITCH 1. -
Architecture Program Report
MARCH 2013 REVISED JULY 2013 ARCHITECTURE PROGRAM REPORT NAAB VISIT FOR AccreDitation Patricia Seitz Master of Architecture Program Head / Program Coordinator Professor of Architecture Email: [email protected] Phone: 617.879.7677 Paul Hajian Chair - Architecture Department Professor of Architecture Email: [email protected] Phone: 617.879.7652 Jenny Gibbs Associate Dean of Graduate Programs Email: [email protected] Phone: 617.879.7181 Maureen Kelly Senior Vice President for Academic Affairs Email: [email protected] Phone: 617.879.7365 Dawn Barrett President Email: [email protected] Phone: 617.879.7100 MASSachuSETTS COLLege OF Art AND DESIGN ARCHITECTURE PROGRAM REPORT 2013 ARCHITECTURE PROGRAM Report 2013 MASSACHUSETTS COLLEGE OF ART AND DESIGN / ARCHITECTURE / MARCH 2013 TABLE OF CONTENTS Part ONE (I) - INSTITUTIONAL Support AND COMMITMENT to CONTINUOUS Improvement 4 Section 1: Identity and Self-Assessment 4 I.1.1 History and Mission 4 I.1.2 Learning Culture and Social Equity 18 I.1.3 Responses to the Five Perspectives 22 I.1.4 Long Range Planning 28 I.1.5 Self-Assessment Procedures 40 Section 2: Resources 48 I.2.1 Human Resources and Resource Development 48 I.2.2 Administrative Structure and Governance 69 I.2.3 Physical Resources 74 I.2.4 Financial Resources 92 I.2.5 Information Resources 95 Section 3: Institutional and Program Characteristics 101 I.3.1 Statistical Reports 101 I.3.2 Financial Reports 106 I.3.3 Faculty Credentials 107 Section 4: Policy Review 112 Part TWO (II) - EDucationaL OutcomeS -
Volume 27 , Number 2
THE HUDSON RIVER VALLEY REVIEW A Journal of Regional Studies The Hudson River Valley Institute at Marist College is supported by a major grant from the National Endowment for the Humanities. Publisher Thomas S. Wermuth, Vice President for Academic Affairs, Marist College Editors Christopher Pryslopski, Program Director, Hudson River Valley Institute, Marist College Reed Sparling, Writer, Scenic Hudson Mark James Morreale, Guest Editor Editorial Board The Hudson River Valley Review Myra Young Armstead, Professor of History, (ISSN 1546-3486) is published twice Bard College a year by the Hudson River Valley Institute at Marist College. COL Lance Betros, Professor and Head, Department of History, U.S. Military James M. Johnson, Executive Director Academy at West Point Research Assistants Kim Bridgford, Professor of English, Gabrielle Albino West Chester University Poetry Center Gail Goldsmith and Conference Amy Jacaruso Michael Groth, Professor of History, Wells College Brian Rees Susan Ingalls Lewis, Associate Professor of History, State University of New York at New Paltz Hudson River Valley Institute Advisory Board Sarah Olson, Superintendent, Roosevelt- Peter Bienstock, Chair Vanderbilt National Historic Sites Margaret R. Brinckerhoff Roger Panetta, Professor of History, Dr. Frank Bumpus Fordham University Frank J. Doherty H. Daniel Peck, Professor of English, BG (Ret) Patrick J. Garvey Vassar College Shirley M. Handel Robyn L. Rosen, Associate Professor of History, Marjorie Hart Marist College Maureen Kangas Barnabas McHenry David Schuyler, -
The Civil War Diary of Hoosier Samuel P
1 “LIKE CROSSING HELL ON A ROTTEN RAIL—DANGEROUS”: THE CIVIL WAR DIARY OF HOOSIER SAMUEL P. HERRINGTON Edited by Ralph D. Gray Bloomington 2014 2 Sergeant Samuel P. Herrington Indianapolis Star, April 7, 1912 3 CONTENTS Page INTRODUCTION 5 CHAPTERS 1. Off to Missouri (August-December 1861) 17 "There was no one rejected." 2. The Pea Ridge Campaign (January-March 15, 1862) 61 "Lord but how we made things hum." 3. Missouri Interlude (March 16-June 1862) 87 "There is a great many sick [and] wounded." 4. Moving Along the Mississippi (July-December 1862) 111 "We will never have so much fun if we stay ten years in the service." 5. The Approach to Vicksburg (January-May 18, 1863) 149 "We have quite an army here." 6. Vicksburg and Jackson (May 19-July 26, 1863) 177 ". they are almost Starved and cant hold out much longer." 7. To Texas, via Indiana and Louisiana (July 27-December 1863) 201 "The sand blows very badly & everything we eat is full of sand." 8. Guard Duty along the Gulf (January-May 28, 1864 241 "A poor soldier obeys orders that is all." 9. To the Shenandoah and Home (May 29-September 1864) 277 "I was at the old John Brown Fortress where he made his stand for Liberty and Justice." 4 The picture can't be displayed. 5 INTRODUCTION Indiana played a significant role in the Civil War. Its contributions of men and material, surpassed by no other northern state on a percentage basis, were of enormous importance in the total war effort. -
Reelnumber Title City Begindate Enddate 56492 Volunteer AL
ReelNumber Title City BeginDate EndDate 56492 Volunteer AL - Athens 4/23/1864 4/23/1864 56492 Mobile Advertiser and Register AL - Mobile 11/15/1862 11/15/1862 56492 Weekly Advertiser and Register AL - Mobile 2/8/1864 2/8/1864 56492 Federal Union AL - Selma 5/13/1865 5/13/1865 54815 World's Cresset AR - Leachville 12/26/1918 12/26/1918 13833 Critic AR - Piggott 6/11/1915 6/11/1915 54825 Sacramento Weekly Union CA - Sacramento 4/12/1876 4/12/1876 54825 Sacramento Weekly Union CA - Sacramento 4/26/1876 4/26/1876 54825 Sacramento Weekly Union CA - Sacramento 8/2/1876 8/2/1876 54824 Enterprise and Co-Operator CA - San Francisco 5/25/1872 5/25/1872 54825 Spirit of the Times (& Underwriter’s J CA - San Francisco 3/23/1872 3/23/1872 54821 San Luis Obispo, California Tribune CA - San Luis Obispo 8/12/1876 8/12/1876 54824 Leadville Daily Herald CO - Leadville 11/18/1882 11/18/1882 54824 Connecticut Western News CT - Canaan 12/26/1895 12/26/1895 54825 Connecticut Western News CT - Canaan 7/9/1884 7/9/1884 56492 La Nueva Era CUB - Ponce 8/29/1898 8/29/1898 54825 Reporter DC - Washington, D.C. 1/22/1866 1/22/1866 54825 Reporter DC - Washington, D.C. 2/5/1866 2/5/1866 54825 Reporter DC - Washington, D.C. 2/22/1866 2/22/1866 54825 Reporter DC - Washington, D.C. 2/26/1866 2/26/1866 54825 Reporter DC - Washington, D.C. 3/5/1866 3/5/1866 54825 Reporter DC - Washington, D.C.