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2010 Annual Meeting organization of A merican historians Washington, D.C. Welcome

ashington D.C. is the ideal location for this year’s conference, with the theme “American Culture, American Democracy.” Our program committee, chaired by Tim Borstelmann, and our local resource committee, chaired by Keri Lewis, have worked very hard to put together an outstand- ingW conference that takes full advantage of our location in the nation’s capital.

The program includes two plenary sessions that examine new directions in the field. “Environmental His- tory: Retrospect and Prospect,” considers the field of environmental history as it has evolved over the last thirty years, and where it is headed in the future, as issues ranging from global warming to infectious dis- ease fill the headlines and call for historical study and insight. “The in the World” looks at how U.S. history is connected to world history, by examining the ways in which the field has recently embraced and transnational approaches. These sessions are timely and relevant not only to our field, but May to the critical issues facing our world.

In addition to these two exciting plenaries, the program includes a wide range of innovative sessions, such as a roundtable on the national parks focused on the recent documentary series, and retrospective panels that consider the work of two of the great innovators in our field, Franklin and John Higham. Two sessions focus on the practical matters of working as a historian in the twenty-first century. “Digital Tools for Historians” examines the potential of new media to revolutionize historical research, and the other, “Finding a Good Home for your Manuscript,” offers tips on book publishing at a time of major changes in the publishing industry.

The OAH Local Resource Committee has organized opportunities for special tours and sessions at some of the nation’s greatest treasure troves. A session at the addresses the challenges and rewards of crafting the monumental five-volume History of the Book in America, with members of the project’s editorial board. A special National Archives tour at the Center for Legislative Archives includes a program in the Legislative Treasures Vault. There is also a tour of the Capitol Building and its new visitor’s center.

These are only a few of the exciting events and sessions that are part of this year’s program. I want to offer my heartfelt thanks to all those who worked so hard to bring this program to fruition. ­—Elaine Tyler May, OAH President

s the OAH Interim Executive Director (and Washington, D.C. adopted native), I add my welcome to that of the OAH President, Elaine Tyler May. During my time with the Organization of American Historians, I have been extremely impressed by the dedication and commitment of the membership, Athe various committees, the executive board, and the staff. The culmination of much of that care will be evi- denced in this annual meeting.

The OAH annual meetings are incredible opportunities to gain so much on so many levels—to inform the or- ganization’s members of the general state of the current discourse, debate, and research in the rich and vibrant field of U.S. history; to connect with new colleagues and valued friends; to model for students and emerging leaders of the academy; and to visit exhibits that showcase new works, educational innovations, and technol- Kissman ogy. And all in the nation’s capital—one of the most exciting historic locations in the world.

I also add my special thanks to Tim Borstelmann and the 2010 program committee, Keri Lewis and the 2010 Local Resource Com- mittee, and to our director of meetings, Amy Stark, meetings assistant, Jason Groth, and the rest of the staff at the OAH for their efforts in making this an outstanding annual meeting.

I look forward to seeing you at the opening reception! ­—Katha Kissman, OAH Interim Executive Director

The 2010 OAH Annual Meeting Program is a publication of the Organization of American Historians, 112 North Bryan Avenue, PO Box 5457, Bloomington, IN 47407-5457 2010 OAH Annual Meeting • Washington, D.C. • 1 Schedule of Events 2010 OAH Annual Meeting OAH Sessions and Events Wednesday, April 7 Friday, April 9 Saturday, April 10 Session 1— Session 1— Session 1— 1:45 p.m. to 3:15 p.m. 8:30 a.m. to 10:00 a.m. 8:30 a.m. to 10:00 a.m. Session 2— Session 2— Session 2— 3:30 p.m. to 5:00 p.m. 10:15 a.m. to 11:45 a.m. 10:15 a.m. to 11:45 a.m. Opening Reception Luncheons— Luncheons— 5:30 p.m. to 7:00 p.m. 12:00 noon to 1:30 p.m. 12:00 noon to 1:30 p.m. Session 3— Session 3— Thursday, April 8 1:45 p.m. to 3:15 p.m. 1:45 p.m. to 3:15 p.m. Session 1— Plenary Session— OAH Awards Ceremony and 8:30 a.m. to 10:00 a.m. 3:30 p.m. to 5:30 p.m. Presidential Address— Session 2— 3:30 p.m. to 5:30 p.m. 10:15 a.m. to 11:45 a.m. Presidential and Distinguished Session 3— Members Reception— 1:45 p.m. to 3:15 p.m. 5:30 p.m. to 6:30 p.m. Plenary Session— 3:30 p.m. to 5:30 p.m. OAH Exhibit Hall Hours Thursday, April 8 9:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.

Friday, April 9 9:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.

Saturday, April 10 9:00 a.m. to 1:00 p.m.

OAH Committee and Board Meetings Meeting times for OAH committee and board meetings may be found on page 56. American Culture American Democracy 2010 OAH Annual Meeting Wednesday to Saturday, April 7 to 10 • Washington, D.C.

Table of Contents 2010 Annual Meeting Sponsors...... 4 Registration...... 6 Lodging...... 7 Travel...... 8 2010 OAH Program Committee Highlights...... 10 Tim Borstelmann, University of Nebraska-Lincoln, Chair Plenary ...... 12 Kristin L. Ahlberg, Office of the Historian, U.S. Department of State Receptions...... 13 Meals ...... 14 Margot Canaday, Community College Historians ...... 15 María Cristina García, Cornell University Public History...... 16 Sharon M. Leon, Center for History and New Media, George Mason University Precollegiate Teachers...... 17 Tiya A. Miles, Graduate Students...... 18 Jon Sensbach, University of Florida TAH Symposium...... 19 Howard J. Shorr, Clackamas Community College Workshops...... 20 Offsite Sessions...... 21 2010 OAH Local Resource Committee Tours...... 24 Keri Lewis, U.S. Department of State, Chair Sessions at a Glance...... 25 Beth M. Boland, Sessions Wednesday...... 29 Katrina Dodro, National History Day Thursday...... 31 Kathleen Franz, American University Friday...... 38 Cathy Gorn, National History Day Saturday...... 47 Robyn Muncy, University of , College Park Committee and Board Meetings...... 56 Joseph P. Reidy, Participant Index...... 57 Gideon Sanders, McKinley Technology High School About OAH...... 60 OAH Distinguished Members...... 65 The papers and commentaries presented during this meeting are intended solely for those in attendance Advertisers and Exhibitors Index...... 73 and should not be recorded, copied, or otherwise reproduced, in whole or in part, without the consent of Exhibit Floorplan...... 74 the presenters and the Organization of American Historians. Recording, copying, or reproducing a paper Preregistration Form...... 144 without the consent of the author is a violation of common law copyright.

On the cover: Inside the Capitol Dome. Photo courtesy of Destination DC. 6 picas from top = top image > Please join us in thanking the History Channel

Pearson

Basic Books, a member of the Perseus Books Group

Routledge

Bedford/St. Martin’s

Council for International Exchange of Scholars, a Division of the Institute of International Education

The Gilder Lehrman Institute of American History

4 • 2010 OAH Annual Meeting • Washington, D.C. 2010 Annual Meeting Sponsors

SAGE Department of History University of Illinois Press Adam Matthew Digital The Press California Newsreel Department of History, University of South Carolina University of Minnesota History Department United States Capitol Historical Society Western Historical Quarterly Public History Program, American University Society for the History of the Federal Government History Associates Incorporated , Department of History Department of History, Polytechnic Institute and State University Southern Association for Women Historians National Museum of American History Bill Lane Center for the American West, Stanford University The Department of History Center for Public History and Archaeology, Colorado State University American West Center, University of Utah Department of History and Public History Program, University of Nevada, Las Vegas University of Delaware Department of History Business History Conference University of Arizona Department of Gender and Women’s Studies Shippensburg University Graduate Program in Applied History Betty Dessants Haverford College Department of History University of Minnesota Department of Gender, Women, and Sexuality Studies

The George Washington University American Studies, Center for the Study of Public History and Public Culture

2010 OAH Annual Meeting • Washington, D.C. • 5 6 picas from top = top image > Registration Preregistration Preregister using the form located on page 144 or on the OAH secure Web site at . Preregistration is available through March 12, 2010. Forms sent in the mail will be accepted if postmarked or faxed on or before that date. After March 12, 2010, all registrations will be handled onsite. Registration is not transferable. Mail completed form with check, money order, or credit card information to: Preregistration, OAH, PO Box 5457, Bloomington, Indiana 47407-5457. Credit card orders may be faxed to 812-855-0696. OAH accepts checks, money orders, VISA, MasterCard, Discover, or American Express for preregistration and onsite registration. Registrations without complete payment will be returned.

Registration Fees Regular Preregistration (before March 12, 2010) OAH Member...... $129 OAH Member Student...... $74 Nonmember...... $179 Nonmember Student...... $104 Guest (see below)...... $60 One-day Only...... n/a Registration (after March 12, 2010) OAH Member...... $154 OAH Member Student...... $89 Nonmember...... $199 Nonmember Student...... $119 Guest (see below)...... $85 One-day Only...... $85 Refund Policy All registration cancellations must be in writing. Requests postmarked or e- mailed on or before March 12, 2010 will receive a refund (less a $20 processing fee).

Convention Materials Convention badges, tickets, and the Onsite Program may be picked up at the preregistration counter at the Hilton Washington. Convention materials will not be mailed.

One-Day Registration Attendees choosing to register for one day will receive a badge indicating the date they are registered and will receive access to the exhibit hall and other events on that day. One-day registration is available onsite only.

Guest Registration 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 conven- tion badge that allows entrance to sessions, receptions, and the exhibit hall.

Teacher and Student Registration Special rates are available for graduate advisors and their students to attend the annual meeting. If you would like to bring a group of graduate students to the meeting, please contact the meetings department for registration rates.

6 • 2010 OAH Annual Meeting • Washington, D.C. Lodging The Hilton Washington 1919 Connecticut Avenue, NW Washington, D.C. 20009 telephone (202) 483-3000

The Hilton Washington hotel is located near Dupont Circle on Connecticut Avenue, in the heart of the city, and surrounded by D.C.’s most interesting neighborhoods, including Adams Morgan, Woodley Park, and the U Street Corridor. The hotel is a mile from the Smithsonian National Zoo and just four blocks from the Dupont Circle Metro Station on the Red Line.

The newly-renovated guestrooms at the Hilton Washington were designed to be a contemporary urban retreat with modern amenities, rich dark woods, textured ivory wall coverings, and crisp white linens. Enjoy views of the Washington, D.C. skyline, an enlarged work station, ergonomic desk chair, and plenty of desk-level outlets. Amenities include in-room coffee maker, iron and ironing board, cable television, and two dual line telephones with voicemail. In-room Internet access is available for a fee.

Guest rooms are available at the Hilton Washington at a special OAH convention rate of $199/night plus tax. Please call the hotel or reserve your room online through the OAH Web site . Be sure to mention that you are attending the OAH Annual Meeting in order to receive the discounted rates. The OAH rate is subject to a hotel sales tax (cur- rently 14.5% per room, per night). A deposit equal to one night’s room rate is required for all reservations. Guests who cancel reservations by 6:00 p.m. on the day before the scheduled arrival date will receive a full refund of the deposit. The deadline for reservations in the OAH room block is March 1, 2010.

Dining The Capitol Café at the Hilton Washington offers a full menu for breakfast, lunch, and dinner and a breakfast buffet. The cafe menu includes a selection of entrée salads, sandwiches, entrées, and desserts and is a good way to grab a quick lunch between sessions. The Capitol Café is open from 6:30 a.m. to 11:30 p.m. daily.

Parking The Hilton Washington offers onsite, covered and secured self parking and valet parking with in/out privileges. Current rates are for $28.00 per day for self parking and $35.00 per day for valet parking. Limited street parking is also available near the hotel.

Roommate Requests and Matching Staying in the conference hotel is convenient and a great opportunity for networking. For 2010, the OAH will offer a matching service to assist at- tendees seeking roommates for the convention hotel. An online form is available at to gather the relevant information. Attendees will be responsible for contacting the possible roommate and for making arrangements with the Hilton Washington for your stay. Only those interested in being contacted by potential convention roommates should complete the form. Applicants must purchase meeting registration before requests will be posted. The OAH reserves the right to refuse posting of requests that are not of a serious nature.

Graduate Student Housing In addition to the roommate matching service, the OAH will hold a small block of rooms at the Hilton Washington for graduate students. This block of rooms will be filled through the OAH meeting department office. Requests will be honored on a first-come, first-served basis until the block is filled. To apply, complete the online form at . Applicants must purchase meeting registration before being con- sidered for graduate student housing and must provide proof of graduate student status.

Childcare Family and Child Care Service (202-723-2051) for childcare within the hotel. Current child care rates average $25.00 per hour for one child, with a minimum requirement of four hours of service. Rates increase for additional children. A $27.00 transportation fee is also required for each child- care reservation. Additional services or more children require different fees. The OAH does not guarantee this service.

2010 OAH Annual Meeting • Washington, D.C. • 7 6 picas from top = top image > Travel The Washington, D.C., area is served by three From Dulles Airport (IAD) Driving to the major airports—Ronald Reagan National Take the Dulles toll road to Rt. 66 EaStreet Airport, Dulles International Airport, and Take Rt. 66 to Constitution Avenue. Follow Hilton Washington /Washington International Airport. Constitution Avenue to 18th Street and turn From Baltimore/Eastern Pennsylvania/ Approximate transportation costs from all left on 18th Street Follow 18th Street to Con- New York—North three airports to Hilton Washington are listed necticut Avenue and turn left onto Connecti- Take I-95 south to 495 West. Take 495 West below. Driving directions and information cut Avenue Stay in left-hand lane and take the to exit 33, Chevy Chase/Connecticut Avenue about buses and trains are also listed here. Ad- Dupont Circle underpass. Hilton Washington Take Connecticut Avenue South approximately ditional information about visiting Washing- will be three blocks ahead on the right. Drive 6 miles. The Hilton Washington will be on the ton, D.C. and the area can be found at . See the section on the Metrorail for instruc- tions on using public transportation from IAD From Baltimore Washington Parkway Airports to the Hilton Washington. Take the Baltimore Washington Parkway to From National Airport (DCA) New York Avenue Stay on New York Avenue Follow signs to I-395 and 14th Street Bridge. From Baltimore-Washington for approximately six miles, then veer right While on 395 North, merge into the left lane International Airport (BWI) onto Massachusetts Avenue. Take Massachu- when see the sign for Route 1. This will take Leave the terminal and follow signs to I-95 setts Avenue to Dupont Circle (stay in the you to the 14th Street exit. Take 395 North South. Take I-95 South to 495 West, then 495 outer right-hand lane). Go a third of the way over the 14th Street Bridge. Stay in the left- West to exit 33, Chevy Chase/Connecticut around the circle and turn right onto Con- hand lane take 14th Street to R Street NW. You Avenue Take Connecticut Avenue South, ap- necticut Avenue. The Hilton Washington will will notice the streets run alphabetically. Make proximately six miles; the hotel will be on left. be four blocks ahead on the right. a left on R Street Follow R Street for six blocks Drive time: 60 minutes. Typical taxi charge, to Connecticut Avenue NW. Make a right on $65.00. See the section on the Metrorail for From Richmond/Williamsburg—South Connecticut Avenue Hilton Washington will instructions on using public transportation Take I-95 North to 395 North. Stay on 395 be four blocks up on right. Drive time: 20 from BWI to the Hilton Washington. North to the 14th Street exit. Follow 395 North over the 14th Street Bridge (stay in the minutes. Typical taxi charge, $19.00. See the section on the Metrorail for instructions on left-hand lane). Follow 14th Street to R Street, using public transportation from DCA to the N.W. and turn left onto R Street. Follow R Hilton Washington. Street for six blocks to Connecticut Avenue N.W. Turn right on Connecticut Avenue. The Hilton Washington will be three blocks ahead on right.

From Route 66/Mclean/ Charlottesville—West Take Route 66 to Constitution Avenue, then Constitution Avenue to 18th Street. Turn Left on 18th Street to Connecticut Avenue, Turn left on Connecticut Avenue. Stay in the left-hand lane and take the Dupont Circle underpass. The Hilton Washington will be three blocks ahead on the right.

Amtrak The Washington, D.C., area is served by through seven different stations. The closest station to the Hilton Washington is Union Station, 50 Massachusetts Avenue, NE. The following Amtrak train lines run to Union Station: Express, / , , , /, , Silver Service/, and the lines. Union Station is also a station on the Red Line for Metrorail.

Capitol Region USA

8 • 2010 OAH Annual Meeting • Washington, D.C. station through the Q Street exit and walk up Connecticut Avenue three blocks. The Hilton Washington is on the right side of Connecticut Avenue at T Street.

Using Metrorail From Dulles International Airport to the Hilton Washington For flights arriving at Dulles International Airport, connect to Metrorail using Metro- bus. Take Metrobus route 5A to the Blue and Orange Lines at ($3 exact change is required). Take either train to the . Transfer to the Red Line to the . Exit the station through the Q Street exit and walk up Connecticut Avenue three blocks. The Hilton Washington is on the right side of Connecticut Avenue at T Street.

WMATA Photograph by Larry by Photograph Levine WMATA Using Metrorail From Baltimore/Wash- ington International Greyhound Dupont Circle station at approximately 5:30 Airport (BWI) to the Hilton Washington Greyhound buses serve Washington, D.C., at a.m. weekdays, and 7:00 a.m. Saturday and For flights arrive at the Baltimore/Washington two locations. A full-service Greyhound ter- Sunday. The last train departs Dupont Circle International Thurgood Marshall Airport, minal is available at 1005 1st Street NE, Wash- at 12:00 midnight Sunday through Thursday connect to Metrorail using Metrobus. Take ington, D.C. The terminal is open twenty-four and 3:00 a.m. Friday and Saturday. Farecards Metrobus route B30 to the Green Line at hours per day, seven days per week. A limited can be purchased at the station. A one-day ($3 per person exact change service bus station is also available at Wash- pass is also available for $7.80, which offers required. Take the Green Line to the Gallery ington’s Union Station. This stop does not offer unlimited rides after 9:30 a.m. on weekdays Place/Chinatown Station. Transfer to the Red ticketing or baggage assistance. Union Station and all day on weekends. More information Line to the Dupont Circle Station. Exit the is also a station on the Red Line for Metrorail. about Washington’s Metrorail transportation station through the Q Street exit and walk up system is at . Connecticut Avenue three blocks. The Hilton Washington is on the right side of Connecticut Washington Metropolitan Using Metrorail From Ronald Reagan Avenue at T Street. Area Transit Authority (Metro) Washington National Airport to the Hilton Washington’s Metro rail system has been Washington Ronald Reagan Washington Na- Using Metrorail from Union Station heralded as one of the nation’s best public tional Airport is connected directly to Metro’s (Greyhound and Amtrak) transportation systems, and it offers an easy Yellow and Blue Lines. Follow the signs to the Take the Red Line to the Dupont Circle Metro way to get around Washington. The closest station, and take the Yellow Line to Gallery Station. Exit the station through the Q Street Metro station to the Hilton Washington is Place/Chinatown Station or the Blue Line to exit and walk up Connecticut Avenue three the Dupont Circle station, which is served by Metro Center Station. Transfer to the Red blocks. The Hilton Washington will be ahead the Red Line trains. The first train leaves the Line to the Dupont Circle Station. Exit the on the right at T Street.

2010 OAH Annual Meeting • Washington, D.C. • 9 6 picas from top = top image > Highlights State of the Field Sessions Virtual JFK: Vietnam if Kennedy Had Lived These sessions are designed to present to a diverse audience the Thursday, April 8, 6:00 p.m. historiography of a subfield and its evolution during the past ten to Hosted by Rowman and Littlefield twenty years. Experts in the subject answer the question, “How did the One of the most discussed “what if” scenarios of American foreign field get to where it is today?” rather than focus on the cutting edge policy is this: “What could President John F. Kennedy have done in developments that one might find in regular OAH sessions. State of Vietnam if he had not been assassinated?” Professors James G. Blight the Field sessions are aimed at scholars and teachers not already deeply and janet M. Lang of Brown University’s Watson Institute for Interna- immersed in a particular field, those who have not kept up with the tional Studies are focusing their research on this question and on the journal literature, those who wish to get up to speed in a new area, and lessons it could provide for contemporary U.S. policy. those who may want to incorporate the historiography into their teach- ing. Topics include: The History of Capitalism, History of Women/ This session will screen the documentary film associated with the Gender/Sexuality, New Directions in Working-Class History, Digital project, provide a chance to discuss it with the authors. The event is History, Social and Cultural History, History of Science, History of hosted by Rowman and Littlefield Publishers, Inc. as part of the new American Slavery, and Teaching and Learning History. OAH Book Exhibitor lecture series.

Navigating the OAH: A Session for First Timers Public History Town Hall Meeting Hosted by the OAH Membership Committee Friday, April 9, 12:00 noon Wednesday, April 7, 3:30 p.m. The OAH Committee on Public History invites all historians to a Is this your first time attending the OAH? Need answers to questions town hall meeting to discuss the role of public history within the or- like: What kinds of sessions are available? How can I meet people shar- ganization and to plan the work of the committee over the next three ing my areas of interest? What are the advantages of the book exhibit to five years. The committee seeks ways in which to serve the OAH’s (besides the books)? These questions, and more, will be answered by efforts to reach a wider audience, to increase dialogue between public OAH leaders and long-time members. and academic historians, and to think broadly about the involvement of scholars in public life. McGraw-Hill is proud to announce the publication of the The New From Slavery Ninth Edition of ’s honored text... to Freedom and the Southern Labor Studies Association Legacy of John Hope Panel Discussion and General Meeting Franklin Friday, April 9, 2:00 p.m. FROM SLAVERY Thursday, April 8, 1:30 p.m. Hosted by the Southern Labor Studies Association Hosted by McGraw-Hill The Southern Labor Studies Association will hold its annual Evelyn Brooks Higginbotham is membership meeting. All current and future potential members, TO FREEDOM the Victor S. Thomas Professor and anyone interested in the history of the southern working class, Fully rewritten and updated by of History and of African and broadly conceived, is encouraged to attend. The meeting will include African American Studies at the session, “Challenging Teachers, Teaching Challenges in Southern Evelyn Brooks Higginbotham Labor History”, featuring Robert Korstad, , Joseph Harvard University, and chair of the Department of African and McCartin, Georgetown University, and Cindy Hahamovitch, The Complete ISBN: 978-007-296378-6 African American Studies. College of William & Mary. Volume One ISBN: 978-007-740751-3 Volume Two ISBN: 978-007-740752-0 Her writings span diverse Bagels and Coffee in the Exhibit Hall fields—African American velyn Brooks Higginbotham is the Victor S. Thomas Professor of Saturday, April 10; 9:30 a.m. religious history, women’s history, civil rights, constructions of racial Sponsored by Routledge History and of African and Africanand gender American identity, Studies, electoral Harvard politics, and the intersection of theory E Join colleagues and exhibitors for bagels and coffee on Saturday University, author of the prize-winningand history.Righteous Dr. Discontent: Higginbotham The has revised and rewritten the classic morning, April 10, before the close of the exhibit hall. Take advantage Women’s Movement in the Black BaptistAfrican Church: American 1880-1920 history survey (Harvard From Slavery to Freedom. She is the coauthor with the late John Hope Franklin of this book’s ninth edition, of last minute deals and a quick bite to eat. University Press, 1993), co-editor ofto African be published American by McGraw Lives (Oxford Hill in January, 2010. University Press, 2004), and editor in of The Harvard Guide to OAH Business Meeting Evelyn Brooks Higginbotham African-American History (HarvardDr. University Higginbotham Press, 2001).will discuss the revision of Dr. Franklin’s book dur- Saturday, April 10, 3:30 p.m and John Hope Franklin ing this session, hosted by McGraw Hill as part of the new OAH Book The OAH Business meeting will be held Saturday, April 10 at 3:30 Exhibitor lecture series. photo courtesy of Please join us for EVELYN HIggINBOTHAM’s presentation, p.m. immediately preceding the OAH Awards Ceremony and Presi- The Harvard Crimson dential Address. All OAH members are encouraged to attend the “The New From Slavery to Freedom and the Legacy of John meeting, meet incoming OAH Executive Director Katherine Finley, Hope Franklin” on Thursday, April 8, at 1:45 p.m. (See your and participate in the governance of the organization. Stop by conference program for session location.) booth #317 to learnlearn moremore aboutabout From SLSLaVerY ALSO AVAILABLE FROM McGRAW-HILL to FreeDom ALSO AVAILABLE FROM McGRAW-HILL to FreeDom 10 • 2010 OAH Annual Meeting • Washington, D.C. and to browse our and to browse our Davidson, et al. Jones other new american History titles U*S: A NARRATIVE THE AMERICAN HISTORY CIVIL WAR Volume 1 ISBN: 978-007-338546-4 ISBN: Brinkley Volume 2 ISBN: 978-007-723621-2 978-007-740294-5 THE Two-Volume Set ISBN 978-007-731539-9 UNFINISHED McPherson/Hogue NATION, Davidson/Lytle ORDEAL 6th Edition AFTER THE FACT, 6th Edition BY FIRE, Complete ISBN: 978-007-338552-5 Complete ISBN 978-007-338548-8 4th Edition Volume 1 ISBN: 978-007-728635-4 Volume 1 ISBN 978-007-729268-3 ISBN: Volume 2 ISBN: 978-007-728636-1 Volume 2 ISBN 978-007-729269-0 978-007-338555-6

For more inFormation: Contact your local sales representative at 1-800-338-3987 or consult our website www.mhhe.com/wmg/titles/History 2010 OAH Poster Session Saturday, April 10, 2:30 p.m. OAH will host a poster session for participants interested in presenting current public history projects, research, or teach- ing strategies. Poster sessions are an informal opportunity for presentations that use posters, computer presentations, or other materials. Presenters may demonstrate and discuss Web sites or other computer applications for public history projects; mount table-sized exhibits of research and interpre- tation; or share images, audiovisual materials, and handouts from successful public programs.

The 2010 Poster Session will be held immediately preced- ing the OAH Awards Ceremony and Presidential Address. Participants will set up their posters before the session and discuss their projects informally with conference attendees. OAH will provide tables and electrical connections. Partici- pants must provide their own computers.

To submit a poster proposal, please visit . Proposals must be received by February 15, 2010, and should include: contact information including name, affiliation, address, e-mail, and phone number; an abstract of no more than 250 words that includes a title and summary of the project and describes the method of presentation; and a one-page biographical statement for each participant.

Screening History and On-Demand • Fully Awake: Black Mountain College Documentary Film Library (Documentary Educational Resources) Sponsored by California Newsreel • Greensboro: Closer to the Truth (Filmakers Library) The Screening History room features films selected for their quality • Herskovits at the Heart of Blackness (California Newsreel) and usefulness in teaching. The 2010 OAH Erik Barnouw Award • Jesus Politics: The Bible and the Ballot (Icarus Films) winner and honorable mention films will be screened Friday, April • Malls R Us (Icarus Films) 9 and Saturday, April 10. The OAH Annual Meeting also will feature • Miss Margaret (Documentary Educational Resources) a documentary film library in the exhibit hall. Meeting participants • The New Metropolis (Bullfrog Films) may view any of these documentary films on American history • One People (Third World Newsreel) upon request: • Original Intent: The Battle for America (Filmakers Library) • Agent Orange: A Personal Requiem (Icarus Films) • Passage (Bullfrog Films) • American Outrage (Bullfrog Films) • Peter Cooper: Mechanic to Millionaire (Filmakers Library) • The American Ruling Class (Bullfrog Films) • Scarred Justice: The Orangeburg Massacre 1968 • Buried Stories: A Native American Preserves Her Heritage (California Newsreel) (Filmakers Library) • Secrecy (Bullfrog Films) • A Child Shall Lead Them: The Desegregation of Nashville Public • Secondhand (Pepe) (Third World Newsreel) Schools, 1957 (Filmakers Library) • A Sense of Wonder (Bullfrog Films) • Crips and Bloods: Made in America (Bullfrog Films) • Somba Ke: The Money Place (Filmakers Library) • Closer to the Dream (Third World Newsreel) • The Strangest Dream (Bullfrog Films) • A Deterrent Weapon: The History of the Atomic Bomb • Virtual JFK: Vietnam if Kennedy Had Lived (Bullfrog Films) (Filmakers Library) • When Medicine Got It Wrong • Dreams Deferred: The Sakia Gunn Film Project (Documentary Educational Resources) (Third World Newsreel) • We All Fall Down (Icarus Films) • Willa Beatrice Brown: An American Aviator (Filmakers Library)

2010 OAH Annual Meeting • Washington, D.C. • 11 6 picas from top = top image > Plenary Sessions Environmental History: Retrospect and Prospect Thursday April 8, 3:30 p.m. Chair: Donald Worster, University of

Alfred Crosby, The University of Texas, Austin, Emeritus Nancy Langston, University of Wisconsin, Madison Thomas Andrews, University of Colorado, Denver Rachel St. John, Harvard University

Forty years after Earth Day, it is clear that humanity has been running an unprecedented and largely unmonitored experiment with the earth and its natural resources, beginning with of the Industrial Revolution and continuing through the twentieth and twenty-first centuries. As the wealthi- est and most polluting of the industrialized nations, the United States has had an integral role in this historical process. Yet it was not until the 1960s, and 1970s, that environmental consciousness began to flower and spread into most corners of American life. The preservation of wild lands, conservation of natural resources, and control of air and water pollution all became major issues in U.S. government policy in response to a growing environmental movement that promoted education and demanded changes in public policy. At the same time, the new field of ecology developed in the sciences as a way of studying the interaction of humans and the natural world. It was in this context that a few historians began to ask how human history is related to natural history. With the formation of the American Society for Environmental History in 1977, these pio- neers opened new paths into the American past by expanding the boundaries of a previously anthropocentric discipline of history.

Environmental concerns from global warming to infectious diseases have become front-page news for Americans, but the teaching and scholarship of U.S. history as a whole have only begun to be influenced by the approaches and insights of environmental historians. This roundtable session aims to expand that influence. Donald Worster and Alfred Crosby are two of the most senior and distinguished scholars in the field, with long- time interests in the U.S. West and global migrations of flora and fauna, respectively. Nancy Langston is an environmental historian and author of award-winning books on forests, rivers, and environmental health. She is past president of the American Society for Environmental History. Thomas Andrews is a multiple prize-winning author who brings together labor history and environmental history in the landscape of the Rocky Mountains. Rachel St. John is a historian of the U.S.-Mexican borderlands who highlights the centrality of natural resources such as water. As a diverse group of unusually insightful scholars, this plenary session will offer what promises to be a fascinating and enlightening discussion of an important field of American history.

The United States in the World Friday April 9, 3:30 p.m. Chair: Thomas Bender, New York University

Melani McAlister, George Washington University Matthew Connelly, Columbia University Mae Ngai, Columbia University Nan Enstad, University of Wisconsin, Madison

For at least its first seventy-five years, the American historical profession emphasized top-down political history and considered foreign relations to be a major aspect of the field of U.S. history. Since the early 1970s, however, first social history and then cultural history rose to dominant positions within the discipline, to some extent shunting aside what used to be called diplomatic history. But the U.S. place in the world has continued to be enormously important and contentious, and the broader phenomenon of globalization has for at least two decades brought increasing attention to the question of how the United States interacts with and fits within the rest of the world outside its borders. The narrow older diplomatic history has grown into a wide new sub-discipline of U.S. international and transnational history, which includes a remarkable variety of approaches to under- standing how the United States and the world beyond its boundaries have shaped each other’s developments. From diplomacy and war-making to immigration and cultural exchanges, the field of U.S. foreign relations is currently one of American history’s most creative and important salients.

For all the talk about globalization that has become so commonplace both inside and outside the academy, many teachers and scholars of Ameri- can history are not sure what the new emphasis on global interconnectedness means for understanding the American past. This roundtable ses- sion will address this uncertainty. The five panelists represent, in very different ways, the diversity and excitement of current U.S. international and transnational history. Thomas Bender has been perhaps the leading scholarly figure in promoting a comparative approach to U.S. history. Melani McAlister has brought novel attention to cultural aspects of how the United States has engaged the outside world, particularly popular culture and religion. Matthew Connelly uses a world historian’s sensibility to place U.S. policies regarding such issues as colonialism and population control in their proper context. Mae Ngai is one of the leading young historians of American immigration. Nan Enstad brings a cultural historian’s approach to the growth of global corporate capitalism and consumption. Together, this accomplished panel will present a discussion of the state of U.S. international and transnational history.

12 • 2010 OAH Annual Meeting • Washington, D.C. Receptions Opening Night Reception Wednesday, April 7; 5:30 p.m. Sponsored by The History Channel Enjoy drinks and hors d’oeuvres compliments of The History Channel and the OAH. Reconnect with old friends, make new ones, and meet mem- bers of the OAH leadership including incoming OAH Executive Director, Katherine Finley. The opening reception, at the Hilton Washington, will be held Wednesday evening at 5:30 p.m.

International Reception Thursday, April 8; 5:30 p.m. Sponsored by the Council for International Exchange of Scholars, a Division of the Institute of International Education This reception, cosponsored by the CIES, welcomes all conference attend- ees interest in faculty and student exchanges such as those made available through the Fullbright program, as well as other efforts to promote global ties among American historians.

ALANA Gathering Thursday, April 8; 5:30 p.m. The OAH Committee on the Status of African American, Latino/a, Asian American, and Native American (ALANA) Historians and ALANA Histories invites graduate students to an early evening reception. Join other graduate students and ALANA Committee members for drinks and snacks before leav- ing the hotel for dinner.

Public History Reception Thursday, April 8; 5:30 p.m. Sponsored by Department of History, University of South Carolina; United States Capitol Historical Society; Western Historical Quarterly; Public History Program, American University; Society for the History of the Federal Government; History Associates Incorporated; National Museum of American History; Bill Lane Center for the American West, Stanford University; Center for Public History and Archaeology, Colorado State University; American West Center, University of Utah; Department of History and Public History Program, University of Nevada, Las Vegas; George Washington University American Studies, Center for the Study of Public History and Public Culture The OAH Committee on Public History invites public historians and guests for a reception Thursday, April 8, at 5:30 p.m. The reception provides an opportunity for attendees with similar professional interests and responsibilities to meet in an informal atmosphere.

SHAFR Reception Friday, April 9; 5:30 p.m. The Society for Historians of American Foreign Relations will host a cash bar reception for SHAFR members and all meeting attendees interested in the study of American foreign relations.

Intercollegiate Studies Institute Friday, April 9; 5:30 p.m. All attendees are invited to a reception hosted by the Intercollegiate Studies Institute, a non-profit educational organization whose mission is to instill in successive generations of students a better understanding of and appreciation for the values and institutions that sustain a free and virtuous society.

SHGAPE Reception Friday, April 9; 5:30 p.m. The Society for Historians of the and Progressive Era will host a reception for all SHGAPE members and meeting attendees interested in the study of the Gilded Age and Progressive Era.

Presidential and Distinguished Members Reception Saturday, April 10; 5:30 p.m. Sponsored by Basic Books, a member of the Perseus Books Group and Pearson The final convention reception will honor outgoing OAH President Elaine Tyler May and all of the OAH distinguished members. Enjoy hors d’oeuvres and cocktails before dinner, and say farewell to friends and colleagues until the 2011 OAH Annual Meeting in Houston.

2010 OAH Annual Meeting • Washington, D.C. • 13 6 picas from top = top image > Meals Tickets for Meal Functions Women in the Historical Focus on Teaching Luncheon Tickets for meal functions are available during Profession Luncheon Saturday, April 9, 12:00 noon preregistration only. A small theater seating area Friday, April 9, 12:00 noon Hosted by the OAH Committee on Teaching is provided in each luncheon room for attendees Sponsored by the University of Minnesota His- Allida Black will discuss the Eleanor Roos- who wish to hear the speaker. Register online or evelt Project’s innovative teaching projects, tory Department; Columbia University, Depart- use the preregistration form on page 144. including mini-documentaries, podcasts, a ment of History; Department of History, Virginia web-based exhibit, and online document- Graduate Student Breakfast Polytechnic Institute and State University; based curricula designed in partnership with Southern Association for Women Historians; primary and secondary school teachers. She Thursday, April 8, 8:00 a.m. Johns Hopkins University Department of His- will demonstrate how such materials can Join fellow graduate students for coffee and instruct and inspire students at all levels tory; University of Delaware Department of a light continental breakfast. This informal studying and the Universal gathering offers graduate student attendees a History; Business History Conference; University Declaration of Human Rights. chance to talk with the incoming OAH Execu- of Arizona Department of Gender and Women’s tive Director Katherine Finley and other OAH Studies; Department of History, University of leaders and to make connections with other Women and Social graduate student attendees. South Carolina; Shippensburg University Gradu- Movements Luncheon ate Program in Applied History; Betty Dessants; Saturday, April 10; 12:00 noon Community College Haverford College Department of History; and The Women and Social Movements Web Historians Breakfast the University of Minnesota Department of site and Alexander Street Press sponsor a Gender, Women, and Sexuality Studies. luncheon to discuss recent developments at Sponsored by Bedford/St. Martin’s The 2010 Women in the Historical Profes- the Web site, in particular the publication Friday, April 9, 7:30 a.m. sion Luncheon speaker is Congresswoman of “Women’s International Agendas, 1840- Community college historians will gather for Eleanor Holmes Norton, who is now in her 2000,” a new digital archive available through the third annual OAH Community College tenth term as Congresswoman for the District library subscription. The luncheon is free, Breakfast. The breakfast provides an opportu- of Columbia. Congresswoman Norton taught but advance registration is required and space nity to meet OAH leaders, staff, and members full time before being elected and continues is limited. Please contact Thomas Dublin at of the OAH Committee on Community Col- as a tenured professor of law at Georgetown to reserve a place. leges and to learn about upcoming workshops University, teaching a course there every year. and professional development opportunities After receiving her bachelors degree from Agricultural History designed for professors working in commu- Antioch College in Ohio, she simultaneously nity colleges. Society Luncheon earned her law degree and a masters degree in Saturday, April 10; 12:00 noon American Studies from Yale. Shane Hamilton, University of Georgia, will LAWCHA/AFL-CIO Brown Bag present the keynote address, “The Cold War Through the generosity of donors, the Friday, April 9, 12:00 noon and the Global Supermarket.” Professor members of the OAH Committee on Women Bring lunch and join labor historians and Hamilton is the 2008 winner of the Theodore in the Historical Profession are able to offer union advocates for “A Forum on Unions and Saloutos Book Award for the best book on luncheon tickets to graduate students at no Labor Rights Today,” chaired by LAWCHA United States Agricultural History. President Kimberley Phillips, William and cost on a first-come, first-served basis. To request a graduate student ticket, e-mail Mary College, and moderated by Joseph Mc- Society for Historians of Cartin, Kalmanovitz Inititative for Labor and before the Working Poor, Georgetown University. March 12, 2010. American Foreign Relations (No ticket required.) Saturday, April 10; 12:00 noon Urban History The 2010 Stuart L. Bernath Memorial Lecture Society for Historians of the Association Luncheon will be given by Elizabeth Borgwardt, Wash- ington University. Andrew J. Rotter, Colgate Saturday, April 10; 12:00 noon Gilded Age and Progressive Era University, will preside. Friday, April 9, 12:00 noon The Urban History Association 2010 luncheon keynote address, “Is There Anything New to Jack Blocker, Huron University College, The Labor and Working-Class University of Western Ontario, will give the Say About Urban Renewal?” will be delivered 2010 Presidential Address, “Writing African by Lizabeth Cohen, Howard Mumford Jones History Association American Migrations.” Professor of American Studies and chair of the Saturday, April 10; 12:30 noon history department at Harvard University. Offsite at the College of William and Mary D.C. office, 1779 Massachusetts Avenue, N.W. (Metro: Red Line to Dupont Circle station or walking distance from the Hilton Washington). Professor Julie Greene, University of Maryland, College Park, will present the keynote address.

14 • 2010 OAH Annual Meeting • Washington, D.C. Community College Historians Community College Historians Breakfast Sponsored by Bedford/St. Martin’s Friday, April 9; 7:30 a.m. Community college historians will gather for the third annual OAH Community College Breakfast. The breakfast provides an opportunity to meet OAH leaders, staff, and members of the OAH Committee on Community Colleges and to learn about upcoming workshops and professional devel- opment opportunities designed for professors working in community colleges.

Community College Workshop Saturday, April 10, 7:30 a.m. Sponsored by Pearson Again this year, the OAH Committee on Community Colleges offers a professional development workshop for community college faculty as part of the annual meeting. The workshop allows community college faculty to work together on matters of common interest. The workshop sessions focus on two major issues that challenge historians teaching in community colleges: teaching students of different abilities and levels of academic preparation, and assessing student learning in history as they meet general education outcomes. Interactive sessions will be led by speakers who have been dealing constructively with these issues in community colleges. Ticket price: $25

Schedule ■ 7:30 a.m. — Registration and Light Breakfast

■ 8:30 a.m. — Developing Online, Hybrid, and Web-Enhanced History Courses Mary Jo Wainwright, Imperial Valley College Chiemi Ma, Cascadia Community College

This presentation briefly explains the process of developing online and hybrid history courses, as well as pedagogy, best practices, and course evaluation. Discussion will also focus on using online tools in face to face courses and provide online history resources and references for further information to all participants.

■ 10:00 a.m. — Break

■ 10:15 a.m. — Research and Writing a Book Report in the Digital Age Andrés Tijerina, Austin Community College This presentation, focused on methods and procedures, is part of a new book entitled How to Pass History.

■ 12:00 p.m. — Lunch

■ 12:30 p.m. — Keynote Address

Sessions of Interest to Community College Historians • “Come Together”: Part-Time/Contingent Faculty in History Sponsored by the OAH Committee on Part‑Time and Adjunct Employment • Concord, Massachusetts: Transcendentalism and Social Reform in Mid-Nineteenth-Century America Sponsored by the Community College Humanities Association • Revisiting American Immigration Sponsored by the OAH Committee on Community Colleges and the Immigration and Ethnic History Society

2010 OAH Annual Meeting • Washington, D.C. • 15 6 picas from top = top image > Public History Public History Workshop Thursday, April 8, 1:00 p.m. New Media, Old Media: Historians and the Media This half-day workshop will foster discussions on how historians can work successfully with social media of all kinds, including public radio and new media, to reach a variety of public audiences. It will also focus on practical information and skills covering current issues in social media, fair use and copyright issues of historians, how to work with radio producers, and how to create a simple podcast and begin using WordPress software. Ticket price: $25

Schedule ■ 1:00 p.m. — Public Media 2.0 for Historians Jessica Clark, Center for Social Media, American University Pat Aufderheide, Center for Social Media, American University

■ 2:00 p.m. — Breaking into Public Radio: BackStory as a Case Study Brian Balogh, The , and Tony Field, Pro- ducer, BackStory Public History Reception Thursday, April 8; 5:30 p.m. ■ 3:00 p.m. — Using Digital Media to Reach Your Audience: Sponsored by Department of History, University of South Carolina; United Podcasting and WordPress States Capitol Historical Society; Western Historical Quarterly; Public History Jeremy Boggs, Center for History and New Media, George Program, American University; Society for the History of the Federal Gov- Mason University ernment; History Associates Incorporated; National Museum of American Public History Town Hall Meeting History; Bill Lane Center for the American West, Stanford University; Center Friday, April 9; 12:00 noon for Public History and Archaeology, Colorado State University; American The OAH Committee on Public History invites all historians to West Center, University of Utah; Department of History and Public History a town hall meeting to discuss the role of public history within Program, University of Nevada, Las Vegas; George Washington University the organization and to plan the work of the committee over the American Studies, Center for the Study of Public History and Public Culture next three to five years. The committee seeks ways in which to serve the OAH’s efforts to reach a wider audience, to increase The OAH Committee on Public History invites public historians and dialogue between public and academic historians, and to think guests for a reception Thursday, April 8 at 5:30 p.m. The reception provides broadly about the involvement of scholars in public life. an opportunity for attendees with similar professional interests and re- sponsibilities to meet in an informal atmosphere. Sessions of Interest to Public Historians • Unexpected Treasures: Teaching Historical Inquiry in Colleges and Historic Sites • Best Practices Recommendations in Teaching Public History Sessions are indicated with a P symbol. Public History • Hot Topics in Public History Sponsored by the OAH Committee on Public History • Wars in Granite and Stainless Steel: War Memorials and Constructions of American National Identity • Roundtable Discussion of Ken Burns’s Series The National Parks: America’s Best Idea Sponsored by the OAH Committee on National Park Service Collaboration • Creating a Shared Vocabulary of Historical Thinking in Museums and Elementary to Postsecondary Classrooms Sponsored by the National History Education Clearinghouse • Race and Public Culture on the and Capitol Hill • Public History Roundtable: The Gullah/Geechee Cultural Heritage Corridor • Learning American Culture and Democracy from Historic Places • Carter G. Woodson, Public History, and the National Park Service Sponsored by the OAH Committee on National Park Service Collaboration

16 • 2010 OAH Annual Meeting • Washington, D.C. Precollegiate Teachers Focus on Teaching Luncheon Saturday, April 10; 12:00 noon Allida Black will discuss the Eleanor Roosevelt Project’s innovative teaching projects, including mini-documentaries, podcasts, a Web-based ex- hibit, and online document-based curricula designed in partnership with primary and secondary school teachers. She will demonstrate how such materials can instruct and inspire students studying Eleanor Roosevelt and the Universal Declaration of Human Rights at all levels.

Certificates of Professional Development Certificates will be available for attendees whose school districts or institutions require verification of attendance at professional development events. Visit the OAH Registration Desk Saturday, April 10 between 12:00 noon and 2:00 p.m.

Sessions of Interest to Precollegiate Teachers • A.P. United States History Roundtable: The 2009 Exam, Teaching Social History, and Future Directions Sponsored by The College Board, Advanced Placement • Unexpected Treasures: Teaching Historical Inquiry in Colleges and Historic Sites • Teaching the Tough Issues Sponsored by the OAH Committee on Teaching Teaching Sessions are indicated with a  symbol. • Best Practices Recommendations in Teaching Public History • Teaching American Religious History: Challenges and Strategies • Creating a Shared Vocabulary of Historical Thinking in Museums and Elementary to Postsecondary Classrooms Sponsored by the National History Education Clearinghouse • Teaching with Primary Sources: Visual Documents in the Middle School through University Classroom Sponsored by the OAH Committee on Teaching • Teaching Atlantic History in the United States Survey • Creating a History Teaching and Learning Community: Experiences of a Secondary School‑University Alliance in Southwestern Michigan • Putting Pedagogy into Digital Archives: Making Online History Collections Useful for K‑12 Teachers and Students • “That’s not what we were taught”: The Evolution of His- tory Education, 1985‑2010 Sponsored by the OAH Magazine of History Advisory Board • “Reacting to the Past”: The Collision of Ideas and His- torical Contexts in College‑Level Classes • Learning American Culture and Democracy from His- toric Places • Clio in the Classroom: Teaching Women’s History Sponsored by the OAH Committee on the Status of Women in the Historical Profession • Paper Works in the Classroom: Teaching with Prints, Photographs, and Ephemera

2010 OAH Annual Meeting • Washington, D.C. • 17 6 picas from top = top image > Graduate Students Navigating the OAH: A Session for First-Time Attendees Wednesday, April 7; 3:30 p.m. Hosted by the OAH Membership Committee During this session representatives of the OAH Membership Committee will help first-timers learn how to navigate the OAH conference and enjoy a more meaningful and rewarding annual meeting. The session will address how to find sessions that will be most useful, how to best manage time in the exhibit hall, and how to carry the meeting with you after the event is over.

Graduate Student Breakfast Thursday, April 8; 8:00 a.m. Join fellow graduate students for coffee and a light continental breakfast. This informal gathering offers graduate student attendees a chance to talk with the incoming OAH Executive Director Katherine Finley and other OAH leaders and to make connections with other graduate student attendees.

ALANA Gathering Thursday, April 8; 5:30 p.m. The OAH Committee on the Status of African American, Latino/a, Asian American, and Native American (ALANA) Historians and ALANA Histories invites graduate students to an early evening reception. Join other graduate students and ALANA Committee members for drinks and snacks before leaving the hotel for dinner.

Women in the Historical Profession Luncheon Friday, April 9; 12:00 noon Sponsored by the University of Minnesota History Department; Columbia University, Department of History; De- partment of History, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University; Southern Association for Women Historians; Johns Hopkins University Department of History; University of Delaware Department of History; Business History Conference; University of Arizona Department of Gender and Women’s Studies; Department of History, University of South Carolina; Shippensburg University Graduate Program in Applied History; Betty Dessants; Haverford College Department of History; and the University of Minnesota Department of Gender, Women, and Sexuality Studies. The 2010 Women in the Historical Profession Luncheon speaker is Congresswoman Eleanor Holmes Norton, who is now in her tenth term as Congresswoman for the District of Columbia. Congresswoman Norton taught full time before being elected and continues as a tenured professor of law at Georgetown University, teaching a course there every year. After receiving her bachelors degree from Antioch College in Ohio, she simultaneously earned her law degree and a masters degree in American Studies from Yale.

Through the generosity of its donors, the members of the OAH Committee on Women in the Historical Profession are able to offer luncheon tick- ets to graduate students at no cost on a first-come, first-served basis. To request a graduate student ticket, e-mail before March 12, 2010.

2010 OAH Poster Session Saturday, April 10, 2:30 p.m. OAH will host a poster session for participants interested in presenting current public history projects, research, or teaching strategies. Poster sessions are an informal opportunity for presentations that use posters, computer presentations, or other materials. Presenters may demonstrate and discuss Web sites or other computer applications for public history projects; mount table-sized exhibits of research and interpretation; or share images, audiovisual materials, and handouts from successful public programs. The 2010 Poster Session will be held at 2:30 p.m. Saturday, April 10, immediately preceding the OAH Presidential Address. For more information, see page 11.

Sessions of Interest to Graduate Students • Research Opportunities and a Tour of the Legislative Treasures Vault Offsite Session at the National Archives and Records Administration • Finding a Good Home for your Manuscript in These Times Graduate Student sessions are indicated with a  symbol. • “Come Together”: Part-Time/Contingent Faculty in History Sponsored by the OAH Committee on Part‑Time and Adjunct Employment

18 • 2010 OAH Annual Meeting • Washington, D.C. TAH Symposium 2010 TAH Symposium Wednesday April 7, 7:30 a.m. Cosponsored by The Gilder Lehrman Institute of American History The fifth-annual OAH/H-Net Teaching American History Grant Symposium is a special half-day sym- posium on the current impact and the future of Teaching American History grants and projects. This year’s symposium will focus on evaluating TAH grants. The TAH Symposium registration fee of $60 includes all symposium materials and breakfast on Wednesday, April 7. Please register using the preregistration form on page 144 or online at .

Schedule ▪ 7:30 a.m. to 8:00 a.m. — Registration and Breakfast

▪ 8:00 a.m. — Introductions

▪ 8:15 a.m. to 9:30 a.m. — Keynote Address “What Constitutes Success of the TAH program and How Can We Know?” Bruce Van Sledright, University of Maryland, College Park

Bruce Van Sledright is professor and head of the History/Social Studies Education program at the University of Maryland, College Park. He has contributed across his career to the research literature on teaching and learning history. In addition, he has been conducting TAH grant project evaluations since the inception of the TAH program earlier this decade.

Van Sledright ▪ 9:30 a.m. to 9:45 a.m. — Break

▪ 9:45 a.m 10:15 a.m. — Keynote Discussion led by H-TAH Coeditors

▪ 10:15 a.m. to 11:15 a.m. — Interactive Networking Sessions

▪ 11:15 a.m. to 11:45 a.m. — Wrap-up and Conclusions

2010 OAH Annual Meeting • Washington, D.C. • 19 6 picas from top = top image > Workshops

Public History Workshop Thursday, April 8, 1:00 p.m. New Media, Old Media: Historians and the Media This half-day workshop will foster discussions on how historians can work successfully with social media of all kinds, including public radio and new media, to reach a variety of public audiences. It will also focus on practical information and skills covering current issues in social media, fair use and copyright issues of historians, how to work with radio producers, and how to create a simple podcast and begin using WordPress software. Ticket price: $25

Schedule ■ 1:00 p.m. — Public Media 2.0 for Historians Jessica Clark, Center for Social Media, American University Pat Aufderheide, Center for Social Media, American University

■ 2:00 p.m. — Breaking into Public Radio: BackStory as a Case Study Brian Balogh, The University of Virginia, and Tony Field, Producer, BackStory

■ 3:00 p.m. — Using Digital Media to Reach Your Audience: Podcasting and WordPress Jeremy Boggs, Center for History and New Media, George Mason University

Community College Workshop Saturday, April 10, 7:30 a.m. Sponsored by Pearson Again this year, the OAH Committee on Community Colleges offers a professional development workshop for community college faculty as part of the annual meeting. The workshop allows community college faculty to work together on matters of common interest. The workshop sessions focus on two major issues that challenge historians teaching in community colleges: teaching students of different abilities and levels of academic preparation, and assessing student learning in history as they meet general education outcomes. Interactive sessions will be led by speakers who have been dealing constructively with these issues in community colleges. Ticket price: $25

Schedule ■ 7:30 a.m. — Registration and Light Breakfast

■ 8:30 a.m. — Developing Online, Hybrid, and Web-Enhanced History Courses Mary Jo Wainwright, Imperial Valley College Chiemi Ma, Cascadia Community College

This presentation briefly explains the process of developing online and hybrid history courses, as well as pedagogy, best practices, and course evaluation. Discussion will also focus on using online tools in face to face courses and provide online history resources and references for further information to all participants.

■ 10:00 a.m. — Break

■ 10:15 a.m. — Research and Writing a Book Report in the Digital Age Andrés Tijerina, Austin Community College This presentation, focused on methods and procedures, is part of a new book entitled How to Pass History.

■ 12:00 p.m. — Lunch

■ 12:30 p.m. — Keynote Address

20 • 2010 OAH Annual Meeting • Washington, D.C. Offsite Sessions Offsite Session at the National historians, independent scholars, and museum curators, we will explore the history of homeownership from the perspective of Building Museum government policy and social and cultural history, and engage in a National Building Museum, 401 F Street, N.W. (Metro: Red Line to discussion about how to share these ideas with the general public in station) the form of museum exhibitions.

The National Building Museum advances the quality of the built envi- Two upcoming exhibitions at ronment by educating the public the National Building Museum about its impact on people’s lives. provide the impetus for the panel. Chartered by the U.S. Congress “Designing Tomorrow: America’s in 1980 as a private, nonprofit World’s Fairs of the 1930s” (2010) institution, the museum serves looks at the relationship between as the nation’s leading public architecture and design at Depres- forum for addressing historic sion-era world’s fairs, including and contemporary issues related the promotion of modern hous- to the building arts and sciences. ing and home ownership. “House Through its exhibitions, youth and Home” (2012) will provide a and adult education programs, historical sweep of the relation- and publications, the museum ship between built structures and has helped millions of people to ideas about home. As a leader understand the issues that shape in presenting exhibitions that our built environment including encourage visitors to think about architecture, construction, design, the origins of our built environ- engineering, landscape architec- ment, the National Building ture, and urban planning. Museum is uniquely positioned to lead a discussion about the For more information about the historical context of our current National Building Museum’s exhi- housing issues. bitions and programs visit . “Roots of the Crisis” looks at the 1930s as the moment when— Roots of the Crisis? amidst the greatest economic Modern American crisis that the nation had ever Homeownership and faced—federal policy and the Homemaking in the 1930s activities of individual consumers helped place home ownership at Thursday, April 8; 11:00 a.m. the center of American democ- racy. What, the panelists will ask, Chair: Laura Schiavo, George were the stakes of homeownership Washington University in the United States? How did the discourse of homeownership Inventing a Market for Homes: New inform policy and practice in Deal Policy and the 1930s? Shirley Wajda, David the Modern Housing Ideal Freund, and Matthew Bokovoy, David Freund, University of whose scholarship has focused on

Maryland Courtesy Building Museum National social history and federal hous- ing policy, present complex and The 2008 Housing Crisis in the sometimes competing stories about how the federal and local govern- Shadows of Social Housing ments advocated for home ownership; the policies put in place to make Matthew Bokovoy, University of Nebraska Press owning a home an attainable goal for some Americans at the expense of others; progressive housing policies; and the on-the-ground practice of Houses For the People, By the People, and Of the People buying and decorating homes in the 1930s. Drawing on this research, Shirley Wajda, Kent State University museum curators Laura Schiavo and Sarah Leavitt tackle the interpreta- tion of the historical roots of one of the most challenging issues of our Comment: Sarah Leavitt, National Building Museum own time—a period of economic crisis integrally related to the collapse of the very systems that were put in place and popularly embraced in In our lifetimes, there has never before been a time when the housing the 1930s. The panel will thus bring scholarship with methodological industry and the well-being of our economy were so clearly linked. diversity into conversation, and then raise questions about how new This panel takes a look backward at the origins of this relationship and timely research about a topic that affects all of us is best addressed and the current housing and economic crises. As university-based in a public history setting.

2010 OAH Annual Meeting • Washington, D.C. • 21 6 picas from top = top image > Offsite Sessions Offsite Session at the National Archives and Records Administration, Center for Legislative Archives Constitution Avenue, N.W., between 7th and 9th Streets (Metro: Yellow or Green Line to the Archives/Navy Memorial station)

The Center for Legislative Archives holds the historically valuable Many of the important historical movements in U.S. history begin in records of the U.S. Senate and the U.S. House of Representatives, in- the Congress. Looked at across time, these debates show the changing cluding the official Committee records, all of which remain the legal and recurrent themes in public attitudes towards immigration. The property of the House and Senate. history of banking in the United States is well-documented in Con- gress’s attempt to censure President Andrew Jackson. However, less well-known are the debates over the regulation of banks that led to the passage of the Glass-Steagall Act in 1933. Similarly, the debates leading up to the repeal of the Glass-Steagall Act by the Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act in 1999 haunt the financial crisis of today.

Records from legislative branch support organizations, such as the Congressional Budget Office and the Office of Technology Assessment, as well as publications from the Government Printing Office, are also available at the Center. These records total more than 205,000 cubic feet or approximately 508 million pages.

Research Opportunities and a Tour of the Legislative Treasures Vault Friday, April 9; 1:00 p.m.

This program will highlight the research opportunities through the Center, followed by a program in the Legislative Treasures Vault where participants will see some of the rare legislative jewels like the first Sen- ate Journal, Washington’s first Inaugural Address, and the Resolution of Impeachment of President .

Photograph by Jeff Kubina Offsite Session at the Library of Congress 101 Independence Avenue, S.E. (Metro: Orange or Blue Line to )

A Dynamic Field, Its Challenges and Prospects: Crafting A History of the Book in America in Five Volumes Hosted by the American Antiquarian Society, Center for the Book at the Library of Congress, and the University of Press Friday, April 9; 3:00 p.m. to 4:30 p.m.

Chair: David D. Hall, General Editor, A History of the Book in America

Panelists: Members of the A History of the Book in America Editorial Board

A reception honoring the volume editors and authors will follow the session from 4:30 p.m. to 6:00 p.m.

22 • 2010 OAH Annual Meeting • Washington, D.C. Offsite Sessions

Offsite Sessions at The College of William and Mary Washington Office 1779 Massachusetts Avenue, N.W. (Metro: Red Line to Dupont Circle station or walking distance from the Hilton Washington)

Working Space: A Conversation Between Roundtable: U.S. Labor and the Global South Labor Historians and Labor Geographers Hosted by the Labor and Working-Class History Association Hosted by the Labor and Working-Class History Association Saturday, April 10; 10:45 a.m. Saturday, April 10; 9:00 a.m. Dan Bender, University of Toronto Chair: Lisa Michelle Fine, Michigan State University Rick Halpern, University of Toronto Lunch and LAWCHA General Meeting Laurie Mercier, Washington State University, Saturday, April 10; 12:30 noon John B. Russo, Youngstown State University Professor Julie Greene, University of Maryland, College Park, will pres- Susan McGrath-Champ, University of Sydney ent the keynote address. Geoff Mann, Simon Fraser University Transnationalism and Latina History Comment: Andrew J. Herod, University of Georgia, and Lisa Michelle Cohosted by the Labor and Working-Class History Association Fine Saturday, April 10; 2:15 p.m.

In a recent article in Antipode, geographer Allison Stenning reported Chair: Vicki L. Ruiz, University of California, Irvine that geographers working in the new field of working-class studies Natalia Molina, University of California, San Diego recognize that “working classness [sic] is placed. It is performed and Ana Elizabeth Rosas, University of California, Irvine constructed within communities and, in turn, shapes the spaces of Carmen Teresa Whalen, Williams College community, economy, politics, and much more.” (Allison Stenning, Maria Cristina Garcia, Cornell University “For Working Class Geographies,” Antipode: A Radical Journal of Geog- raphy, 40 1 [2008]: 9-14) In the last decade some labor and working- This roundtable session explores the expansive continuum of economic, class historians have begun to incorporate a consideration of space, political, and social imperatives, cultural dynamics, and actors driving place, landscape, and the environment into their analyses of working- the transnational contours of the Latina experience and its relationship class life. This has been prompted by theoretical and conceptual insights to their citizenship, identity formation, and rights across and within posed by globalization, as well as transnational trends in capital, labor, borders. Using an interdisciplinary historical approach that consid- technology, and culture. Labor and working-class historians have been ers the centrality of diverse yet overlooked networks and interactions challenged to account for the interplay among local, national, and glob- that stretch across the United States, Cuba, El Salvador, Guatemala, al sources of workers’ identities, consciousness, agency, and resistance. Mexico, Nicaragua, and Puerto Rico, this roundtable seeks to render For their part, beginning in the 1980s, many economic geographers be- the decisive importance of the transnational character, depth, and gan to take more seriously issues of class, focusing particularly on how scope of historical confrontations and turning points driving the Latina class relations and identities are geographically structured. While many experience. By reflecting on the transnational acts, configurations, and such geographers set about exploring how capital is both geographi- consequences informing Latina activism, exclusion, inclusion, and cally structured itself and also actively structures economic landscapes, rights, this panel seeks to draw attention to the dynamism of investigat- by the 1990s several self-styled “labor geographers” had begun to turn ing and writing Latina history with a keen sensibility to discourses and their attention away from a focus upon capital and more fully toward interactions beyond the nation state. Moderated by leading Chicana understanding the spaces within which working-class people live. historian, Vicki L.Ruiz, featured roundtable panelists, María Cristina Specifically, they sought to understand how working-class people’s lives García, Natalia Molina, Ana Elizabeth Rosas, and Carmen T. Whalen’s are spatially structured and how such individuals play an active role in respective presentations of the historical range of Latina oppositional configuring the economic landscape through their own social, politi- practices, subjectivities, and visions of collectivity will render alterna- cal, and economic agency. This session, then, seeks to draw together tive and productive perspectives on the complex interconnections of labor and working-class historians, labor geographers, and those in the citizenship, gender, race, rights, nation, and history. new field of working class studies to explore the points of contact and creative tension between these increasingly overlapping fields. It will be conducted as a roundtable discussion, with each participant briefly describing his/ her work and how interdisciplinarity has informed it. Comments and audience participation will work towards discovering how we can more fully understand the past and present of workers and their worlds not only by presenting laboring people contextually Offsite Sessions are indicated with a  symbol. in time and space but also by exploring how temporal and terrestrial contexts are socially constructed.

2010 OAH Annual Meeting • Washington, D.C. • 23 6 picas from top = top image > Tours Tour and Tea at the National Cathedral The National Building Museum advances the quality of the built Wednesday, April 7; 1:30 p.m. environment by educating the public about its impact on people’s Tour Cost: $25 lives. Chartered by the U.S. Congress in 1980 as a private, nonprofit Enjoy the best of springtime in Washington. This tour begins with all institution, the Museum serves as the nation’s leading public forum of the must-see features of the cathedral, and provides an introduc- for addressing historic and contemporary issues related to the build- tion to the history, architecture, and artwork of the Washington ing arts and sciences. Through its exhibitions, youth and adult educa- National Cathedral. This highlights tour is followed by traditional tion programs, and publications, the museum has helped millions English tea with sandwiches, scones, and a scenic view of Washing- of people to understand the issues that shape our built environment ton. Tour and Tea at the National Cathedral is Wednesday, April 7, at including architecture, construction, design, engineering, landscape 1:30 p.m. The tour begins inside the nave, directly through the West architecture, and urban planning. entrance on Wisconsin Avenue. Tea follows at 2:45 p.m. Transporta- tion to the National Cathedral is not included in the ticket price. Ride Secret Symbols, Ancient Rituals the Red Line to the Tenleytown Station, then take any 30-series bus (30, 32, 34, etc.) south on Wisconsin Avenue. and Patriotic Enclaves Thursday, April 8; 1:30 p.m. Tour Cost: $10 Tour the Capitol Building and Join National Park Service staff at the Freemasons Temple and move Capitol Visitors Center on to discover the secret (and not-so secret) history of several frater- Thursday, April 8; 1:30 p.m. nal organizations in the Dupont Circle neighborhood. Some sites in Tour Cost: $10 this tour are depicted in Dan Brown’s best-seller, The Lost Symbol; all Join Matt Wasniewski of the House Office of History and Preserva- sites are either National Historic Landmarks or listed in the National tion and Betty Koed of the Senate Historical Office for a unique tour Register of Historic Places. During the tour, National Park Service of the year-old Capitol Visitor Center (CVC) and two-century-old staff will explain how properties are designated as National Historic U.S. Capitol. Landmarks and how historians can participate in this process.

Among the highlights will be the new CVC exhibition hall—which From Slavery to the Senate: includes a brief introductory film, historic documents from the National Archives and the Library of Congress, and hundreds of ar- African American History in the District tifacts that tell the story of the two distinct institutions that comprise Friday, April 9; 1:30 p.m. the legislative branch. Tour Cost: $10 Join staff from the National Historic Landmarks Program of the The Capitol portion of the tour will cover some of America’s most National Park Service as they lead a tour which explores African historic spaces—the Rotunda, the Old Hall of the House, the Old American history. The tour begins at the site of the Franklin and Senate Chamber, and the former Supreme Court Chamber. The tour Armfield slave-trading firm, once the largest slave trading firm in the will last approximately two hours, and has a maximum attendance of South (the site is currently the Freedom House Museum). Encom- twenty attendees. passing stops at the homes of renowned abolitionists and leaders in the African American community such as Charlotte Forten Grimke and Mary Church Terrell, the tour concludes at the home of Blanche National Building Museum Tour K. Bruce, the first African American to serve in the U.S. Senate. All Thursday, April 8; 1:30 p.m. sites on the tour are National Historic Landmarks. During the tour, Tour Cost: $10 National Park Service staff will explain how properties are designated Join museum docents for a private custom tour of the museum’s as National Historic Landmarks and how historians can participate in historic home! An in-depth presentation of the structure’s architec- this process. tural elements and historical significance as well as a chronicle of the building’s construction will be presented. Constructed of more than fifteen million bricks, the museum houses some of the largest Corinthian columns in the world and has been the site of seventeen Presidential Inaugural Balls, from Grover Cleveland’s in 1885 to ’s in 2009. The tour includes a visit to the museum’s fourth floor, where you will find yourself face to face with the colossal capitals of our Corinthian columns!

24 • 2010 OAH Annual Meeting • Washington, D.C.  Wednesday—1:45 p.m. Meetings Color Blindness and Racial Justice in the Social Sciences The New Republic: Citizenship and Proprietorship in the Modern U.S. 1:00 p.m. to 6:00 p.m. (Re)Interpreting the Bible in Early American Culture OAH Executive Board Consumer Culture and Gender in Twentieth-Century America New Directions in Race, Ethnicity, Culture and Politics From Roosevelt to Reagan Symposium The Varieties of Nostalgic Experience 7:30 a.m. Black Physicians from Reconstruction to the Civil Rights Era TAH Symposium A.P. United States History Roundtable Receptions  Wednesday—3:30 p.m. Visualizing Space Exploration: Images and Symbols from the Space Age 5:30 p.m. Radical Women of Color as Organic Intellectuals Opening Night Reception Wednesday, April 7 April Wednesday, Unexpected Treasures: Teaching Historical Inquiry in Colleges and Historic Sites Political Networks: Coalition Building on the Left in the Late 1960s and 1970s Comparative Emancipations: The Meanings and Representations of Freedom Anticolonial Movements in the Twentieth Century The Promises of Sport and Democracy in American Culture The Implications of the Staley Fight for Today’s Labor Movement Teaching the Tough Issues Navigating the OAH: A Session for First Timers

OAH Exhibit Hall Hours Thursday, April 8 9:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.

Friday, April 9 9:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.

Saturday, April 10 9:00 a.m. to 1:00 p.m. Sessions at a Glance Sessions at

2010 OAH Annual Meeting • Washington, D.C. • 25 6 picas from top = top image >  Thursday—8:30 a.m. Reconsidering a Century of American White and Indian Violence Meals Rival Revivals: Religion, Politics, and Labor in the Great Depression 8:00 a.m. La Follette’s Wisconsin in Retrospect—A Roundtable Discussion Graduate Student Breakfast Undesirables: The Politics and Experiences of Unwanted Immigrants Journalism at the Crossroads in the Mid-Twentieth Century United States Receptions Informing the State: Information Management The Art of American Democracy 5:30 p.m. The Early Civil Rights Movement in the City International Reception Best Practices Recommendations in Teaching Public History ALANA Gathering Public Opinion and Media in the Cold War Public History Reception

 Thursday—10:15 a.m. Offsite Sessions Hot Topics in Public History 11:00 a.m. Ethnicity, Migration, and Public History since the 1960s

Thursday, April 8 Thursday, Roots of the Crisis? Modern American Where is the Culture of Print? Homeownership and Homemaking Wars in Granite and Stainless Steel The Boundaries of Popular Power in the Early Republic Workshop American Civil Society and United States New Perspectives on Women and Gender at World’s Fairs 1:00 p.m. New Perspectives on the Politics of Consumption New Media, Old Media: Historians Resisting “Rebellion”: Slaves’ Collective Violence in Their Own Terms and the Media American Indians and Reconstruction Suburban Visions: Political Identities, Democracy, and Metropolitan Space Plenary Session Material Culture and Indigenous Power in Native America 3:30 p.m. Race, Gender, and Colonialism at the Dawn of the Twentieth Century Environmental History: Retrospect and Prospect  Thursday—1:45 p.m. Gender, Politics, and Popular Culture in African American Life Meetings Investigators and Witnesses: The HUAC Revisited Conservatism in the 1960s 8:00 a.m. to 1:00 p.m. State of the Field: History of Women/Gender/Sexuality OAH Executive Board Picturing Freedom: Visual and Performative Activism Rethinking Social Welfare 8:00 a.m. to 10:30 a.m. Asian Americans and Democracy OAH International Committee New Approaches to Religious Freedom in American History 1:00 p.m. to 3:00 p.m. Rethinking the Nadir: Gender, Race, and Uplift Teaching American Religious History: Challenges and Strategies OAH Committee on Part-time Roundtable Discussion of Ken Burns’s Series The National Parks and Adjunct Employment Popular Culture and Memory During the Age of American Empire LAWCHA Board Meeting National Endowment for the Humanities Information Session OAH Membership Committee Fear, Loathing, and Foreigners Creating a Shared Vocabulary of Historical Thinking 4:00 p.m. to 6:00 p.m. Teaching with Primary Sources: Visual Documents Historians of American Sessions at a Glance Sessions at

26 • 2010 OAH Annual Meeting • Washington, D.C.  Friday—8:30 a.m. Meals Revisiting American Immigration The United States and the Rediscovery of “Human Rights” 7:30 a.m. Enshrining Inequality: Race, Region, and the Politics of Memory Community College Historians Breakfast Rethinking the Carter Administration The Political Uses of Feminism 12:00 noon Teaching Atlantic History in the United States Survey LAWCHA/AFL-CIO Brown Bag Controversies in the History of Organized Employers and Anti-Unionism SHGAPE Luncheon Could Nixon Have Achieved a Peace Accord in Vietnam in 1969 instead of 1973? Women in the Historical Profession Luncheon Localized Law and Governance in the Nineteenth-Century United States “Strive and Succeed”; Or, Taking Alternative Routes to American Respectability The Politics of Homemaking Receptions Friday, April 9 April Friday, The Frontiers of Cold War United States Labor 5:30 p.m. Crucible of Citizenship: Black Washington and the U.S. Government SHAFR Reception Suburban Diversity, Civic Identity, and Racialized Politics in Postwar America Intercollegiate Studies Institute The Democratic State: American Jewish Experiences SHGAPE Reception New Insights About Women in Public Life Acceptable Luxuries: The Pursuits of American Horticulture Offsite Sessions State of the Field: Teaching and Learning History 1:00 p.m.  Friday—10:15 a.m. Research Opportunities and a Tour of the Legislative Treasures Vault Making California American Race and Public Culture on the National Mall and Capitol Hill 3:00 p.m. American Indians and American Citizenship Crafting A History of the Book in America Mean Streets: Violence in American Cities in Five Volumes Creating a History Teaching and Learning Community Explaining the Apocalypse: The Impact of Hurricane Katrina Town Hall Relativism and Its Discontents in Modern American Thought Mob Violence in the Post-Civil War Midwest 12:00 noon African American Women and Definitions of Citizenship in Antebellum America Public History Town Hall Meeting New Directions in Scholarship on the History of Americanization and Imperialism in Educational Projects Abroad Plenary Putting Faith in American Democracy: Protestantism in the Twentieth Century 3:30 p.m. Children as Activists: Stories of the Civil Rights Movement The United States in the World Putting Pedagogy into Digital Archives White Slavery and the Construction of American Democracy Public History Roundtable: The Gullah/Geechee Cultural Heritage Corridor Meetings The Populist Legacy: New Perspectives on the Agrarian Revolt 8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. The Evolution of History Education 2011 OAH Program Committee 8:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m.  Friday—1:45 p.m. OAH Nominating Board Histories of Multiracial America and the Pacific Songs and Narrative from the Great Depression and Beyond 8:30 a.m. to 10:30 a.m. State of the Field: Digital History OAH/JAAS Japan Historians Roundtable: How Should Historians Study Conservatism? Collaborative Committee Reapportionment and the Transformation of American Democracy OAH Committee on National Surveillance, Counter-Subversion, and National Security Park Service Collaboration German Immigrants and American Pluralism 1:00 p.m. to 3:00 p.m. Defining the Boundaries of Citizenship in the Era of Reconstruction OAH Committee on Academic Freedom Building a Community of Good Citizens OAH Committee on Community Colleges Archivists, Researchers, and Uses of Archives New and Old 3:00 p.m. to 6:00 p.m. A Fresh Perspective on Free Speech and Suppression Annual Meeting of the Immigration From the Bottom Up: Sailors and Democracy and Ethnic History Society Organizing Rural Southerners in the Jim Crow Era 3:30 p.m. to 5:00 p.m. “Reacting to the Past”: The Collision of Ideas and Historical Contexts OAH Committee on Women Learning American Culture and Democracy from Historic Places in the Historical Profession Punishing Cultures: New Perspectives on Prisons in American History 4:00 p.m. to 5:30 p.m. Cuba and the United States in the Obama Era: Looking Back to Move Forward Remembering John Hope Franklin (1915-2009) SHGAPE Business Meeting Balancing Acts: Crafting a Life in the Historical Profession Sessions at a Glance Sessions at

2010 OAH Annual Meeting • Washington, D.C. • 27 6 picas from top = top image >  Saturday—8:30 a.m. Clio in the Classroom: Teaching Women’s History Workshop United States Price Stabilization and Citizen-Consumer Associations 7:30 a.m. Ronald Reagan’s Neshoba County Speech in National Memory State of the Field: The History of Capitalism Community College Workshop The Intellectual in American History Politicizing Southern Culture after World War II Meals The Memory of John Brown and Radical Antislavery Culture in America Across the Pacific: Migration Between Japan, the Philippines, and Taiwan—and the U.S. 12:00 noon Fear and Loving in the Early Republic Urban History Association Luncheon Federal Expansion in the Civil War Era Focus on Teaching Luncheon Race and the Law: in Southern Courts Women and Social Movements Luncheon Rethinking Congress and Politics in America Agricultural History Society Luncheon Fighting Over the Future: Social Reformers and Childhood SHAFR Luncheon Lesbian and Gay Publications and the Instruction of Sexuality State of the Field: History of Science Offsite Sessions State of the Field: History of American Slavery Saturday, April 10 April Saturday, Ethnic Politics: Negotiating Empire, Race, and Boderlands 9:00 a.m. A Conversation Between Labor  Saturday—10:15 a.m. Historians and Labor Geographers Freethinkers’ Imagined Communities in the Age of Revolution 10:45 a.m. American Culture/American Democracy from the Margins Publications on the Status of Women, 1960 to Present U.S. Labor and the Global South Reassessing Andrew Jackson in the Twenty-First Century 2:15 p.m. Rethinking Gender and the State in the New Deal Era Transnationalism and Latina History Remapping the City Digital Tools for Historians The New Intellectual History of Conservatism Meetings Race, Community, and Discourse in the Nineteenth-Century Temperance Movement 8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. The Varieties of Progressive Politics in the New Deal Era Reforming Faith: Progress and Liberal Religion in Nineteenth-Century America 2011 OAH Program Committee Finding a Good Home for your Manuscript in These Times 8:30 a.m. to 11:30 a.m. Japanese-American Relations since World War II: A Transpacific Dialogue Journal of American History Editorial Board Music Production and Radio Reception in the Post Civil Rights Era The Life and Death of Democracy: Author Meets Critics 8:30 a.m. to 10:30 a.m. The Problem of Democracy in Wartime OAH Committee on Public History “Come Together”: Part-Time/Contingent Faculty in History OAH Magazine of History  Saturday—1:45 p.m. Editorial Board Transcendentalism and Social Reform in Mid-Nineteenth-Century America Committee on the Status The Commerce of Social Change of ALANA Historians Were Jews Silent? A Roundtable Discussion 9:00 a.m. to 10:00 a.m. Revisiting John Higham’s Strangers in the Land Antievolutionism Reconsidered Urban History Association Board Meeting Teaching with Prints, Photographs, and Ephemera 9:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. Managing Mobility History Cooperative Board Meeting Bodybuilding and the Visualizing of Civic Identities State of the Field: New Directions in Working-Class History 1:30 p.m. to 3:30 p.m. Critical Perspectives on “Race” and Preservation OAH Committee on Teaching American Reform by Electoral and Non-Electoral Means Local and Global Perspectives on the End of Black Power 3:00 p.m. to 6:00 p.m. Democracy and American Music OAH Leadership Advisory Council State of the Field: Social and Cultural History After Intervention: What Happens Once the Shooting has Stopped? 3:30 p.m. to 4:00 p.m. History, Historians, and Public Culture OAH Business Meeting Carter G. Woodson, Public History, and the National Park Service

 Awards Ceremony and Presidential Address—3:30 p.m.

Security Against Democracy Elaine Tyler May, University of Minnesota, OAH President

The awards ceremony will be followed by the Presidential and Distinguished Members Reception at 5:30 p.m. Sessions at a Glance Sessions at

28 • 2010 OAH Annual Meeting • Washington, D.C. Wednesday, April 7 Sessions  Wednesday, April 7 ▪ 1:45 p.m. Cars, Clothes, and Kitchens: Consumer Culture and Gender in Twentieth‑Century America “A Rap On Race”: Color Blindness and Racial Justice in the Chair: Jennifer Scanlon, Bowdoin College Social Sciences, 1939‑1958 Chair: Alice O’Connor, University of California, Santa Barbara Selling Women’s Vulnerability in Steel: Twentieth Century Automobile Advertising Relative to Culture: , , and Competing Katherine Parkin, Monmouth University Versions of Wartime Tolerance Education Zoe Burkholder, Montclair State University The Limits of Democratized Consumption: Gender and the Electric Home and Farm Authority “The Realistic Process of Democracy”: Class, Rights, and Prejudice Michelle Mock, Carnegie Mellon University in the Sociology of Race Relations, 1939‑1954 Leah Gordon, Stanford University Gender, Consumption, and the Returning Veteran Matthew Johnson, “A Deeper Science”: Race, Class, and the Work of Social Psychiatry at Harlem’s Lafargue Mental Hygiene Clinic, 1945‑1958 Comment: Susan Strasser, University of Delaware Gabriel Mendes, University of California, San Diego There’s A Riot Goin’ On: New Directions in Race, Ethnicity, Comment: Luke Harris, Vassar College Culture and Politics From Roosevelt to Reagan Chair: , University of South Florida The New Republic: Citizenship and Proprietorship in the Modern United States “Whiteness” and World War II‑Era America: Cohosted by the Society for Historians of the Gilded Age and Progressive Era The Limits of a Historical Concept Chair: Barbara Welke, University of Minnesota Thomas Bruscino, United States Army School of Advanced Military Studies “Disintegrating Tendencies”? The Fate of Family Based Republicanism in Four Progressive Era Constitutional Amendments Mothership Connection: Music and Identity in the 1970s Rebecca Rix, Princeton University Stephen Tootle, College of the Sequoias

Citizenship, Proprietorship, and Social Risk in 1910s America , Black Liberation, and Transnationalism: Bus Jonathan Levy, Princeton University Boycotts in the United States and South Africa in the 1940s and 1950s Derek Catsam, The University of Texas, Permian Basin Muckraking the Trading Floor, 1890‑1917 Julia Ott, New School University Comment: Raymond Arsenault

Comment: Barbara Welke The Varieties of Nostalgic Experience Chair: Stephanie Yuhl, College of the Holy Cross (Re)Interpreting the Bible in Early American Culture Chair: Chris Beneke, Bentley University The Impossibility of Return Susan Matt, Weber State University Unacquainted with Christianity’s Alphabet: American Rebuttals of Paine’s Age of Reason Nostalgia and Homosexuality in the American South Jonathan Den Hartog, Northwestern College Benjamin Wise, University of Florida

The Qur’an, Natural Religion, and the Bible: The Uses Comment: Stephanie Yuhl of the Qur’an in Anti-Deist Rhetoric in Early America Michael Lee, Messiah College

Bible Reading as Conversation in Colonial Massachusetts Alexis Antracoli, Independent Scholar

Comment: Chris Beneke Key To Sessions  State of the Field  Teaching P Public History  Graduate Student  Film Screening  Offsite Sessions

2010 OAH Annual Meeting • Washington, D.C. • 29 Sessions Black Physicians from Reconstruction to the Civil Rights Radical Women of Color as Organic Intellectuals Era: Health, Progress, and Respectability Chair: Evelyn Brooks Higginbotham, Harvard University Chair: Susan Reverby, Wellesley College Thinking Dialectically: Grace Lee Boggs and the The New Negro in Harlem Hospital: Black Doctors and Legacy of C.L.R. James Their Crusade against Quackery, 1919‑1935 Scott Kurashige, University of Michigan Adam Biggs, Claflin University Claudia Jones and the West Indian Gazette Medical Education as an Anomaly of Desegregation: Public Policy Clarissa Atkinson, Independent Scholar Efforts to Recruit Black Physicians Karen Kruse Thomas, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine Black Women Radicals' Intellectual Thought and Activism during the 1950s “I can’t write you the history I give you a sketch”: Dayo Gore, University of Massachusetts Jon Donalson and the Austin Freedmen’s Bureau Gretchen Long, Williams College  P Unexpected Treasures: Teaching Historical Inquiry in Colleges and Historic Sites Comment: Susan Reverby Chair: Robert K. Sutton, National Park Service

 A.P. United States History Roundtable: The 2009 Maggie Walker: Service Learning with Found Documents Exam, Teaching Social History, and Future Directions Heather Huyck, College of William and Mary, and Hosted by The College Board, Advanced Placement Eola Dance, National Park Service

An Overview of the Course and Exam Review and Revealing Women: Best Practices in Interpreting Test Development: Historical Thinking Skills Women’s History at Historic Places William Tinkler, The College Board Catherine Turton, National Park Service

Skills, Social History, and World War II The Phyllis Wheatley Home for Girls as a Site for Both Ted Dickson, Providence Day School Academic and Public Archaeology Anna Agbe‑Davies, The University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill The 2009 DBQ and the Challenges of Teaching Social History Ernest Frithiof Freeberg, University of Tennessee Political Networks: Coalition Building on the Left in the Late 1960s and 1970s Student Performance on Labor History Questions on the Chair: Allen Matusow, Rice University A.P. United States History Examination Uma Venkateswaran, Educational Testing Service What Necessity Breeds: Feminist Networks in Denver, 1967‑1975 Melissa Estes Blair, Warren Wilson College  Wednesday, April 7 ▪ 3:30 p.m. The Politicians of Women’s Liberation: Feminism in Congress Visualizing Space Exploration: Images and Symbols Rachel Pierce, University of Virginia from the Space Age Chair: Patrick Moore, University of West Florida Hippies, Housewives, and Hard Hats: The Coalition of La Causa Todd Holmes, Imagery as a Method of Consensus Building for Human Spaceflight: A Study of Industrial Advertising, 1957-1962 Comment: Allen Matusow Megan Prelinger, Prelinger Library and Archives Comparative Emancipations: The Meanings and Seeing the Earth Representations of Freedom in Transatlantic Societies Robert Poole, University of Cumbria Chair: Debra Newman‑Ham, Morgan State University

Picturing a Telescope, Presenting the Universe: Representations of “Full and Fair Compensation”: Free Labor Ideology and the the Hubble Space Telescope before its Launch Liminal Spaces of Freedom in Low Country Georgia 1865‑1868 Elizabeth Kessler, Ursinus College Karen Bell, Morgan State University

Comment: Roger Launius, National Air and Space Museum, Smith‑ Aspects of the Political Languages of Emancipation in Villages, sonian Institution Towns, and Townships: Demerara, Guyana, and Virginia, U.S.A. Barbara Josiah, College

“Going to Washington to Get Their Free Papers”: Black Southern Marylanders and the Politics of Race and Freedom Sharita Jacobs Thompson, Gettysburg College

30 • 2010 OAH Annual Meeting • Washington, D.C. Thursday, April 8

Anticolonial Movements in the Twentieth Century  Wednesday, April 7 ▪ 5:30 p.m. Chair: Penny Von Eschen, University of Michigan Opening Night Reception Sponsored by the History Channel Puerto Rico and the Ends of Decolonization Alyosha Goldstein, University of New Mexico  Thursday, April 8 ▪ 8:00 a.m. Anti-Imperial Anti-Americanism: The Parallel Careers  Graduate Student Breakfast of Grau, Albizu, and Recto Join fellow graduate students for coffee and a light continental break‑ Augusto Espiritu, University of Illinois, Urbana‑Champaign fast. This informal gathering offers graduate student attendees a chance to talk with the OAH leadership and to make connections with other “Stepping Stones” to the United States Mainland: graduate student attendees. Asian Indian Anticolonialism in North America Seema Sohi, University of Colorado, Boulder  Thursday, April 8 ▪ 8:30 a.m. Comment: Penny Von Eschen Reconsidering a Century of American White and Indian Violence, 1753‑1868 The Promises of Sport and Democracy in American Chair: Patrick Griffin, University of Notre Culture: Perspectives on Ethnicity, Gender, and Race in the Sporting Past “Devoted to Hardships, Danger, and Devastation”: The Landscape Chair: Steven A. Riess, Northeastern Illinois University of Indian and White Violence in Wyoming Valley, Pennsylvania, from 1753 to 1800 “C’ Mon Girls—Gertrude Ederle Did It! . . . Give the Men Some Kathryn Meier, University of Virginia Wild Competition!” Jewish Women, Sport, and Democratic Pursuits at American Jewish Organizations The West that Wasn’t: Pawnee, Iowa, and American Linda J. Borish, Western Michigan University Geopolitics in the Trans‑Mississippi West in the 1830s David Bernstein, University of Wisconsin, Madison Sport, Democracy, and the Americanization of Italian Americans Gerald R. Gems, North Central College Peace by Some Means: United States Army Officers and Indian Policy, 1865‑1868 “Be Sure to Measure Him Right”: Joe Louis, Peter Luebke, University of Virginia American Hero for Democracy? Pellom McDaniels III, University of Missouri, Kansas City Comment: John Bowes, Eastern University

Comment: Steven A. Riess Rival Revivals: Religion, Politics, and Labor in the Great Depression The Implications of the Staley Fight for Chair: Lizabeth Cohen, Harvard University Today’s Labor Movement Hosted by the Labor and Working-Class History Association Revival or Revolt: Religious Foretelling at the Dawn Steven K. Ashby, University of Illinois, Urbana‑Champaign of the Great Depression C.J. Hawking, Arise Chicago Alison Greene, Yale University

 Teaching the Tough Issues “The Gospel Sends You Home Mad”: Rebellious Religion Hosted by the OAH Committee on Teaching and Rural Protest in the 1930s South Anne Lee, University of Maryland Jarod Roll, University of Sussex Kevin Byrne, Gustavus Adolphus College Carl Weinberg, Organization of American Historians Was FDR the Antichrist? The New Deal and the Gideon Sanders, McKinley Technology High School Rise of Fundamentalist Antiliberalism Kim Nielsen, University of Wisconsin, Green Bay Matthew Avery Sutton, Washington State University

 Navigating the OAH: A Session for First Timers Comment: Ken Fones‑Wolf, West Virginia University Hosted by the OAH Membership Committee Is this your first time attending the OAH? Need answers to questions like: What kinds of sessions are available? How can I meet people shar‑ ing my areas of interest? What are the advantages of the book exhibit Key To Sessions (besides the books)? These questions, and more, will be answered by OAH leaders and long-time members.  State of the Field  Teaching P Public History  Graduate Student  Film Screening  Offsite Sessions

2010 OAH Annual Meeting • Washington, D.C. • 31 Sessions La Follette’s Wisconsin in Informing the State: Information Management, Bureau‑ Retrospect—A Roundtable Discussion cratic Technique, and Statebuilding in the Cohosted by the Society for Historians of the Twentieth-Century United States Gilded Age and Progressive Era Chair: Kenneth Lipartito, Florida International University Chair: Alan Lessoff, Illinois State University “The Machine in the Grey Flannel Suit”: The Bureau of the Budget, La Follette’s Autobiography as a Snapshot of Progressivism Computerized Information Management, and the Transformation Nancy C. Unger, Santa Clara University of Postwar Policy Process Andrew Meade McGee, University of Virginia The Ethnic and Racial Side of Robert M. La Follette Jørøn Brøndal, University of Southern Denmark “Learn to Write Well”: The China Hands and the Communist‑ification of Diplomatic Writing Robert La Follette: Wisconsin's Radical Hero Hannah Gurman, New York University Matthew Rothschild, The Progressive Magazine Burn After Reading: Information and Early What the Progressives Had in Common Security‑Classification in the American State, 1911‑1941 Glen Gendzel, San Jose State University Alexandre Rios‑Bordes, Centre d’Études Nord-Américaines, EHESS (Paris) Undesirables: The Politics and Experiences of Unwanted Immigrants Comment: Kenneth Lipartito, and James Sparrow, Chair: Andrew Huebner, University of Alabama University of Chicago

Second Only to Bootlegging: Immigrant Smuggling, “The Art of American Democracy”: Making and Managing Rum‑Running, and the Underground Economy of Prohibition Early American Democracy through Image and Object Lisa Lindquist‑Dorr, University of Alabama Chair: Stephanie Wolf, University of Pennsylvania

A Nation of Immigrants, 1924‑Style Commercial Art for a Capitalist Democracy: Retail and Advertising Robert Fleegler, University of Mississippi Imagery in America’s Urban Communities, 1840‑1861 Joanna Cohen, Queen Mary, University of London The Deportation of Eulélia Mendes Figueiredo Rachel Buff, University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee Painting the “Mingled Multitude”: Crowds, Mobs, and the Body Politic in Antebellum Art Sex and Betrayal: The Long Arm of Patriarchy in a Ross Barrett, The University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill Transnational United States‑Mexican Social World Deborah Cohen, University of Missouri, St. Louis Portraying Republicanism: Luxury in the Age of Homespun Zara Anishanslin, Johns Hopkins University Comment: Jeffrey Fortin, State University of New York, Oneonta Defining “Republican Simplicity”: Material Culture Journalism at the Crossroads in the and Moral Authority in 1790s Mid‑Twentieth-Century United States Amy H. Henderson, University of Delaware Chair: Elizabeth Fones‑Wolf, West Virginia University Comment: Stephanie Wolf Louis Stark and the Rise of the Labor Beat David Witwer, The Pennsylvania State University, Harrisburg Youth Culture and Latinos in Los Angeles Chair: Matthew Garcia, Brown University Working for a Free Press: The Political Culture of Luis Alvarez, University of California, San Diego Journalism in an Age of Totalitarianism, 1933‑1941 Michael Willard, California State University, Los Angeles Sam Lebovic, University of Chicago Julie Cohen, University of Southern California

Antifeminism in the Right Wing Media’s Attacks on Washington during the 1940s and 1950s Landon Storrs, University of Houston

Comment: Deepa Kumar,

32 • 2010 OAH Annual Meeting • Washington, D.C. Thursday, April 8

The Early Civil Rights Movement in the City, 1900‑1930 P Ethnicity, Migration, and Public History since the 1960s Chair: Steven Reich, University Cohosted by the Immigration and Ethnic History Society Chair: Joel Wurl, National Endowment for the Humanities “An Arm of God”: The Early History of the NAACP in Charleston, West Virginia, 1918‑1926 The American Museum of Immigration: A National Thomas Edge, Northwestern University Shrine in the Era of Ethnic Revival Joan Fragaszy Troyano, The George Washington University Making their Capital Safe for Democracy: Black Women’s Activism in Washington, D.C.’s Phyllis Wheatley YWCA, 1917‑1930 Doing Well by Doing Right: Museums and Mary‑Elizabeth Murphy, University of Maryland, College Park Migration History in Late-Twentieth-Century America John Grabowski, Case Western Reserve University “Kansas Grows the Best Wheat and the Best Race Women”: Kansas Club Women and the Struggle for Racial Justice, 1900‑1930 Making an Asian City: Building and Doretha Williams, University of Kansas Rebuilding the Wing Luke Asian Museum, 1965‑2008 Anju Reejhsinghani, The University of Texas, Austin Comment: Nikki Brown, University of New Orleans Comment: Joel Wurl  P Best Practices Recommendations in Teaching Public History Where is the Culture of Print?: Rhetoric and Moderator: Constance Schulz, University of South Carolina Region in the Early Republic and Antebellum America Donna DeBlasio, Youngstown State University Chair: Trish Loughran, University of Illinois Steven Burg, Shippensburg University Ann McCleary, University of West Georgia Denise D. Meringolo, University of Maryland, Baltimore County From “International Exchange” to “the Glory of our City”: The Ivan Steen, University at Albany, State University of New York Boston Public Library, the Anxiety of Place, and Antebellum Civic Culture Public Opinion and Media in the Cold War Lynda Yankaskas, Virginia Commonwealth University Chair: Kristin Ahlberg, U.S. Department of State, Office of the Historian Ralph Waldo Emerson North and South: Slavery and the AConduct of Life@ Lectures in Rochester and St. Louis American “Culture” and “Democracy” on Adam Arenson, The University of Texas, El Paso Display in Poland, 1957‑1968 Tomas Tolvaisas, Winona State University Periodicals and Provincial Nationalism: The Massachusetts Town Survey in the Boston Magazine and the American Hitlerites and Good Germans: United States Public Opinion Robb Haberman, University of Connecticut and the Occupation of Germany, 1945‑1949 Andrea O’Brien, The George Washington University Comment: Trish Loughran Wars in Granite and Stainless Steel: War Memorials and When Worlds Collide: Eleanor Roosevelt and the P Development of Public Affairs Journalism Constructions of American National Identity Mary Jo Binker, Eleanor Roosevelt Papers Chair: Kirk Savage, University of Pittsburgh

Comment: Kristin Ahlberg “The Enduring American Truth”? Nation, War, and the Korean War Veterans Memorial  Thursday, April 8 ▪ 10:15 a.m. Christine Knauer, University of Tuebingen P Hot Topics in Public History Monumental Patriotism: Forgetting and Remembering Hosted by the OAH Committee on Public History the Japanese American World War II Experience Abbie Salyers Grubb, Houston Maritime Museum Eric Rauchway, University of California, Davis Lary May, University of Minnesota, Twin Cities “To Bind Up the Nation’s Wounds”: Patriotic Nationalism Lewis Erenberg, Loyola University, Chicago and the Vietnam Veterans Memorial Robert S. McElvaine, Millsaps College Liam van Beek, University of Western Ontario

The 2004 National World War II Memorial: Reviving Neo‑Classi‑ cism, Constructing National Identity, and Shaping Political Ideol‑ ogy in a Post-9/11 World Patty Rooney, St. Louis Community College

Comment: James Deutsch, Smithsonian Institution

2010 OAH Annual Meeting • Washington, D.C. • 33 Sessions The Boundaries of Popular Power in the Early Republic New Perspectives on the Politics of Consumption Chair: Rosemarie Zagarri, George Mason University Chair: Meg Jacobs, Massachusetts Institute of Technology

The Minority Rights Revolution in Antebellum America Small Talk: Antimonopoly, Consumer Politics, Kyle Volk, University of Montana, Missoula and Democratic Culture in the Modern United States Daniel Scroop, Sheffield University The Crisis in Popular Sovereignty, 1816‑1825 Reeve Huston, Duke University The Political Economy of Pawn Elizabeth Chin, Occidental College Comment: Nancy Isenberg, Louisiana State University Consumer Activism, Consumer Movements, and Consumer American Civil Society and United States‑Middle East Regimes: Thinking about Consumer Politics in United States History Relations, from the Cold War to the War on Terror Lawrence Glickman, University of South Carolina Chair: Mary Ann Heiss, Kent State University Resisting “Rebellion”: Slaves’ Collective Violence The Cultural Cold War Comes to the Orient: The CIA and the in their own Terms in Eighteenth‑Century American Friends of the Middle East, 1951‑1967 North America and the Caribbean F. Hugh Wilford, California State University, Long Beach Chair: Michael Johnson, Johns Hopkins University

Making American Dissenters: Operation Boulder and Reading Violence to Recover Values: Understanding Arab‑American Political Activism, 1972‑1978 Slave Violence from the Ground Up Salim Yaqub, University of California, Santa Barbara Jason Sharples, Princeton University

A Broken Wing? Women’s Rights as Barometer of Reassessing “Tacky’s Revolt”: Slaves’ Uses of Violence in Democracy in the Middle East Mid‑Eighteenth‑Century Jamaica Helen Laville, University of Birmingham Maria Bollettino, The University of Texas, Austin

Comment: Mary Ann Heiss Fighting for Freedom? The Berbice Slave Rebellion of 1763 Marjoleine Kars, University of Maryland, Baltimore County New Perspectives on Women and Gender at World’s Fairs Cohosted by the Society for Historians of the Gilded Age Comment: Joseph Miller, University of Virginia and Progressive Era Chair: Robert Rydell, Montana State University American Indians and Reconstruction: Freedom, Nation, Race, and Belonging Memorializing the Tennessee Centennial’s Woman’s Building Chair: Andrew Fisher, College of William and Mary Elisabeth Israels Perry, “For Purposes of Labor and Lust”: Emancipation, Traffics The Gendering of Japan at the 1893 Chicago World’s Fair in Native Women, and the Reconstruction of California Lisa Langlois, State University of New York, Oswego Stacey Smith, Oregon State University

Encountering “Woman” at San Francisco’s Including Indians in Reconstruction: The Five Panama‑Pacific International Exposition “Civilized” Tribes and the Treaties of 1866 Abigail Markwyn, Carroll University Jesse Schreier, Freedmen and Southern Society Project, University of Maryland The Dream of Women Who Work: Woman’s World’s Fairs T.J. Boisseau, The University of Akron The End of Autonomy: The Chickasaw Experience in the Reconstruction of the Confederate‑Allied Indians Comment: Robert Rydell Daniel Flaherty, University of

Comment: Heather Cox Richardson, University of Massachusetts, Amherst

Key To Sessions  State of the Field  Teaching P Public History  Graduate Student  Film Screening  Offsite Sessions

34 • 2010 OAH Annual Meeting • Washington, D.C. Thursday, April 8

Suburban Visions: Political Identities,  Thursday, April 8 ▪ 11:00 a.m. Democracy, and Metropolitan Space Chair: Andrew Wiese, San Diego State University  Roots of the Crisis? Modern American Homeownership and Homemaking in the 1930s Maternalism in Suburbia: Gender and Space in Offsite at the National Building Museum Montclair, New Jersey and Berkeley, California Chair: Laura Schiavo, The George Washington University Patricia Hampson, Rutgers University Inventing a Market for Homes: New Deal Policy and Pioneers on Liberty Road: Building Black Middle-Class the Modern Housing Ideal Suburbs in the Post-Civil Rights Era David Freund, University of Maryland Gregory Smithsimon, The 2008 Housing Crisis in the Shadows of Social Housing Challenging the Second Barrio: Federal Housing Policy, Matthew Bokovoy, University of Nebraska Press Racial Formation, and Mexican American Activism Aaron Cavin, University of Michigan Houses for the People, by the People, and of the People Shirley Wajda, Kent State University Comment: Karyn Lacy, University of Michigan Comment: Sarah Leavitt, National Building Museum Material Culture and Indigenous Power in Colonial Native America  Thursday, April 8 ▪ 1:00 p.m. Chair: Colin G. Calloway, P Workshop: New Media, Old Media: Indians, Firearms, and the Problem of Dependency Historians and the Media in Colonial America Hosted by the OAH Committee on Public History David Silverman, The George Washington University This half-day workshop will foster discussions on how historians can work successfully with social media of all kinds, including public radio Paya Mataha at Mobile: How European Goods and new media, to reach a variety of public audiences. It will also focus on practical information and skills covering current issues in social Served Indian Peace‑Making media, fair use and copyright issues of historians, how to work with Kathleen DuVal, The University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill radio producers, and how to create a simple podcast and begin using WordPress software. The “Wretched Hiroquois Canoe”: Revisiting the History of a Maligned Component of Iroquois Material Culture Jessica Clark, Center for Social Media, American University Jon Parmenter, Cornell University Pat Aufderheide, Center for Social Media, American University Brian Balogh, University of Virginia Comment: Colin G. Calloway Tony Field, University of Virginia Jeremy Boggs, Center for Social Media, American University Race, Gender, and Colonialism at the Dawn of the Twentieth Century  Thursday, April 8 ▪ 1:45 p.m. Chair: Jennifer Guglielmo, Smith College Gender, Politics, and Popular Culture in Emma Guffey Miller in Mixed Residence Japan, 1901‑1906 African American Life Masaru Nishikawa, The Japan Institute of International Affairs Chair: Martha Jones, University of Michigan

Disease, Culture, and Colonization; Or, A Teacher Consuming Melodrama in Black and White as a Public Health Official During a Diphtheria Outbreak Sandra Heard, The George Washington University at Santa Clara Pueblo in 1903 Adrea Lawrence, American University Gender, Lynching, and the NAACP Frances Jones-Sneed, Massachusetts College of Liberal Arts Disunity in Diversity: The Controversy over the Admission of Black “Pursued and Persecuted by Powerful Enemies”: The NAACP’s Struggle Women to the General Federation of Women’s Clubs, 1900‑1902 to Eliminate Racial Discrimination in Jury Service in the 1930s Jan Doolittle Wilson, University of Tulsa Meredith Clark-Wiltz, The Ohio State University Comment: Jennifer Guglielmo Comment: Martha Jones

2010 OAH Annual Meeting • Washington, D.C. • 35 Sessions Investigators and Witnesses: The House Committee Claudine in the Model City: The Performance of Community Action on Un‑American Activities (HUAC) Revisited Beyond Blaxploitation Chair: John Earl Haynes, Library of Congress Mark Krasovic, Rutgers University, Newark

Terminal Hearing: The House Committee on Comment: Matthew Guterl, Indiana University, Bloomington Un‑American Activities and the Death of Jerry J. O’Connell Vernon Pedersen, University of Great Falls Rethinking Social Welfare Moderator: Kevin Mumford, University of Iowa Cold War Patriarch: The Several Lives of FBI Informant Herbert Philbrick Old‑Age Insecurity Veronica Wilson, University of Pittsburgh, Johnstown Sonya Michel, University of Maryland, College Park

Behind the Curtain: HUAC Investigator Robert Stripling Who Cares? and the Alger Hiss Case Eileen Boris, University of California, Santa Barbara Jason Roberts, Northern Virginia Community College Racing Pensions Comment: Dan Leab, Seaton Hall University Brandi Brimmer, Vanderbilt University

Conservatism in the 1960s Disabled State Chair: Jonathan Schoenwald, Hunter College Sarah Rose, The University of Texas, Arlington

“Race Is Only a Minor Concern”: White Resistance Military Welfare and the Concealment of Race in the Civil Rights Era South Jennifer Mittelstadt, The Pennsylvania State University Stephanie Rolph, Georgia Southwestern State University Asian Americans and Democracy Tracing the Culture Wars in the 1960s: Richard Nixon and the Shift Chair: Frank H. Wu, Howard University in Evangelical Politics from Anti‑Catholic to Anti‑Secular Daniel Williams, University of West Georgia Representing Democracy: Chinese Nationals in the United States and Visions of International Harmony in the Postwar Period “Girded with a moral and spiritual revival”: The Christian Robin Li, University of California, Berkeley Anti‑Communism Crusade and Conservative Politics Laura Gifford, George Fox University Asian Americans, Pacific Islanders, Citizenship, and Military Service Comment: Jonathan Schoenwald Anna Pegler‑Gordon, Michigan State University

 State of the Field: History of Women/Gender/Sexuality Filipino Labor Migrants and Indigenous Communities Hosted by the OAH Committee on the Status of Women in the American Pacific in the Historical Profession Kimberly Alidio, University of Illinois, Urbana‑Champaign Chair: Robert Self, Brown University Comment: Frank H. Wu Regina Kunzel, University of Minnesota Nayan Shah, University of California, San Diego New Approaches to Religious Freedom in Stephanie McCurry, University of Pennsylvania American History Brenda Stevenson, University of California, Los Angeles Nancy Cott, Harvard University Chair: Tracy Fessenden, Arizona State University

Picturing Freedom: Visual and Performative Activism History and Historiography in Church‑State Relations Eric Mazur, Virginia Wesleyan College in the Long Civil Rights Movement Chair: Ruth Feldstein, Rutgers University, Newark Religion, Race, and Southern Ideas of Freedom Paul Harvey, University of Colorado, Colorado Springs Radical Respectability: Soul Women, Beauty, and the Politics of Style Native Americans and the Dilemmas of Religious Freedom Tanisha Ford, Indiana University, Bloomington Tisa Wenger, Yale University

“How It Feels to Be Black”: The Visual Activism of Comment: Tracy Fessenden in Life Magazine, 1948‑1970 Erin Park Cohn, University of Pennsylvania

36 • 2010 OAH Annual Meeting • Washington, D.C. Thursday, April 8

Rethinking the Nadir: Gender, Race, and Uplift in  National Endowment for the Humanities Post‑Reconstruction Visions of Progress and Citizenship Information Session Chair: Reginald Hildebrand, The University of Hosted by the National Endowment for the Humanities North Carolina, Chapel Hill Staff from the National Endowment for the Humanities will describe current grant opportunities and give examples of recent grant awards Rethinking the Black Industrial School in the Age of Washington: in American history. Brief presentations will include information on Progressive Pedagogy and Racial Uplift, 1890-1910 ongoing initiatives and new developments. A general question-and- James Anders Levy, Hofstra University answer period will follow.

Race and the Imperatives of Progress in Fear, Loathing, and Foreigners Late-Nineteenth‑Century America Hosted by the Society for Historians of the Gilded Age and Progressive Era Joan Bryant, Syracuse University Chair: Diane North, University of Maryland

Black Women in the Polis: Frances E. W. Harper on Germany is My Mother, but America is My Bride: Christian Citizenship and Womanhood in the Late-Nineteenth Century Heurich and Anti‑German Sentiment in Washington, D.C. during Marcia Robinson, Syracuse University World War I Mark Benbow, Marymount University Comment: Reginald Hildebrand Religious Rite or Civil Right: German‑American Jews  Teaching American Religious History: and the Volstead Act Challenges and Strategies Marni Davis, Georgia State University Chair: Judith Weisenfeld, Princeton University Laurie Maffly‑Kipp, The University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill Hyphenated‑Americans and the Espionage and Deborah Dash Moore, University of Michigan Sedition Acts of World War I Rudy V. Busto, University of California, Santa Barbara Daniel Donalson, Houston Community College, Southeast Rowena McClinton, Southern Illinois University Under Watch: The American Public and Military Surveillance in P Roundtable Discussion of Ken Burns’s Series World War I The National Parks: America’s Best Idea Lon Strauss, University of Kansas Hosted by the OAH Committee on National Park Service Collaboration Moderator: Marty Blatt, Boston National Historical Park Comment: Diane North Edward T. Linenthal, Journal of American History Brenda Child, University of Minnesota  P Creating a Shared Vocabulary of Historical Karl Jacoby, Brown University Thinking in Museums and Elementary to Cindy Ott, Saint Louis University Postsecondary Classrooms Hosted by the National History Education Clearinghouse Popular Culture and Memory during the Chair: Teresa DeFlitch, George Mason University Age of American Empire Michael O’Malley, George Mason University Chair: Chris Tudda, U.S. Department of State, Jill Sanderson, Independent Education Specialist Office of the Historian Stacy Hoeflich, Elementary School Teacher

Pacific Cultures, American Democracy: The United States  Teaching with Primary Sources: Visual Documents in and the Transpacific World of Goods, 1776‑1853 the Middle School Through University Classroom Kariann Yokota, Yale University Hosted by the OAH Committee on Teaching Chair: Carole DeVito, Dwight-Englewood School “Cowboy Up,” Down Under: Representations of Jacob Fay, Dwight-Englewood School Wild West Imagery in Australian Popular Entertainment Aimionoizomo Akade, Dwight-Englewood School Leland Turner, Texas Tech University  Thursday, April 8 ▪ 3:30 p.m.—Plenary From Barbary to Baghdad: The Politics of Memory Lotfi Ben Rejeb, University of Ottawa Environmental History: Retrospect and Prospect Chair: Donald E. Worster, University of Kansas Comment: Chris Tudda Alfred Crosby, The University of Texas, Austin Nancy Langston, University of Wisconsin Thomas Andrews, University of Colorado, Denver Rachel St. John, Harvard University

2010 OAH Annual Meeting • Washington, D.C. • 37 Sessions  Thursday, April 8 ▪ 5:30 p.m. The United States and the Rediscovery of “Human Rights” Chair: Mark Lawrence, The University of Texas, Austin International Reception Sponsored by the Council for International Exchange of Scholars, a Division “A Call for United States Leadership”: Congressional of the Institute of International Education Activism on Human Rights This reception, cosponsored by the CIES, welcomes all conference Sarah Snyder, Yale University attendees interest in faculty and student exchanges such as those made available through the Fullbright program, as well as other efforts to The Limits of Human Rights Diplomacy promote global ties among American historians. Daniel Sargent, University of California, Berkeley

ALANA Gathering The Reagan Administration and Human Rights: The OAH Committee on the Status of African American, Latino/a, Support for Solidarność Asian American, and Native American (ALANA) Historians and Gregory F. Domber, University of North Florida ALANA Histories invites graduate students to an early evening recep‑ tion. Join other graduate students and ALANA Committee members Comment: Elizabeth Borgwardt, Washington University for drinks and snacks before leaving the hotel for dinner. Enshrining Inequality: Race, Region, P Public History Reception and the Politics of Memory Sponsored by Department of History, University of South Carolina; United Chair: Phoebe Kropp, University of Colorado, Boulder States Capitol Historical Society; Western Historical Quarterly; Public His- tory Program, American University; Society for the History of the Federal Gov- Phillis Wheatley=s Tea‑Table: Race, Revolution, and Nostalgia in ernment; History Associates Incorporated; National Museum of American New England from the Parlor to the Museum History; Bill Lane Center for the American West, Stanford University; Center Margot Minardi, Reed College for Public History and Archaeology, Colorado State University; American West Center, University of Utah; Department of History and Public History “A Place to Call Home?” Memory and Ethnoracial Community Program, University of Nevada, Las Vegas; George Washington University among African and Japanese Americans in American Studies, Center for the Study of Public History and Public Culture Post‑World War II Los Angeles Hillary Jenks, Portland State University The OAH Committee on Public History invites public historians and guests for a reception Thursday, April 8, at 5:30 p.m. The reception pro‑ Of or For? The Recent History of the Museum of the Confederacy vides an opportunity for attendees with similar professional interests Sarah Milov, Princeton University and responsibilities to meet in an informal atmosphere. Comment: Phoebe Kropp  Friday, April 9 ▪ 7:30 a.m. Rethinking the Carter Administration Community College Historians Breakfast Chair: Susan Hartmann, The Ohio State University Sponsored by Bedford/St. Martin’s Community college historians will gather for the third annual OAH More Reagan than Reagan? Jimmy Carter’s Deregulation Legacy Community College Breakfast. The breakfast provides an opportunity Eduardo Canedo, Princeton University to meet OAH leaders, staff, and members of the OAH Committee on Community Colleges and to learn about upcoming workshops and pro‑ fessional development opportunities designed for professors working in “Worse than Cancer and Worse than Snakes”: Jimmy Carter, community colleges. Southern Baptists, and the 1980 Presidential Election Neil Young, Princeton University  Friday, April 9 ▪ 8:30 a.m. Selling the Sequoia: Jimmy Carter and Trimming Revisiting American Immigration the Trappings of Office Hosted by the OAH Committee on Community Colleges and the Jason Friedman, Michigan State University Immigration and Ethnic History Society Chair: Maureen Murphy Nutting, North Seattle Community College Conflict, Cooperation, and Congressional End‑Runs: Civil‑Military Mary Dillard, Sarah Lawrence College Relations in the Carter Administration Marilyn Fischer, University of Dayton John Mini, United States Military Academy Natalie Friedman, Vassar College Martin Valadez Torres, Columbia Basin College Comment: Susan Hartmann Comment: Maureen Murphy Nutting

38 • 2010 OAH Annual Meeting • Washington, D.C. Friday, April 9

The Political Uses of Feminism, 1970‑2005 Localized Law and Governance in the Chair: Alice Kessler‑Harris, Columbia University Nineteenth‑Century United States Chair: Dylan Penningroth, Northwestern University Personal Fulfillment and Political Agendas: and the American Bar Foundation The Healthy Marriage Initiative Rebecca Davis, University of Delaware Murdering Mothers in the Fabric of Everyday Life: Infanticide and Local Law‑Making Processes in Antebellum America Gender, Race, and Conservative Legal Thought in the 1970s Felicity Turner, Duke University Serena Mayeri, University of Pennsylvania Seducing the Naive: Seduction Law, Intimate Violence, and the Reagan’s “Gender Gap” Strategy and Blurred Boundaries of Sexual Consent Liberal Feminism’s Class Problem Melissa Hayes, Northern Illinois University Marisa Chappell, Oregon State University From the “Offspring of Revolution” to the “Offspring of Law”: Comment: Gwendolyn Mink, Independent Scholar John A. Jameson and the Creation of a Law of Constitutional Conventions  Teaching Atlantic History in the United States Survey Roman Hoyos, University of Chicago and Moderator: Karen Kupperman, New York University Duke University School of Law Heather Kopelson, University of Alabama Christian Crouch, Bard College Comment: Dylan Penningroth Jenny Shaw, University of Alabama Kristen Block, Florida Atlantic University “Strive and Succeed”; Or, Taking Alternative Routes to Ignacio Gallup‑Diaz, Bryn Mawr College American Respectability Controversies in the History of Organized Chair: Pamela Laird, University of Colorado, Denver Employers and Anti‑Unionism Genteel Notoriety: Gender, Crime, and Self‑Making Cohosted by the Labor and Working-Class History Association in Gilded Age America Chair: Rosemary Feurer, Northern Illinois University Wendy Gamber, Indiana University What’s So New About the “New Right”? Rethinking The Gilded Age “Smash Up”: Love‑Hate Relationships, the Origins of Postwar Anti‑Unionism Financial Entanglements, and Small Business Failure Chad Pearson, University of Alabama, Huntsville in Nineteenth‑Century Brooklyn Jocelyn Wills, Brooklyn College, City University of New York Moderates and the Lingering Open Shop Question: Organized Employers in Columbus, 1887‑1960 White Collars in the Black Belt: Unconventional Social Howard Stanger, Canisius College Mobility in Chicago, 1914‑1950 Will Cooley, Walsh University Employers and the Limits of the Open Shop in , 1902‑1907 Thomas Klug, Marygrove College Comment: Scott Sandage, Carnegie Mellon University Comment: Andrew Cohen, Syracuse University and Rosemary Feurer

Could Nixon Have Achieved a Peace Accord in Vietnam in 1969 instead of 1973? New United States and Vietnamese Evidence Moderator: James Hershberg, The George Washington University Jeffrey P. Kimball, Miami (OH) University Pierre Asselin, Hawai’i Pacific University Lien‑Hang Nguyen, Yale University , Cornell University John Prados, National Security Archive Key To Sessions  State of the Field  Teaching P Public History  Graduate Student  Film Screening  Offsite Sessions

2010 OAH Annual Meeting • Washington, D.C. • 39 Sessions The Politics of Homemaking: Gender, Citizenship, and The “best humane institution on the face of the Globe”? The Govern‑ Democracy in Post-World War II America ment Hospital for the Insane and African American Perceptions of Cohosted by the Labor and Working-Class History Association the State in Post‑Reconstruction Washington, D.C. Chair: Eileen Boris, University of California, Santa Barbara Martin Summers, Boston College

Citizen Housewife: Consumer Activism, CIO Labor Comment: William Jones, University of Wisconsin, Madison Auxiliaries, and New Deal Liberalism Emily E. LaBarbera Twarog, University of Illinois, Chicago Suburban Diversity, Civic Identity, and Racialized Politics in Postwar America The Obligations of Motherhood: Rethinking the Politics Chair: Heather Ann Thompson, Temple University of Family in Post‑World War II Chicago Sarah Potter, University of Memphis Defining and Defending the Suburban Community: Suburban Chicago Responds to Residential Desegregation “An Orderly, Well‑Run House”: Homemaking Margaret Lee, University of Wisconsin, Madison and the Working Mother, 1940‑1970 Elizabeth More, Harvard University White Civic Visions vs. Black Suburban Aspirations: Cleveland’s Garden Valley Urban Renewal Project Home Economics: Class, Sexuality, and the Defeat of the Equal Todd Michney, University of Toledo Rights Amendment, 1978‑1982 Alison Lefkovitz, University of Chicago Creating Progress in an Era of Crisis: Suburban Citizenship, Biracial Politics, and the Rhetoric of Democracy in Comment: Eileen Boris Birmingham, 1961‑1965 Catherine Conner, The University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill From National to Transnational: The Frontiers of Cold War United States Labor Comment: Matthew Lassiter, University of Michigan Chair: Peter Hahn, The Ohio State University The Democratic State: American Jewish Experiences More Subtle than We Knew: The AFL in the British Caribbean Chair: Tony Michels, University of Wisconsin, Madison Robert Anthony Waters, Jr., Ohio Northern University The First American to Get New Tires was Abe Cohen: George McCray’s Imprint on the African Labor College: The Refrac‑ Names and Democracy in World War II tion of AFL‑CIO Labor Policy through an African American Activist Kirsten Fermaglich, Michigan State University Yevette Richards, George Mason University “The same ideal that was handed down to us from Mt. Sinai”: From Dollars to Deeds: AFL Foreign Policy against The Jewish Welfare Board, World War I, and the Nazism and Communism, 1934‑1945 Discourses of Democracy Geert van Goethem, Amsab‑Institute of Social History, Jessica Cooperman, Muhlenberg College Ghent, Belgium “We Should Take a Stand”: Jewish Sororities and The American Federation of Labor Campaign against “Slave Labor” the Campaign against California Bill #758 and the Cold War: Interrelationships between Labor and Govern‑ Shira Kohn, New York University ment in the United States and Europe Quenby Hughes, Rhode Island College What New Insights About Women in Public Life Can We Find in Recent Scholarly Editions of Women’s Letters and Comment: Peter Hahn Papers, 1870‑1930? Cohosted by the OAH Committee on the Status of Women Crucible of Citizenship: Black Washington and the United in the Historical Profession States Government Moderator: Melanie Gustafson, University of Vermont Chair: Adele Alexander, The George Washington University Kathryn Kish Sklar, State University of New York, Binghamton Daniel Horowitz, Smith College “Memorandum to the Honorable Warren G. Harding”: Ann D. Gordon, Rutgers University Black Civil Servants after Wilson Mary Lynn McCree Bryan, Papers Eric S. Yellin, University of Richmond Beverly Wilson Palmer, Pomona College

George T. Downing and the Effort to Establish an African American Lobby during Reconstruction Kate Masur, Northwestern University

40 • 2010 OAH Annual Meeting • Washington, D.C. Friday, April 9

Acceptable Luxuries: The Pursuits of American Horticulture P Race and Public Culture on the National Mall Chair: Jennifer Anderson, Stony Brook University and Capitol Hill Chair: Emily Straus, State University of New York, Fredonia High Hopes and Low Yields: The Chameleonic Political Economy of Anglo‑American Sericulture A Gathering of Nation(s): The Smithsonian’s Public Displays on the Ben Marsh, University of Stirling Mall from the 1960s to the Present William Walker, State University of New York, Oneonta The Rhetoric of Antebellum Agriculture: “Character” and “Luxury” in Grapes “A Concealed Place”: African Americans and Capitol Hill Erica Hannickel, Northland College Lindsay Silver Cohen, Harvard University

The Seeds of Beauty: Growing Flowers “Race Memory” and the National Mall: in Nineteenth‑Century America The Martin Luther King, Jr. National Memorial Marina Moskowitz, University of Glasgow Erika Doss, University of Notre Dame

Comment: Jennifer Anderson Comment: Fath Davis Ruffins, Smithsonian Institution  State of the Field: Teaching and Learning History American Indians and American Citizenship Hosted by H-Net’s Teaching and Learning History Chair: Philip Deloria, University of Michigan Discussion Network (H-TLH) Kim Warren, University of Kansas Chair: David Gerwin, Queens College, City University of New York Paul C. Rosier, Villanova University Frederick E. Hoxie, University of Illinois, Urbana‑Champaign Preparing History Teachers (and Professors) to Angela Parker, University of Michigan Develop Adolescents’ Historical Thinking Terrie Epstein, Hunter College and Graduate Center, Mean Streets: Violence in American Cities City University of New York Cohosted by the Urban History Association Chair: Elizabeth Blackmar, Columbia University Preparing New History Teachers to Develop Adolescents’ Historical Reading and Writing Fire and Be Damned: The Militia in Nineteenth-Century Riots Chauncey Monte‑Sano, University of Maryland Zachary Schrag, George Mason University

Comment: Sadia Mohammed, High School for Construction The Ghettoization of Homicide in Postwar Philadelphia Trades, Engineering, and Architecture Eric Schneider, University of Pennsylvania

 Friday, April 9 ▪ 10:15 a.m. ’s Upper Class, the 1863 Draft Riots, and the Idea of the Dangerous Classes Making California American: Community, Violence, and Clifton Hood, Hobart and William Smith Colleges Democracy in the Transformation of California from Bor‑ derland to Early Modern State Comment: Marilynn Johnson, Boston College Chair: Patricia Limerick, University of Colorado, Boulder  Creating a History Teaching and Learning The Modoc Genocide, 1851‑1873 Community: Experiences of a Secondary Benjamin Madley, Yale University School‑University Alliance in Southwestern Michigan Chair: Sarah Drake Brown, Ball State University James King of William and the Transformation of Wilson Warren, Western Michigan University Frontier Masculinity in Mid‑Nineteenth-Century San Francisco Gordon Andrews, Grand Valley State University Warren Wood, University of California, Santa Barbara Kent Baker, Portage Central High School Comment: Sarah Drake Brown “When Stern Necessity Knew No Law”: Hybrid Justice, Popular Violence, and State Formation in the Los Angeles Borderlands David Torres‑Rouff, The Colorado College

Comment: Patricia Limerick

2010 OAH Annual Meeting • Washington, D.C. • 41 Sessions Explaining the Apocalypse: The Impact “Nothing is Wanting on our Part but Opportunity”: of Hurricane Katrina African American Women and Definitions of Chair: Adam Fairclough, Leiden University Citizenship in Antebellum America Chair: Loren Schweninger, The University of Why Mardi Gras Matters North Carolina, Greensboro Randy Sparks, Tulane University African American Women, the Courts, and the Hurricane Katrina as a Providential Catastrophe Black Body Politique in Antebellum Maryland James Boyden, Tulane University Jessica Millward, University of California, Irvine

Explaining the Unexplainable: Hurricane Katrina, Citizenship and the Politics of Perception: African American FEMA, and the Bush Administration Women in Antebellum Charleston Romain Huret, Ecole des Hautes Études en Sciences Sociales Amrita Chakrabarti Myers, Indiana University

Comment: Alecia Long, Louisiana State University Awake and Slumber No More: Citizenship and Black Women’s Political Activism in Antebellum New York City Relativism and Its Discontents in Leslie Alexander, The Ohio State University Modern American Thought Chair: Casey Blake, Columbia University Comment: Rosalyn Terborg‑Penn, Morgan State University

Speaking (Relative) Truth to Power: Antifoundationalism New Directions in Scholarship on the History of and Oppression in African American Thought Los Angeles: Urban Development, the Processes Jennifer Ratner‑Rosenhagen, University of Wisconsin, Madison of Modernity, and Immigrant Activism Cohosted by the Los Angeles History Research Group Anti‑Relativism in the Age of Reagan: Allan Bloom, Dinesh Chair: Nicolas Rosenthal, Loyola Marymount University D’Souza, and Lynne Cheney Do Battle for the Soul of America Andrew Hartman, Illinois State University The Local Line: Reevaluating Rural Community Development and the Dynamics of Metropolitan Growth in Los Angeles, 1902‑1929 Leo Strauss and the Critique of Relativism in Postwar Kyle Livie, San Francisco State University United States Social Science Benjamin L. Alpers, University of Oklahoma Leisurewear and the Retail Revolution: Los Angeles Men’s Clothing Merchandising, 1925‑1960 Comment: Bruce Kuklick, University of Pennsylvania William Scott, University of Delaware

Mob Violence in the Post-Civil War Midwest The Forging of an Iranian American Ethnicity in Chair: Richard Nation, Eastern Michigan University Los Angeles, 1979‑1993 Parandeh Kia, California State University The Politics of Mobbing: Gender, Class, and Justice in Gilded Age Cincinnati Comment: Allison Varzally, California State University, Fullerton Shannon Bennett, Indiana University Americanization and Imperialism in Riotous Hoosiers: Class, Community, and Violence in Southern Educational Projects Abroad Indiana Coal Towns during the Late-Nineteenth-Century Chair: Kristin Hoganson, University of Illinois, Urbana‑Champaign Laura Bergstrom, Purdue University Education for Nation Building: Domingo Sarmiento, Mary Peabody “The Women’s Christian Temperance Union Has No Business Inter‑ Mann, and the Paradigm of Americanization fering”: in the Midwest, 1885‑1915 Karen Leroux, Drake University Helen McLure, Southern Methodist University Training an “Army” of Cuban Teachers: Harvard University, the “We Cannot Say We Regret This Man’s Death”: The Lynching of War Department, and the Cuban Summer School, 1900 White Men in Kansas, 1865‑1884 Sarah Manekin, Johns Hopkins University Brent M.S. Campney, The University of Texas, Pan American “The Problem of Turkey”: John Dewey and the Comment: Richard Nation Process of Modernization Charles Dorn, Bowdoin College

Comment: Jonathan Zimmerman, New York University

42 • 2010 OAH Annual Meeting • Washington, D.C. Friday, April 9

Putting Faith in American Democracy: Remembering Liberal Protestantism in the Twentieth Century P Public History Roundtable: The Gullah/Geechee Chair: Darren Dochuk, Purdue University Cultural Heritage Corridor Michael Allen, Gullah Geechee Cultural Heritage Corridor and Responsible Freedom: Liberal Protestant Ecumenism National Park Service as Cold War Counterculture Emory Campbell, Gullah Geechee Cultural Heritage Corridor Mark Edwards, Ouachita Baptist University John Haley, Gullah Geechee Cultural Heritage Corridor Reading Religion in Public: Liberal Protestant Faith in the Public Libraries, 1920‑1948 Comment: Margaret Washington, Cornell University Matthew Hedstrom, University of Virginia The Populist Legacy: New Perspectives on John Coleman Bennett, Robert McAfee Brown, and the Meaning and Impact of the Agrarian Revolt the Push for Religious Pluralism in the 1950s Hosted by the Society for Historians of the Gilded Age and Progressive Era Bryan Peery, The George Washington University Chair: Robert Cherny, San Francisco State University Comment: Mark Hulsether, University of Tennessee “We Are All Makers of History”: The Language of Populism and the Practice of Local and Family History in the Late Nineteenth and Children as Activists: Stories of the Civil Rights Movement Early Twentieth Century Chair: Laura Lovett, University of Massachusetts Katharina Hering, University of Pittsburgh

Coming of Age in the Movement: Children, Activism, “Bryan Will Be Here”: The Meaning of William Jennings Bryan=s Trauma, and Memory Visit to the Eastern Shore of Maryland in 1900 Francoise Hamlin, Brown University Eric A. Cheezum, College

Youth and the Battle for the Future of African American Christian‑ The New South Post‑1896: Populist Ideas in New Contexts ity during the Civil Rights Movement Connie L. Lester, University of Central Florida Thomas Bergler, Huntington University Comment: James M. Beeby, Indiana University, Southeast Caught in the Crossfire: Black Teenagers on Virginia’s Civil Rights Frontline  “That’s not what we were taught”: The Jill Ogline Titus, Washington College Evolution of History Education, 1985‑2010 Hosted by the OAH Magazine of History Advisory Board Comment: Laura Lovett Chair: Carl Weinberg, Organization of American Historians Putting Pedagogy into Digital Archives: Laura Westhoff, University of Missouri, St. Louis  Billie Jean Clemens, Swain County High School Making Online History Collections Useful for Linda Sargent Wood, Arizona State University K‑12 Teachers and Students Keith Berry, Hillsborough Community College Moderator: William J. Tally, Center for Children and Technology, Rita G. Koman, Independent Scholar Education Development Center Stacia Smith, Paxton Center School  Friday, April 9 ▪ 12:00 noon Kathleen Barker, Massachusetts Historical Society Ellen Noonan, The Graduate Center, City University of New York P Public History Town Hall Meeting The OAH Committee on Public History invites all historians to a town Trafficking in Innocence and Purity: White Slavery and the hall meeting to discuss the role of public history within the organiza‑ Construction of American Democracy tion and to plan the work of the committee over the next three to five Chair: Chad Heap, The George Washington University years. The committee seeks ways in which to serve the OAH’s efforts to reach a wider audience, to increase dialogue between public and White Slavery under J. Edgar Hoover’s Bureau of academic historians, and to think broadly about the involvement of scholars in public life. Investigation: The Federal Policing of Interracial Sex under the Mann Act during the and 1930s Jessica Pliley, The Ohio State University Key To Sessions Rape, Ruin, and Race: The Sexual Politics of White Slavery in New Orleans, 1890‑1920  State of the Field  Teaching Emily Landau, University of Maryland, College Park P Public History  Graduate Student Comment: Chad Heap and Catherine Christensen, University of California, Irvine  Film Screening  Offsite Sessions

2010 OAH Annual Meeting • Washington, D.C. • 43 Sessions  Friday, April 9 ▪ 1:45 p.m.  Friday, April 9 ▪ 12:00 noon Luncheons Shades of Democracy: Histories of Multiracial America and the Pacific LAWCHA/AFL-CIO Brown Bag Chair: George Sanchez, University of Southern California Friday, April 9, 12:00 noon Bring lunch and join labor historians and union advocates for “A “Brotherhood is not Easy”: The Multiethnic Activism Forum on Unions and Labor Rights Today,” chaired by LAWCHA of Minority Neighbors President Kimberley Phillips, William and Mary College, and mod‑ Allison Varzally, California State University, Fullerton erated by Joseph McCartin, Kalmanovitz Inititative for Labor and the Working Poor, Georgetown University. (No ticket required.) Aloha Compadre: Historical and Contemporary Society for Historians of the Gilded Age Latina/o Transpacific Migrations to the Hawai’ian Islands Rudy P. Guevarra, Jr., Arizona State University and Progressive Era (Dr. Guevarra’s paper will be presented by George Sanchez) Jack Blocker, Huron University College, The University of Western Ontario, will give the 2010 Presidential Address “Writing African The “Future Immense”: Multiracial Intersections in American Migrations.” the United States‑Mexico Borderlands  Women in the Historical Profession Luncheon Julian Lim, Cornell University Sponsored by the University of Minnesota History Department; Columbia Comment: George Sanchez University, Department of History; Department of History, Virginia Poly- technic Institute and State University; Southern Association for Women Hard‑Hitting Songs For Hard‑Hit People: Songs and Narra‑ Historians; Johns Hopkins University Department of History; University of tive from the Great Depression and Beyond Delaware Department of History; Business History Conference; University Hosted by the Labor and Working-Class History Association of Arizona Department of Gender and Women’s Studies; Department of This multimedia presentation will include musicians from the D.C. History, University of South Carolina; Shippensburg University Graduate labor arts community. Papers are available from Program in Applied History; Betty Dessants; Haverford College Depart- and . ment of History; and the University of Minnesota Department of Gender, Chair: Kimberley Phillips, College of William and Mary Women, and Sexuality Studies. Michael Honey, University of Washington, Tacoma Darryl Holter, University of Southern California The 2010 Women in the Historical Profession Luncheon speaker is Comment: Erik Gellman, Roosevelt University Congresswoman Eleanor Holmes Norton, who is now in her tenth term as Congresswoman for the District of Columbia. Congress‑  State of the Field: Digital History woman Norton taught full time before being elected and continues Moderator: Sharon M. Leon, George Mason University as a tenured professor of law at Georgetown University, teaching a Steven Mintz, Columbia University course there every year. After receiving her bachelors degree from Dan Cohen, George Mason University Antioch College in Ohio, she simultaneously earned her law degree Michael Frisch, State University of New York, Buffalo and a masters degree in American Studies from Yale. Patrick Gallagher, Gallagher Design Kirsten Sword, Indiana University Through the generosity of donors, the members of the OAH Com‑ mittee on Women in the Historical Profession are able to offer luncheon tickets to graduate students at no cost on a first-come, Roundtable: How Should Historians Study Conservatism first-served basis. To request a graduate student ticket, e-mail Now that Studying the Right is Trendy? before March 12, 2010. Moderator: Timothy Thurber, Virginia Commonwealth University Michael Kazin, Georgetown University Leo Ribuffo, The George Washington University Glen Jeansonne, University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee Sarah Mergel, Dalton State College  Friday, April 9 ▪ 1:00 p.m. Mary Brennan, Texas State University, San Marcos   Research Opportunities and a Tour of the Legislative Treasures Vault Offsite Session at the National Archives and Records Administration The Center for Legislative Archives holds the historically valuable records of the U.S. Senate and the U.S. House of Representatives, including the official Committee records, all of which remain the legal property of the House and Senate.

44 • 2010 OAH Annual Meeting • Washington, D.C. Friday, April 9

One Person, One Vote: Reapportionment and Defining the Boundaries of Citizenship in the Era the Transformation of American Democracy of Reconstruction: The Politics of Region, Race, and Chair: Laura McEnaney, Whittier College Gender in Post‑Emancipation America Chair: Joanne Pope Melish, University of Kentucky From the Grass Roots to the Halls of Congress: Opposition to the Supreme Court’s Reapportionment Decisions Reconstructing Masculinity: Gender, Race, and Citizenship at the J. Douglas Smith, Occidental College 1868 South Carolina Constitutional Convention Ehren Foley, University of South Carolina The Making of Baker v. Carr Stephen Ansolabehere, Harvard University Unwelcome Citizens: Freedpeople and Reconstruction in the Choctaw Nation Comment: Julian Zelizer, Princeton University Fay Yarbrough, University of Oklahoma

Surveillance, Counter‑Subversion, and National “Colored Citizens”: Gender and Northern Reconstruction Security: Resisting the Expansion of Democratic Leslie Schwalm, University of Iowa Citizenship, 1915‑1929 Cohosted by the Society for Historians of the Gilded Age Comment: Hannah Rosen, University of Michigan and Progressive Era Chair: Joan Jensen, New Mexico State University Building a Community of Good Citizens Chair: Gail Radford, State University of New York, Buffalo Democracy, Federal Surveillance, and the “Outlaw” Strike of 1920 Paul Taillon, University of Auckland “From Immigrant Ship to Citizenship”: Molding Space, Molding Self in Boston’s North End Surveillance and the National Security Agenda during World War I Jana Cephas, Harvard University Graduate School of Design Jennifer Fronc, University of Massachusetts, Amherst The Greenbelt Towns: Would‑Be Communities of the Future “We Are Very Anxious To Have An Intelligent [Woman] Worker’s Julie Turner, Miami (OH) University Point Of View”: Gender and the Practices of Workplace Surveillance in Interwar Cotton Mills Citizens and Subjects in Puerto Rico’s Subsidized Housing Stephen Robertson, University of Sydney Marygrace Tyrrell, Northwestern University

Patriots and Parlor Pinks: “Patrioteering,” Surveillance, Comment: Eric Fure‑Slocum, St. Olaf College and the Long Red Scare, 1915‑1941 Dolores Janiewski, Victoria University, Wellington Archivists, Researchers, and Uses of Archives New and Old Chair: Jodi Allison‑Bunnell, Orbis Cascade Alliance German Immigrants and American Pluralism Rosalie Lack, Digital Special Collections, California Digital Library Chair: Jeff Strickland, Montclair State University Laura Clark Brown, The University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill Comment: Jodi Allison‑Bunnell “Self‑Defense and Self‑Expression”: The Steuben Society Radical Talk and Legal Thought: A Fresh Perspective on and Assimilation, 1919‑1970 Gregory Kupsky, The Ohio State University Free Speech and Suppression in Early Twentieth‑Century America The German American Democrats Who Supported Chair: Melvin Urofsky, Virginia Commonwealth University African American : An Unusual Case of the Immigrant Paradigm at Work in 1869 Anarchists in America: The Emergence of Free Speech Alison Efford, Marquette University Consciousness and Free Speech Defenders (1901‑1910) Julia Rose Kraut, New York University German Americans, Nativism, and Murder: The Trial of Paul Schoeppe, 1869‑1872 The Communist Contribution to Constitutional Law Friederike Baer, American Philosophical Society Jennifer Uhlmann, Washington University, St. Louis

Comment: Kathleen N. Conzen, University of Chicago The Time to Kill a Snake: Gitlow v. New York and the Bad Tendency Doctrine Marc Lendler, Smith College

Comment: David Rabban, The University of Texas School of Law

2010 OAH Annual Meeting • Washington, D.C. • 45 Sessions From the Bottom Up: Sailors and Democracy Punishing Cultures: New Perspectives on Prisons Chair: Jesse Lemisch, City University of New York, John Jay College in American History Chair: , Vanderbilt University Crafting Democracy in the American Revolution: The Case of the Revolutionary Navy, ca. 1777‑1783 Convicts, Corrections, and Citizenship: Lessons Nathan Perl‑Rosenthal, Columbia University from California’s Penal Welfare State Volker Janssen, California State University, Fullerton “All Humble Mariners”: Sailors and Democratic Discourse in the Early Republic Southern Origins of a Prison Nation Christine Sears, University of Alabama, Huntsville Robert Perkinson, University of Hawai’i, Manoa

“Dead to All Justice, to All Humanity, to All Sense of Feeling”: Wil‑ Ghosts of Penal Servitude: Lineages of the Mass Carceral State liam Ray and the Sailor in Service to the State Rebecca McLennan, University of California, Berkeley Hester Blum, The Pennsylvania State University Comment: Gary Gerstle Comment: Mark Hanna, University of California, San Diego Cuba and the United States in the Obama Era: Agrarian Anxieties: Organizing Rural Southerners Looking Back to Move Forward in the Jim Crow Era Cohosted by the Emergency Network of Cuban American Scholars Chair: Nan Woodruff, The Pennsylvania State University and Artists (ENCASA) Moderator: Felix Masud‑Piloto, DePaul University “I look forward to the day when all of them, black and white, will María Cristina García, Cornell University call me by my first name”: The Search for Economic Justice and Louis A. Pérez, The University of North Carolina Biracial Egalitarianism on Delta Cooperative Farm and Providence William LeoGrande, American University Plantation, 1936‑1956 Felix Masud‑Piloto, DePaul University Robert Ferguson, The University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill Remembering John Hope Franklin (1915‑2009) “The Union Merely Shows the Way”: Grassroots Organizing This roundtable panel commemorates the life and professional achieve‑ and the Southern Tenant Farmers Union ment of John Hope Franklin. Colleagues and former students will Jason Manthorne, University of Georgia speak, followed by audience contributions. Chair: Lonnie Bunch, National Museum of African American His‑ Cultural Obstacles to Economic Self‑Sufficiency tory and Culture John Hayes, Wake Forest University Raymond Arsenault, University of South Florida Evelyn Brooks Higginbotham, Harvard University Comment: Lu Ann Jones, National Park Service Loren Schweninger, The University of North Carolina, Greensboro John W. Franklin, National Museum of African American History  “Reacting to the Past”: The Collision of Ideas and Culture and Historical Contexts in College‑Level Classes  Balancing Acts: Crafting a Life in the Lara Vapnek, St. John’s University Mark Carnes, Barnard College Historical Profession Jeffrey Hyson, Saint Joseph’s University Hosted by the OAH Committee on the Status of Women William Offutt, Pace University in the Historical Profession Chair: Emma Jones Lapsansky‑Werner, Haverford College P  Learning American Culture and Democracy from Historic Places What the Data Tells Us About Women Historians Chair: Beth Boland, National Park Service Robert B. Townsend, American Historical Association James Percoco, West Springfield (VA) High School Carol Shull, National Park Service Comments: Vicki L. Ruiz, University of California, Irvine, Arnita Patsy Fletcher, Independent Historian Jones, American Historical Association, Betty Dessants, Shippens‑ burg University, and Anastasia Curwood, Vanderbilt University

Key To Sessions  State of the Field  Teaching P Public History  Graduate Student  Film Screening  Offsite Sessions

46 • 2010 OAH Annual Meeting • Washington, D.C. Saturday, April 10

 Friday, April 9 ▪ 3:00 p.m.  Saturday, April 10 ▪ 7:30 a.m.  A Dynamic Field, Its Challenges and Prospects: Community College Workshop Crafting A History of the Book in America in Five Volumes Sponsored by Pearson Offsite Session at the Library of Congress Again this year, the OAH Committee on Community Colleges offers a Hosted by the American Antiquarian Society, Center for the Book at the professional development workshop for community college faculty as Library of Congress, and the University of North Carolina Press part of the annual meeting. The workshop allows community college faculty to work together on matters of common interest. The workshop A reception honoring the volume editors and authors will follow the sessions focus on two major issues that challenge historians teaching in session from 4:30 p.m. to 6:00 p.m. community colleges: teaching students of different abilities and levels of academic preparation, and assessing student learning in history as Chair: David D. Hall, General Editor, A History of the Book in they meet general education outcomes. Interactive sessions will be led America by speakers who have been dealing constructively with these issues in Members of the A History of the Book in America Editorial Board community colleges.  Friday, April 9 ▪ 3:30 p.m.—Plenary  Saturday, April 10 ▪ 8:30 a.m. The United States in the World  Clio in the Classroom: Teaching Women’s History Chair: Thomas Bender, New York University Cohosted by the OAH Committee on the Status of Women Melani McAlister, The George Washington University in the Historical Profession Matthew Connelly, Columbia University Mae M. Ngai, Columbia University Chair: Carol Berkin, Baruch College and The Graduate Center, City Nan Enstad, University of Wisconsin, Madison University of New York Barbara Winslow, Brooklyn College Margaret Crocco, Teachers College, Columbia University  Friday, April 9 ▪ 5:30 p.m. — Receptions Nicholas Syrett, University of Northern Colorado SHAFR Reception Linda Levstik, University of Kentucky Comment: Carol Berkin The Society for Historians of American Foreign Relations will host a cash bar reception for SHAFR members and all meeting attendees interested in the study of American foreign relations. United States Price Stabilization and Citizen‑Consumer Associations in the Twentieth Century Intercollegiate Studies Institute Reception Chair: Elizabeth Sanders, Cornell University All attendees are invited to a receiption hosted by the Intercollegiate Studies Institute, a non-profit educational organization whose mission Organization and Ethics: Edna Gleason’s Fair Trade Mission in is to instill in successive generations of students a better understanding California, 1900‑1940 of and appreciation for the values and institutions that sustain a free Laura Phillips, University of Virginia and virtuous society. “Mr. Taxpayer Versus Mr. Tax Spender”: Taxpayers’ Associations, SHGAPE Reception Pocketbook Politics, and the Law during the Great Depression The Society for Historians of the Gilded Age and Progressive Era will Linda Upham‑Bornstein, Plymouth State University host a reception for all SHGAPE members and meeting attendees inter‑ ested in the study of the Gilded Age and Progressive Era. The Last Price Controls: Business, Labor, and the Politics of Inflation, 1971-1974  Friday, April 9 ▪ 5:30 p.m. Benjamin Waterhouse, The University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill George C. Marshall Lecture on Military History Hosted by the Society for Military History and the George C. Comment: Victoria Saker Woeste, American Bar Foundation Marshall Foundation Chair: Mark A. Stoler, George C. Marshall Foundation Ronald Reagan’s Neshoba County Speech Brian M. Linn, Texas A&M University and President, Society for in National Memory Military History Chair: Joseph Crespino, Emory University Clausewitz and the First World War Mississippi and Memory , Chichele Professor of the History of War at Oxford Renee Romano, Oberlin College University

A reception in honor of Hew Strachan will follow the lecture. Does Neshoba County Make Life Too Easy for Democrats? David Chappell, University of Oklahoma

Comment: Joseph Crespino and Angela Dillard, University of Michigan

2010 OAH Annual Meeting • Washington, D.C. • 47 Sessions Across the Pacific: Migration between Japan, the Philip‑ State of the Field: The History of Capitalism  pines, and Taiwan—and the United States Chair: Bethany Moreton, University of Georgia Cohosted by the Immigration and Ethnic History Society Sven Beckert, Harvard University Colleen A. Dunlavy, University of Wisconsin, Madison Chair: Barbara M. Posadas, Northern Illinois University Seth Rockman, Brown University Julia Ott, New School University The Fifty‑first State: Taiwan as an Outpost of American Values Franklin Ng, California State University, Fresno The Intellectual in American History Chair: Thomas Haskell, Rice University Democratic Ideals and the Consequences of Reality: Ethnicity/Race, Religion, and Patriotism Les Intellectuels in America: William James and the Dreyfus Affair Eileen Tamura, University of Hawai’i David Weinfeld, New York University Immigrant or Conqueror: A Tale within a Tale of Americans Lewish Hayden: Former Slave, Abolitionist, Intellectual in the Philippines Peter Wirzbicki, New York University Judith R. Raftery, California State University, Chico Comment: K. Scott Wong, Williams College Academic Freedom from Left to Right: The Case of Lewis Feuer Julian Nemeth, Brandeis University Fear and Loving in the Early Republic: American Emotional Comment: Thomas Haskell Responses to the French Revolution Chair: Jan Ellen Lewis, Rutgers University, Newark Politicizing Southern Culture after World War II Chair: Grace Hale, University of Virginia The Reign of Terror in America: The French Revolution and the Politics of Fear “I Respect a Good Southern White Man”: Jimmy Carter’s Rachel Hope Cleves, University of Victoria Southernness and the 1976 Presidential Campaign Zachary Lechner, Temple University The Feeling of Democracy: Democratic‑Republicans, Francophilia, and American Political Culture Laying a Bedrock for the Backlash: Country Music Politics before Matthew Rainbow Hale, Goucher College George Wallace Peter La Chapelle, Nevada State College Comment: Jan Ellen Lewis and Nicole Eustace, New York University

Southern Family Life and the Absence of Debate in the 1970s Federal Expansion in the Civil War Era Ted Ownby, University of Mississippi Chair: Robert I. Goler, United States Mint

Comment: Grace Hale The Civil War Origins of a Federal Role in Education Michael David Cohen, University of Tennessee The Memory of John Brown and Radical Antislavery Culture in America, 1880‑1940 Why a Bureau of Engraving and Printing? Debating the Chair: Julie Roy Jeffrey, Goucher College Need of a Government Monopoly Franklin Noll, Noll Historical Consulting, LLC “Thanks to your own struggles…the slave is free”: Mary Brown’s Eastern Tour of 1882 Establishing the Department of Justice: Aspirations Bonnie Laughlin‑Schultz, Appalachian State University and Disappointment Brooks D. Simpson, Arizona State University Two Sides of a Similar Coin: George Latimer, John Hutchinson, and the Legacy of Antislavery Activism Comment: Robert I. Goler Scott Gac, Trinity College

The Mad Hero: John Brown through the Prism of Paint Robert Blakeslee Gilpin, The University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill

Comment: Julie Roy Jeffrey and Caleb McDaniel, Rice University

48 • 2010 OAH Annual Meeting • Washington, D.C. Saturday, April 10

Race and the Law: African Americans in Lesbian and Gay Publications and the Instruction Southern Courts, 1865‑1920 of Sexuality in Post‑Stonewall America Chair: Ariela Gross, University of Southern California Chair: John Howard, Kings College, London

From Slave to Litigant: African Americans’ Experiences Sex Will Keep Us Together: The Gay Press and Gay in Court in the Postwar South Sexual Expression during the AIDS Epidemic Melissa Milewski, New York University David Palmer, The University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill

Between the Law and the Lash: Violence, Coercion, and Citizenship Mainstream Fiction, Gay Reviewers, and the in the Postemancipation United States Evolving Politics of Gay Cultural Visibility in the 1970s Carole Emberton, State University of New York, Buffalo Brian Distelberg, Yale University

Regulating Race: Interracial Relationships, Community, Rumors, AIDS, and Black Gay Identities in Chicago, 1978‑1985 and Law in the Jim Crow South Tristan Cabello, Northwestern University L. Kathryn Tucker, University of Georgia Lesbian Feminist Sexual Politics and Press between Comment: Laura Edwards, Duke University the Second Wave and the Sex Wars Anastasia Jones, Yale University Rethinking Congress and Politics in America, 1839 to 1907 Chair: Fred Beuttler, Office of the Historian, Comment: Nan Alamilla Boyd, San Francisco State University U. S. House of Representatives  State of the Field: History of Science Congressional Resistance to Presidential Protection, 1901 to 1907 Moderator: Karen Rader, Virginia Commonwealth University Matthew C. Sherman, Institute for Political History Ruth Schwartz Cowan, University of Pennsylvania James Delbourgo, Rutgers University Visions of an Antislavery Speakership: Abolitionists Contest the David Kaiser, Massachusetts Institute of Technology Slave Power’s Mastery of the House Daniel J. Kevles, Yale University Corey Brooks, University of California, Berkeley Karen Rader, Virginia Commonwealth University

Wives, Widows, and Potential Wives: Nineteenth‑Century Congres‑  State of the Field: History of American Slavery sional Attitudes and Actions toward Women’s Property Rights Cohosted by the Gilder Lehrman Center for the Study of Slavery, Resistance, Tonia M. Compton, Columbia College and Abolition at Yale University Chair: Peter H. Wood, Duke University Comment: Mark Summers, University of Kentucky Ira Berlin, University of Maryland, College Park Jennifer Morgan, New York University Fighting over the Future: Social Reformers and Childhood Stephanie Smallwood, University of Washington, Seattle Leslie Harris, Emory University in Nineteenth‑Century America Edward E. Baptist, Cornell University Chair: Katharine Bullard, Fairleigh Dickinson University Ethnic Politics: Negotiating Empire, Race, and Boderlands Whose Child is This? Contested Custody in Nineteenth‑Century Chair: Rebecca Kugel, University of California, Riverside New York City Orphan Asylums Sarah Mulhall Adelman, Johns Hopkins University “The disaffected people of Great Tellico”: The Struggle for “Speaking Pieces about Liberty”: Performing Freedom at the New Empire in a Cherokee Town Tyler Boulware, West Virginia University York African Free School Anna Mae Duane, University of Connecticut “A Delicate Subject”: Clemencia LÓpez’s Anti‑Imperialist Race and Ethical Obligation: Orphans in the Errand, 1901‑1903 Laura Prieto, Simmons College Reconstruction of Virginia Catherine Jones, University of California, Santa Cruz The “White Persons Skulking” Law and Other Tales of Biracial, Supply and Demand: The Mutual Dependency of Multicultural Democracy, and Justice on the Wisconsin Frontier: Children’s Institutions and the American Farmer, 1865‑1920 1820‑1830 Megan Birk, The University of Texas, Pan American Lucy Eldersveld Murphy, The Ohio State University Comment: Joan Jensen, New Mexico State University

2010 OAH Annual Meeting • Washington, D.C. • 49 Sessions  Saturday, April 10 ▪ 9:00 a.m. Publications on the Status of Women, 1960 to Present: A New Source for Research on the Feminist Working Space: A Conversation between Labor Histo‑  Movement in the United States rians and Labor Geographers Cohosted by the OAH Committee on the Status of Women Offsite at the D.C. Offices of the College of William and Mary in the Historical Profession Hosted by the Labor and Working-Class History Association Chair: Thomas Dublin, State University of New York, Binghamton Chair: Lisa Michelle Fine, Michigan State University Keisha Blain, Princeton University Rick Halpern, University of Toronto Carrie Baker, Berry College Laurie Mercier, Washington State University, Vancouver Marjorie Spruill, University of South Carolina John B. Russo, Youngstown State University Cynthia Harrison, The George Washington University Susan McGrath‑Champ, University of Sydney Kathleen Laughlin, Metropolitan State University Geoff Mann, Simon Fraser University Comments: Lisa Michelle Fine and Reassessing Andrew Jackson in the Twenty‑first Century Andrew J. Herod, University of Georgia Moderator: Daniel Usner, Vanderbilt University Daniel Feller, University of Tennessee  Saturday, April 10 ▪ 10:15 a.m. John Belohlavek, University of South Florida Mark Cheathem, Cumberland University Freethinkers’ Imagined Communities in the Age of Revolu‑ Jon Meacham, tion: Jefferson, Paine, and Cosmopolitans in Europe Kirsten Wood, Florida International University Chair: John Corrigan, Florida State University Rethinking Gender and the State in the New Deal Era At Home in the Universe: The Emotional Valence of Chair: Michael Willrich, Brandeis University Vitalism in the Early American Republic Kirsten Fischer, University of Minnesota Household Workers in the YWCA Industrial Program Dorothea Browder, Western Kentucky University ’s Emotional Geography Maurizio Valsania, University of Torino Through the Normal Channels: Food and Family in the New Deal Rachel Moran, The Pennsylvania State University Portable Patriotism: Cosmopolitanism and Radical Thought in the Age of Revolutions Gender, the Social Security Act, and the Emergence of a Erica Mannucci, University of Milan, Bicocca Public Child Welfare System Catherine Rymph, University of Missouri Comment: John Corrigan Comment: Michael Willrich American Culture/American Democracy from the Margins: Ethnic and Immigrant Experiences in Negotiating United Remapping the City: Integration, Segregation, States Society and Displacement in Postwar Philadelphia Cohosted by the Immigration and Ethnic History Society Chair: Matthew Countryman, University of Michigan Chair: Elliott R. Barkan, California State University, San Bernardino Toward a Democratic Ideal: The Creation of Racially Integrated Work, Family, Ethnicity, and Nation: Adapting to American Space in Postwar Philadelphia Culture as a Workingman in New England=s Petits‑Canadas at the Abigail Perkiss, Temple University Turn of the Twentieth Century Florence Mae Waldron, Millersville University Mapping the Impact of Philadelphia’s Crosstown Expressway Amy Hillier, University of Pennsylvania Banning Shylock: Jewish Efforts to Censor Racial Ridicule in Early Motion Pictures “The American Dream—For All Americans”: M. Alison Kibler, Franklin and Marshall College The African American Response to Jim Crow in Levittown James Wolfinger, DePaul University Learning to be a Citizen Dorothee Schneider, University of Illinois Comment: Matthew Countryman

Comment: Hasia Diner, New York University

50 • 2010 OAH Annual Meeting • Washington, D.C. Saturday, April 10

Digital Tools for Historians Reforming Faith: Progress and Liberal Religion Chair: Brett Bobley, National Endowment for the Humanities in Nineteenth‑Century America Chair: James Moorhead, Princeton Theological Seminary Zotero: Collect, Manage, Cite, and Share Your Research Trevor Owens, Center for History and New Media, History Matters to God: Antislavery Reform, George Mason University Liberal Protestants, and Historicism Molly Oshatz, Florida State University ScholarPress: Open Research and Teaching Jeremy Boggs, Center for History and New Media, “Real Religion”: Self‑Culture and the Defense George Mason University of the Haymarket Anarchists Amy Kittelstrom, Sonoma State University Omeka: Conduct and Publish Your Research Sheila Brennan, Center for History and New Media, “A New Era for Religious Experience”: American George Mason University Intellectuals and the Scientific Study of Conversion Christopher White, Vassar College Project Blacklight and the University of Virginia Geospatial Data Portal: Owning Your Research Infrastructure Comment: James Moorhead Wayne Graham and Joseph Gilbert, University of Virginia  Finding a Good Home for Your The New Intellectual History of Conservatism Manuscript in These Times Moderator: Gillis Harp, Grove City College Jennifer Burns, University of Virginia Chair: Sandra Dijkstra, Sandra Dijkstra Literary Agency Beverly Gage, Yale University Steve Forman, W.W. Norton Angus Burgin, American Academy of Arts and Sciences Peter Ginna, Bloomsbury Press Michael Kimmage, Catholic University of America Tim Bent, Andrew Miller, Knopf Race, Community, and Discourse in the Nineteenth‑Century Temperance Movement Japanese‑American Relations since Chair: William Rorabaugh, University of Washington World War II: A Trans‑Pacific Dialogue Hosted by the OAH‑Japanese Association of American “The Temperance cause is emphatically the cause Studies Collaborative Committee of the colored man”: African American Empowerment and Chair: Robert J. McMahon, The Ohio State University Social Reform in Antebellum New England Robert P. Forbes, University of Connecticut Gendering the United States Military Presence in Japan: Military Bases, Prostitution, and Public Health Regimes in Early Postwar “Whiskey found a ready sale”: Natives, Whites, and Japan, 1945‑1960 Liquor Consumption on the Western Frontier before the Civil War Sayuri Guthrie‑Shimizu, Michigan State University Rebekah Mergenthal, Pacific Lutheran University The United States, Japan, and the Challenges of the Vietnam War Continuity and Transcendence in Nineteenth‑Century Hiroshi Fujimoto, Nanzan University Temperance Discourse H. Paul Thompson, Jr., North Greenville University The Nixon Administration’s Initiative for United States‑Chinese Rapprochement and its Impact on United States‑Japanese Relations Comment: William Rorabaugh Hideki Kan, Seinan Jo‑Gakuin University

The Varieties of Progressive Politics in the New Deal Era Comment: Christopher Jespersen, North Georgia College and State Chair: Alan Brinkley, Columbia University University and Thomas Zeiler, University of Colorado

Outside and Inside: What Impact Did Mass Movements Really Have on the New Deal? Doug Rossinow, Metropolitan State University

The Political Culture of American Anti‑Fascism John Enyeart, Bucknell University Key To Sessions

The Black Challenge to the Red, White, and Blue: What Impact Did  State of the Field  Teaching the Black Left Have Redefining Democracy during the New Deal? Public History  Graduate Student Beth Bates, Wayne State University P  Film Screening  Offsite Sessions

2010 OAH Annual Meeting • Washington, D.C. • 51 Sessions Music Production and Radio Reception in the The OAH Standards: Are They a Good Model Post Civil Rights Era for Contingent Employment? Chair: Paul A. Anderson, University of Michigan Howard Smead, University of Maryland, College Park

All Manner of Sin: The Country Music Industry and the The Challenges of Part‑Time Faculty Employment Perils of Downtown Elizabeth Hohl, Fairfield University Jeremy Hill, The George Washington University  Saturday, April 10 ▪ 10:45 a.m. Broadcasting for the Ghetto? The Struggle over Soul Radio and Media Activism in the Black Power Era  U.S. Labor and the Global South Lars Lierow, The George Washington University Offsite at the D.C. Offices of the College of William and Mary Hosted by the Labor and Working-Class History Association Is Love “in need” of Love? Stevie Wonder’s Songs in the Key of Life Moderator: Daniel Bender, University of Toronto and the Sublation of Eros After MLK Robert LeVertis Bell, University of Michigan  Saturday, April 10 ▪ 12:00 noon Luncheons Comment: Paul A. Anderson Urban History Association The Life and Death of Democracy: Author Meets Critics The Urban History Association 2010 luncheon keynote address, Moderator: Michael Schudson, Columbia University “Is There Anything New to Say About Urban Renewal?” will be delivered by Lizabeth Cohen, Howard Mumford Jones Professor of John Keane, University of Westminster, London American Studies and chair of the history department at Harvard University. Comment: Alexander Keyssar, Harvard University; David Thelen, Indiana University; and Jane Mansbridge, Harvard University  Focus on Teaching Hosted by the OAH Committee on Teaching The Problem of Democracy in Wartime: Cultural Allida Black will discuss the Eleanor Roosevelt Project’s innova‑ and Political Conflicts in America’s Great War Mobilization tive teaching projects, including mini-documentaries, podcasts, a Hosted by the Society for Historians of the Gilded Age and Progressive Era web-based exhibit, and online document-based curricula designed Chair: Lynn Dumenil, Occidental College in partnership with primary and secondary school teachers. She will demonstrate how such materials can instruct and inspire students at Isolationist Dissent and International Engagement in all levels studying Eleanor Roosevelt and the Universal Declaration American Progressive Politics of Human Rights. Christopher McKnight Nichols, University of Pennsylvania Women and Social Movements From Pacifist to Patriotic Motherhood: Mary Roberts Rinehart and The Women and Social Movements Web site and Alexander Street the Domestic Drama of Military Enlistment in 1917 Press sponsor a luncheon to discuss recent developments at the Web Kate Hallgren, The Graduate Center, City University of New York site, in particular the publication of “Women’s International Agen‑ das, 1840-2000,” a new digital archive available through library sub‑ A Prefigurative Media War? Soldiers, Communication scription. The luncheon is free, but advance registration is required Technologies, and Great War America and space is limited. Please contact Thomas Dublin at to reserve a place.

Comment: James Sparrow, University of Chicago Agricultural History Society Shane Hamilton, University of Georgia, will present the keynote  “Come Together”: Part-Time/Contingent address, “The Cold War and the Global Supermarket.” Professor Faculty in History Hamilton is the 2008 winner of the Theodore Saloutos Book Award Hosted by the OAH Committee on Part‑Time and Adjunct Employment for the best book on United States Agricultural History. Chair: Donald Rogers, Central Connecticut State University and Housatonic Community College Society for Historians of American Foreign Relations The 2010 Stuart L. Bernath Memorial Lecture will be given by Eliza‑ Historians’ Contingent Workforce: Where Have We Been? beth Borgwardt, Washington University. Andrew J. Rotter, Colgate Where Are We Going? University, will preside. Donn Hall, Ivy Tech Community College, Indiana, and Arlene Lazarowitz, California State University, Long Beach  Saturday, April 10 ▪ 12:30 noon  LAWCHA Luncheon and General Meeting Offsite at the D.C. Offices of the College of William and Mary Professor Julie Greene, University of Maryland, College Park, will present the keynote address.

52 • 2010 OAH Annual Meeting • Washington, D.C. Saturday, April 10

 Saturday, April 10 ▪ 1:45 p.m. Antievolutionism Reconsidered: Race, Gender, and Class in the 1920s Culture Wars Concord, Massachusetts: Transcendentalism and Social Chair: Ronald L. Numbers, University of Wisconsin Reform in Mid-Nineteenth-Century America Hosted by the Community College Humanities Association Creation Science v. Bolshevism: George McCready Price Chairs: Martha Holder, Wytheville Community College and David as Anti‑Socialist Crusader Berry, Essex County College Carl Weinberg, Organization of American Historians

Emerson’s Divinity School Address: Theological Triumph Mothers and Monkeys: Gender in the Antievolution Controversies or Ethical Failure? Jeffrey Moran, University of Kansas Paul Sukys, North Central State College

Knowing Our Own Ponds: Place-Based Education The Brontosaurus Bully v. The Missing Link: Evolution and Thoreau’s Field Trips and Antievolutionism in 1925 Colleen Webster, Harford Community College Andrew Nolan, University of Maryland, Baltimore County

The Oversoul in Emerson and Thoreau Comment: Constance Clark, Worcester Polytechnic Institute Richard Marranca, Passaic County Community College  Paper Works in the Classroom: Teaching with Prints, Back to Nature Beyond the Bricks: Transcendentalism Photographs, and Ephemera in Paterson, New Jersey Chair: Georgia Barnhill, American Antiquarian Society Alexandra Della Fera, Passaic County Community College Joshua Brown, The Graduate Center, City University of New York Kevin Muller, Chabot College The Commerce of Social Change: Business, Consumer Cul‑ Larry Tise, East Carolina University ture, and American Politics, 1950‑1980 Comment: Megan Kate Nelson, American Antiquarian Society Chair: Susannah Walker, Virginia Wesleyan College Managing Mobility: Border Regulations, Restaurants of Northern Aggression: Food, Race, and Immigration, and Tourism Power in the Civil Rights Movement Chair: John Torpey, City University of New York Graduate Center Nicolaas Mink, University of Wisconsin, Madison Reuniting the Many Histories of People on the Move: Disarm the Nursery? War Toys, “Healthy” Boys, and A“Grand Unified Theory” of Human Mobility? the Business of Culture in the 1960s Andrew K. Sandoval‑Strausz, University of New Mexico Rob Goldberg, University of Pennsylvania The American Tourist, as the Richest, is the Most Appreciated Bootlegging as a Form of Anti‑Capitalist Consumerism Catherine Cocks, Independent Scholar Alex Cummings, Vassar College At the Border and Beyond: The Immigration Border Patrol Comment: Susannah Walker and the Development of Federal Immigration Enforcement Policy, 1924‑1954 Were Jews Silent? A Roundtable Discussion of Hasia S. Deborah Kang, University of California, Berkeley Diner’s We Remember with Reverence and Love: American Jews and the Myth of Silence After The Holocaust, 1945-1962 Comment: John Torpey Cohosted by the American Jewish Historical Society Moderator: Tony Michels, University of Wisconsin, Madison Displaying Fitness: Bodybuilding and the Visualizing of Edward T. Linenthal, Journal of American History Civic Identities, 1860‑1915 Hasia Diner, New York University Chair: Robin Veder, Pennsylvania State University, Harrisburg John Bodnar, Indiana University Gary Gerstle, Vanderbilt University Building Body and Mind: Fitness at the Pennsylvania Cheryl Greenberg, Trinity College Hospital for the Insane Emily Godbey, Iowa State University Revisiting John Higham=s Strangers in the Land: A Classic in a New Era of Migration and Immigration Studies The “Moral Value of Physical Training”: Eugen Sandow Cohosted by the Society for Historians of the Gilded Age and Progressive Era and Health for the Masses and the Immigration and Ethnic History Society Ellery Foutch, University of Pennsylvania Moderator: Timothy Meagher, Catholic University of America Maddalena Marinari, University of Kansas Democratic Disembodiment and the Politics of Muscle Deirdre Moloney, George Mason University in Late-Nineteenth‑Century American Culture Katie Benton‑Cohen, Georgetown University James Salazar, Temple University Alan Kraut, American University Comment: Robin Veder

2010 OAH Annual Meeting • Washington, D.C. • 53 Sessions Democracy and American Music  State of the Field: New Directions in Moderator: David Suisman, University of Delaware Working‑Class History Chair: Jacqueline Jones, The University of Texas, Austin Lauren Sklaroff, University of South Carolina Zaragosa Vargas, The University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill Charles McGovern, College of William and Mary Nancy MacLean, Northwestern University Eric Weisbard, University of Alabama Nelson Lichtenstein, University of California, Santa Barbara David Stowe, Michigan State University David Roediger, University of Illinois, Urbana‑Champaign  State of the Field: Social and Cultural History Critical Perspectives on “Race” and Preservation: Chair: William Chafe, Duke University Reassessing History and Practice Lizabeth Cohen, Harvard University Chair: Angel David Nieves, Hamilton College Kathleen Brown, University of Pennsylvania Joseph Heathcott, The New School Gary Okihiro, Columbia University Kelly Quinn, Miami (OH) University Daniel Rodgers, Princeton University Walter David Greason, Ursinus College Mary Corbin Sies, University of Maryland Comment: William Chafe Lynne Horiuchi, University of California, Berkeley After Intervention: What Happens Once the American Reform by Electoral and Non‑Electoral Means Chair: Howard Brick, University of Michigan Shooting has Stopped? Hosted by the Society for Historians of American Foreign Relations “Pen and Ink Communion”: Evangelical Reading and Chair: Frank Costigliola, University of Connecticut and Institute for Advanced Study Writing in Antebellum America Mary Kelley, University of Michigan The Philippine-American War Paul Kramer, Vanderbilt University Realigning Parties, Reforming Gender in New Deal Politics: Josephine Roche’s 1934 Gubernatorial Campaign World War I Robyn Muncy, University of Maryland, College Park David M. Kennedy, Stanford University Comment: Susan Ware, Independent Scholar and James Brewer Stewart, Macalester College Korea Bruce Cumings, University of Chicago Local and Global Perspectives on the End of Black Power Chair: Nikhil Singh, New York University World War II Wendy Wall, Queen’s University

The “Forgotten Civil Right” and the Birth of the History, Historians, and Public Culture: Star Trek, The Har‑ American Criminal Justice Industry Elizabeth Hinton, Columbia University lem Renaissance, and the United States Coup in Iran Chair: Patricia Loughlin, University of Central Oklahoma Black Internationalism and Tricontinental Divides, 1964‑1976 Robeson Taj Frazier, University of Southern California The New Negro Goes to School: Black History and the Harlem Renaissance Transnational Solidarities between the Black Freedom Jeffrey Snyder, New York University Movement and Algeria, 1962‑1978 Samir Meghelli, Columbia University Historicizing at Warp Speed: The Role of the Historian in Star Trek Aaron Miller, Ball State University Masquerading as Lenin in October: Black Marxist‑Leninist Organi‑ zations and the End of Black Power History Written by the Planners: Donald Wilber’s Evolving Schol‑ Matthew Birkhold, State University of New York, Binghamton arly Justifications for the 1953 CIA Coup in Iran Matt Kohlstedt, The George Washington University Comment: Nikhil Singh Comment: Michelle McClellan, University of Michigan

Key To Sessions  State of the Field  Teaching P Public History  Graduate Student  Film Screening  Offsite Sessions

54 • 2010 OAH Annual Meeting • Washington, D.C. Saturday, April 10

 Saturday, April 10 ▪ 2:15 p.m. P Carter G. Woodson, Public History, and the National Park Service  Transnationalism and Latina History Hosted by the OAH Committee on National Park Service Collaboration Offsite at the D.C. Offices of the College of William and Mary Chair: Robert T. Parker, Carter G. Woodson Cohosted by the Labor and Working-Class History Association Home National Historic Site Chair: Vicki L. Ruiz, University of California, Irvine Natalia Molina, University of California, San Diego Talitha LeFlouria, Howard University Ana Elizabeth Rosas, University of California, Irvine Pero G. Dagbovie, Michigan State University Carmen Teresa Whalen, Williams College Elizabeth Clark‑Lewis, Howard University María Cristina García, Cornell University Bettye Collier Thomas, Temple University Robert Stanton, National Park Service

Comment: Gayle Hazelwood, National Capital Parks, East, and Bettye Gardner, Coppin State College

 Saturday, April 10 ▪ 3:30 p.m. OAH Awards Ceremony and Presidential Address Security Against Democracy Elaine Tyler May, University of Minnesota

Presiding: David Hollinger, University of California, Berkeley, OAH President-Elect

The OAH Presidential Address will be preceded by the presentation of the 2010 OAH awards and prizes.

5:30 p.m. ▪ Presidential and Distinguished Members Reception The final convention reception will honor outgoing OAH President Elaine Tyler May and all of the OAH distinguished members. Enjoy hors d’oeuvres and cocktails before dinner, and say farewell to friends and colleagues until the 2011 OAH Annual Meeting in Houston.

Cosponsored by Basic Books, a member of the Perseus Books Group and Pearson

2010 OAH Annual Meeting • Washington, D.C. • 55 Committee and Board Meetings  Wednesday, April 7 1:00 p.m. to 6:00 p.m. OAH Executive Board

 Thursday, April 8 8:00 a.m. to 1:00 p.m. OAH Executive Board 8:30 a.m. to 10:30 a.m. OAH International Committee 1:00 p.m. to 3:00 p.m. OAH Committee on Part-time and Adjunct Employment LAWCHA Board Meeting OAH Membership Committee 4:00 p.m. to 6:00 p.m Historians of American Communism

 Friday, April 9 8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. 2011 OAH Annual Meeting Program Committee 8:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. OAH Nominating Board 8:30 a.m. to 10:30 a.m. OAH/JAAS Japan Historians Collaborative Committee OAH Committee on National Park Service Collaboration 1:00 p.m. to 3:00 p.m. OAH Committee on Academic Freedom OAH Committee on Community Colleges 3:00 p.m. to 6:00 p.m. Annual Meeting of the Immigration and Ethnic History Society 3:30 p.m. to 5:00 p.m. OAH Committee on Women in the Historical Profession 4:00 p.m. to 5:30 p.m. Society for Historians of the Gilded Age and Progressive Era Business Meeting

 Saturday, April 10 8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. 2011 OAH Annual Meeting Program Committee 8:30 a.m. to 11:30 a.m. Journal of American History Editorial Board Meeting 8:30 a.m. to 10:30 a.m. OAH Committee on Public History OAH Magazine of History Editorial Board Committee on the Status of ALANA Historians 9:00 a.m. to 10:00 a.m. Urban History Association Board Meeting 9:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. History Cooperative Board Meeting 1:30 p.m. to 3:30 p.m. OAH Committee on Teaching 3:00 p.m. to 6:00 p.m. OAH Leadership Advisory Council 3:30 p.m. to 4:00 p.m. OAH Business Meeting

56 • 2010 OAH Annual Meeting • Washington, D.C. Participants A Biggs, Adam 30 Campbell, Emory 43 DeFlitch, Teresa 37 Forbes, Robert P. 51 Adelman, Sarah Mulhall 49 Binker, Mary Jo 33 Campney, Brent M.S. 42 Delbourgo, James 49 Ford, Tanisha 36 Agbe‑Davies, Anna 30 Birkhold, Matthew 54 Canedo, Eduardo 38 Della Fera, Alexandra 53 Forman, Steve 51 Ahlberg, Kristin 33 Birk, Megan 49 Carnes, Mark 46 Deloria, Philip 41 Fortin, Jeffrey 32 Akade, Aimionoizomo 37 Black, Allida 52 Catsam, Derek 29 Dessants, Betty 46 Foutch, Ellery 53 Alexander, Adele 40 Blackmar, Elizabeth 41 Cavin, Aaron 35 Deutsch, James 33 Franklin, John W. 46 Alexander, Leslie 42 Blain, Keisha 50 Cephas, Jana 45 DeVito, Carole 37 Frazier, Robeson Taj 54 Alidio, Kimberly 36 Blair, Melissa Estes 30 Chafe, William 54 Dickson, Ted 30 Freeberg, Ernest Frithiof 30 Allen, Michael 43 Blake, Casey 42 Chappell, David 47 Dijkstra, Sandra 51 Freund, David 35 Allison‑Bunnell, Jodi 45 Blatt, Marty 37 Chappell, Marisa 39 Dillard, Angela 47 Friedman, Jason 38 Alpers, Benjamin L. 42 Blocker, Jack 44 Cheathem, Mark 50 Dillard, Mary 38 Friedman, Natalie 38 Alvarez, Luis 32 Block, Kristen 39 Cheezum, Eric A. 43 Diner, Hasia 50, 53 Frisch, Michael 44 Anderson, Jennifer 41 Blum, Hester 46 Cherny, Robert 43 Distelberg, Brian 49 Fronc, Jennifer 45 Anderson, Paul A. 52 Bobley, Brett 51 Child, Brenda 37 Dochuk, Darren 43 Fujimoto, Hiroshi 51 Andrews, Gordon 41 Bodnar, John 53 Chin, Elizabeth 34 Domber, Gregory F. 38 Fure‑Slocum, Eric 45 Andrews, Thomas 37 Boggs, Jeremy 35, 51 Christensen, Catherine 43 Donalson, Daniel 37 Anishanslin, Zara 32 Boisseau, TJ 34 Clark, Constance 53 Dorn, Charles 42 G Ansolabehere, Stephen 45 Bokovoy, Matthew 35 Clark, Jessica 35 Doss, Erika 41 Gac, Scott 48 Antracoli, Alexis 29 Boland, Beth 46 Clark‑Lewis, Elizabeth 55 Duane, Anna Mae 49 Gage, Beverly 51 Arenson, Adam 33 Bollettino, Maria 34 Clark-Wiltz, Meredith 35 Dublin, Thomas 50, 52 Gallagher, Patrick 44 Arsenault, Raymond 29, 46 Borgwardt, Clemens, Billie Jean 43 Dumenil, Lynn 52 Gallup‑Diaz, Ignacio 39 Ashby, Steven K. 31 Elizabeth 38, 52 Cleves, Rachel Hope 48 Dunlavy, Colleen A. 48 Gamber, Wendy 39 Asselin, Pierre 39 Boris, Eileen 36, 40 Cocks, Catherine 53 DuVal, Kathleen 35 García, María Atkinson, Clarissa 30 Borish, Linda J. 31 Cohen, Andrew 39 Cristina 46, 55 Aufderheide, Pat 35 Boulware, Tyler 49 Cohen, Dan 44 E Garcia, Matthew 32 Bowes, John 31 Cohen, Deborah 32 Edge, Thomas 33 Gardner, Bettye 55 B Boyden, James 42 Cohen, Joanna 32 Edwards, Laura 49 Gellman, Erik 44 Baer, Friederike 45 Boyd, Nan Alamilla 49 Cohen, Julie 32 Edwards, Mark 43 Gems, Gerald R. 31 Baker, Carrie 50 Brennan, Mary 44 Cohen, Lindsay Silver 41 Efford, Alison 45 Gendzel, Glen 32 Baker, Kent 41 Brennan, Sheila 51 Cohen, Lizabeth 31, 52, 54 Emberton, Carole 49 Gerstle, Gary 46, 53 Balogh, Brian 35 Brick, Howard 54 Cohen, Michael David 48 Enstad, Nan 47 Gerwin, David 41 Baptist, Edward E. 49 Brimmer, Brandi 36 Cohn, Erin Park 36 Enyeart, John 51 Gifford, Laura 36 Barkan, Elliott R. 50 Brinkley, Alan 51 Compton, Tonia M. 49 Epstein, Terrie 41 Gilbert, Joseph 51 Barker, Kathleen 43 Brøndal, Jørøn 32 Connelly, Matthew 47 Erenberg, Lewis 33 Gilpin, Robert Blakeslee 48 Barnhill, Georgia 53 Brooks, Corey 49 Conner, Catherine 40 Eschen, Penny Von 31 Ginna, Peter 51 Barrett, Ross 32 Browder, Dorothea 50 Conzen, Kathleen N. 45 Espiritu, Augusto 31 Glickman, Lawrence 34 Bates, Beth 51 Brown, Joshua 53 Cooley, Will 39 Eustace, Nicole 48 Godbey, Emily 53 Beckert, Sven 48 Brown, Kathleen 54 Cooperman, Jessica 40 Goldberg, Rob 53 Beeby, James M. 43 Brown, Laura Clark 45 Corrigan, John 50 F Goldstein, Alyosha 31 Beek, Liam van 33 Brown, Nikki 33 Costigliola, Frank 54 Fairclough, Adam 42 Goler, Robert I. 48 Bell, Karen 30 Brown, Sarah Drake 41 Cott, Nancy 36 Fay, Jacob 37 Gordon, Ann D. 40 Bell, Robert LeVertis 52 Bruscino, Thomas 29 Countryman, Matthew 50 Feldstein, Ruth 36 Gordon, Leah 29 Belohlavek, John 50 Bryan, Coventry, Michael 52 Feller, Daniel 50 Gore, Dayo 30 Benbow, Mark 37 Mary Lynn McCree 40 Cowan, Ruth Schwartz 49 Ferguson, Robert 46 Grabowski, John 33 Bender, Daniel 52 Bryant, Joan 37 Crespino, Joseph 47 Fermaglich, Kirsten 40 Graham, Wayne 51 Bender, Thomas 47 Buff, Rachel 32 Crocco, Margaret 47 Fessenden, Tracy 36 Greason, Walter David 54 Beneke, Chris 29 Bullard, Katharine 49 Crosby, Alfred 37 Feurer, Rosemary 39 Greenberg, Cheryl 53 Bennett, Shannon 42 Bunch, Lonnie 46 Crouch, Christian 39 Field, Tony 35 Greene, Alison 31 Benton‑Cohen, Katie 53 Burgin, Angus 51 Cumings, Bruce 54 Fine, Lisa Michelle 50 Griffin, Patrick 31 Bent, Tim 51 Burg, Steven 33 Cummings, Alex 53 Fischer, Kirsten 50 Gross, Ariela 49 Bergler, Thomas 43 Burkholder, Zoe 29 Curwood, Anastasia 46 Fischer, Marilyn 38 Grubb, Abbie Salyers 33 Bergstrom, Laura 42 Burns, Jennifer 51 Fisher, Andrew 34 Guevarra, Rudy P. 44 Berkin, Carol 47 Busto, Rudy V. 37 D Flaherty, Daniel 34 Guglielmo, Jennifer 35 Berlin, Ira 49 Byrne, Kevin 31 Dagbovie, Pero G. 55 Fleegler, Robert 32 Gurman, Hannah 32 Bernstein, David 31 Dance, Eola 30 Fletcher, Patsy 46 Gustafson, Melanie 40 Berry, David 53 C Davis, Marni 37 Foley, Ehren 45 Guterl, Matthew 36 Berry, Keith 43 Cabello, Tristan 49 Davis, Rebecca 39 Fones‑Wolf, Elizabeth 32 Guthrie‑Shimizu, Sayuri 51 Beuttler, Fred 49 Calloway, Colin G. 35 DeBlasio, Donna 33 Fones‑Wolf, Ken 31

2010 OAH Annual Meeting • Washington, D.C. • 57 Participants

H Huebner, Andrew 32 Kramer, Paul 54 Li, Robin 36 Michels, Tony 40, 53 Haberman, Robb 33 Hughes, Quenby 40 Krasovic, Mark 36 Livie, Kyle 42 Michney, Todd 40 Hahn, Peter 40 Hulsether, Mark 43 Kraut, Alan 53 Logevall, Fredrik 39 Milewski, Melissa 49 Hale, Grace 48 Huret, Romain 42 Kraut, Julia Rose 45 Long, Alecia 42 Miller, Aaron 54 Hale, Matthew Rainbow 48 Huston, Reeve 34 Kropp, Phoebe 38 Long, Gretchen 30 Miller, Andrew 51 Haley, John 43 Huyck, Heather 30 Kugel, Rebecca 49 Loughlin, Patricia 54 Miller, Joseph 34 Hall, David D. 47 Hyson, Jeffrey 46 Kuklick, Bruce 42 Loughran, Trish 33 Millward, Jessica 42 Hall, Donn 52 Kumar, Deepa 32 Lovett, Laura 43 Milov, Sarah 38 Hallgren, Kate 52 I Kunzel, Regina 36 Luebke, Peter 31 Minardi, Margot 38 Halpern, Rick 50 Isenberg, Nancy 34 Kupperman, Karen 39 Mini, John 38 Hamilton, Shane 52 Kupsky, Gregory 45 M Mink, Gwendolyn 39 Hamlin, Francoise 43 J Kurashige, Scott 30 MacLean, Nancy 54 Mink, Nicolaas 53 Hampson, Patricia 35 Jacobs, Meg 34 Madley, Benjamin 41 Mintz, Steven 44 Hanna, Mark 46 Jacoby, Karl 37 L Maffly‑Kipp, Laurie 37 Mittelstadt, Jennifer 36 Hannickel, Erica 41 Janiewski, Dolores 45 La Chapelle, Peter 48 Manekin, Sarah 42 Mock, Michelle 29 Harp, Gillis 51 Janssen, Volker 46 Lack, Rosalie 45 Mann, Geoff 50 Mohammed, Sadia 41 Harris, Leslie 49 Jeansonne, Glen 44 Lacy, Karyn 35 Mannucci, Erica 50 Molina, Natalia 55 Harris, Luke 29 Jeffrey, Julie Roy 48 Laird, Pamela 39 Mansbridge, Jane 52 Moloney, Deirdre 53 Harrison, Cynthia 50 Jenks, Hillary 38 Landau, Emily 43 Manthorne, Jason 46 Monte‑Sano, Chauncey 41 Hartman, Andrew 42 Jensen, Joan 45, 49 Langlois, Lisa 34 Marinari, Maddalena 53 Moore, Deborah Dash 37 Hartmann, Susan 38 Jespersen, Christopher 51 Langston, Nancy 37 Markwyn, Abigail 34 Moorhead, James 51 Hartog, Jonathan Den 29 Johnson, Marilynn 41 Lapsansky‑Werner, Marranca, Richard 53 Moran, Jeffrey 53 Harvey, Paul 36 Johnson, Matthew 29 Emma Jones 46 Marsh, Ben 41 Moran, Rachel 50 Haskell, Thomas 48 Johnson, Michael 34 Lassiter, Matthew 40 Masud‑Piloto, Felix 46 More, Elizabeth 40 Hawking, C.J. 31 Jones, Anastasia 49 Laughlin, Kathleen 50 Masur, Kate 40 Moreton, Bethany 48 Hayes, John 46 Jones, Arnita 46 Laughlin‑Schultz, Matt, Susan 29 Morgan, Jennifer 49 Hayes, Melissa 39 Jones, Catherine 49 Bonnie 48 Matusow, Allen 30 Moskowitz, Marina 41 Haynes, John Earl 36 Jones, Jacqueline 54 Launius, Roger 30 May, Elaine Tyler 55 Muller, Kevin 53 Hazelwood, Gayle 55 Jones, Lu Ann 46 Laville, Helen 34 Mayeri, Serena 39 Mumford, Kevin 36 Heap, Chad 43 Jones, Martha 35 Lawrence, Adrea 35 May, Lary 33 Muncy, Robyn 54 Heard, Sandra 35 Jones-Sneed, Frances 35 Lawrence, Mark 38 Mazur, Eric 36 Murphy, Lucy Eldersveld 49 Heathcott, Joseph 54 Jones, William 40 Leab, Dan 36 McAlister, Melani 47 Murphy, Mary‑Elizabeth 33 Hedstrom, Matthew 43 Josiah, Barbara 30 Leavitt, Sarah 35 McCartin, Joseph 44 Myers, Heiss, Mary Ann 34 Lebovic, Sam 32 McCleary, Ann 33 Amrita Chakrabarti 42 Henderson, Amy H. 32 K Lechner, Zachary 48 McClellan, Michelle 54 Hering, Katharina 43 Kaiser, David 49 Lee, Anne 31 McClinton, Rowena 37 N Herod, Andrew J. 50 Kang, S. Deborah 53 Lee, Margaret 40 McCurry, Stephanie 36 Nathan Perl‑Rosenthal 46 Hershberg, James 39 Kan, Hideki 51 Lee, Michael 29 McDaniel, Caleb 48 Nation, Richard 42 Higginbotham, Kars, Marjoleine 34 Lefkovitz, Alison 40 McDaniels, Pellom 31 Nelson, Megan Kate 53 Evelyn Brooks 30, 46 Keane, John 52 LeFlouria, Talitha 55 McElvaine, Robert S. 33 Nemeth, Julian 48 Hildebrand, Reginald 37 Kennedy, David M. 54 Lemisch, Jesse 46 McEnaney, Laura 45 Newman‑Ham, Debra 30 Hillier, Amy 50 Kessler, Elizabeth 30 Lendler, Marc 45 McGee, Andrew Meade 32 Ngai, Mae M. 47 Hill, Jeremy 52 Kessler‑Harris, Alice 39 LeoGrande, William 46 McGovern, Charles 54 Ng, Franklin 48 Hinton, Elizabeth 54 Kevles, Daniel J. 49 Leroux, Karen 42 McGrath‑Champ, Susan 50 Nguyen, Lien‑Hang 39 Hoeflich, Stacy 37 Keyssar, Alexander 52 Lessoff, Alan 32 McLennan, Rebecca 46 Nichols, Hoganson, Kristin 42 Kia, Parandeh 42 Lester, Connie L. 43 McLure, Helen 42 Christopher McKnight 52 Hohl, Elizabeth 52 Kibler, M. Alison 50 Levstik, Linda 47 McMahon, Robert J. 51 Nielsen, Kim 31 Holder, Martha 53 Kimball, Jeffrey P. 39 Levy, James Anders 37 Meacham, Jon 50 Nieves, Angel David 54 Hollinger, David 55 Kimmage, Michael 51 Levy, Jonathan 29 Meagher, Timothy 53 Nishikawa, Masaru 35 Holmes, Todd 30 Kittelstrom, Amy 51 Lewis, Jan Ellen 48 Meghelli, Samir 54 Nolan, Andrew 53 Holter, Darryl 44 Klug, Thomas 39 Lichtenstein, Nelson 54 Meier, Kathryn 31 Noll, Franklin 48 Honey, Michael 44 Kazin, Michael 44 Lierow, Lars 52 Melish, Joanne Pope 45 Noonan, Ellen 43 Hood, Clifton 41 Kelley, Mary 54 Limerick, Patricia 41 Mendes, Gabriel 29 North, Diane 37 Horiuchi, Lynne 54 Knauer, Christine 33 Lim, Julian 44 Mercier, Laurie 50 Norton, Eleanor Holmes 44 Horowitz, Daniel 40 Kohlstedt, Matt 54 Lindquist‑Dorr, Lisa 32 Mergel, Sarah 44 Numbers, Ronald L. 53 Howard, John 49 Kohn, Shira 40 Linenthal, Edward T. 37, 53 Mergenthal, Rebekah 51 Nutting, Hoxie, Frederick E. 41 Koman, Rita G. 43 Linn, Brian M. 47 Meringolo, Denise D. 33 Maureen Murphy 38 Hoyos, Roman 39 Kopelson, Heather 39 Lipartito, Kenneth 32 Michel, Sonya 36

58 • 2010 OAH Annual Meeting • Washington, D.C. O Richards, Yevette 40 Shaw, Jenny 39 Tinkler, William 30 Whalen, Carmen Teresa 55 O’Brien, Andrea 33 Riess, Steven A. 31 Sherman, Matthew C. 49 Tise, Larry 53 White, Christopher 51 O’Connor, Alice 29 Rios‑Bordes, Shull, Carol 46 Titus, Jill Ogline 43 Wiese, Andrew 35 Offutt, William 46 Alexandre 32 Sies, Mary Corbin 54 Tolvaisas, Tomas 33 Wilford, F. Hugh 34 Okihiro, Gary 54 Rix, Rebecca 29 Silverman, David 35 Tootle, Stephen 29 Willard, Michael 32 O’Malley, Michael 37 Roberts, Jason 36 Simpson, Brooks D. 48 Torpey, John 53 Williams, Daniel 36 Oshatz, Molly 51 Robertson, Stephen 45 Singh, Nikhil 54 Torres, Martin Valadez 38 Williams, Doretha 33 Ott, Cindy 37 Robinson, Marcia 37 Sklar, Kathryn Kish 40 Torres‑Rouff, David 41 Willrich, Michael 50 Ott, Julia 29, 48 Rockman, Seth 48 Sklaroff, Lauren 54 Townsend, Robert B. 46 Wills, Jocelyn 39 Owens, Trevor 51 Rodgers, Daniel 54 Smallwood, Stephanie 49 Troyano, Joan Fragaszy 33 Wilson, Jan Doolittle 35 Ownby, Ted 48 Roediger, David 54 Smead, Howard 52 Tucker, L. Kathryn 49 Wilson, Veronica 36 Rogers, Donald 52 Smith, J. Douglas 45 Tudda, Chris 37 Winslow, Barbara 47 P Roll, Jarod 31 Smithsimon, Gregory 35 Turner, Felicity 39 Wirzbicki, Peter 48 Palmer, Beverly Wilson 40 Rolph, Stephanie 36 Smith, Stacey 34 Turner, Julie 45 Wise, Benjamin 29 Palmer, David 49 Romano, Renee 47 Smith, Stacia 43 Turner, Leland 37 Witwer, David 32 Parker, Angela 41 Rooney, Patty 33 Snyder, Jeffrey 54 Turton, Catherine 30 Woeste, Victoria Saker 47 Parker, Robert T. 55 Rorabaugh, William 51 Snyder, Sarah 38 Twarog, Wolfinger, James 50 Parkin, Katherine 29 Rosas, Ana Elizabeth 55 Sohi, Seema 31 Emily E. LaBarbera 40 Wolf, Stephanie 32 Parmenter, Jon 35 Rosen, Hannah 45 Sparks, Randy 42 Tyrrell, Marygrace 45 Wong, K. Scott 48 Pearson, Chad 39 Rosenthal, Nicolas 42 Sparrow, James 32, 52 Wood, Kirsten 50 Pedersen, Vernon 36 Rose, Sarah 36 Spruill, Marjorie 50 U Wood, Linda Sargent 43 Peery, Bryan 43 Rosier, Paul C. 41 Stanger, Howard 39 Uhlmann, Jennifer 45 Wood, Peter H. 49 Pegler‑Gordon, Anna 36 Rossinow, Doug 51 Stanton, Robert 55 Unger, Nancy C. 32 Woodruff, Nan 46 Penningroth, Dylan 39 Rothschild, Matthew 32 Steen, Ivan 33 Upham‑Bornstein, Wood, Warren 41 Percoco, James 46 Rotter, Andrew J. 52 Stevenson, Brenda 36 Linda 47 Worster, Donald E. 37 Pérez, Louis A. 46 Ruffins, Fath Davis 41 Stewart, James Brewer 54 Urofsky, Melvin 45 Wu, Frank H. 36 Perkinson, Robert 46 Ruiz, Vicki L. 46, 55 St. John, Rachel 37 Usner, Daniel 50 Wurl, Joel 33 Perkiss, Abigail 50 Russo, John B. 50 Stoler, Mark A. 47 Perry, Elisabeth Israels 34 Rydell, Robert 34 Storrs, Landon 32 V Y Phillips, Kimberley 44 Stowe, David 54 Valsania, Maurizio 50 Yankaskas, Lynda 33 Phillips, Laura 47 S Strachan, Hew 47 van Goethem, Geert 40 Yaqub, Salim 34 Pierce, Rachel 30 Salazar, James 53 Strasser, Susan 29 Vapnek, Lara 46 Yarbrough, Fay 45 Pliley, Jessica 43 Sanchez, George 44 Straus, Emily 41 Vargas, Zaragosa 54 Yellin, Eric S. 40 Poole, Robert 30 Sandage, Scott 39 Strauss, Lon 37 Varzally, Allison 42, 44 Yokota, Kariann 37 Posadas, Barbara M. 48 Sanders, Elizabeth 47 Strickland, Jeff 45 Veder, Robin 53 Young, Neil 38 Potter, Sarah 40 Sanders, Gideon 31 Suisman, David 54 Venkateswaran, Uma 30 Yuhl, Stephanie 29 Prados, John 39 Sanderson, Jill 37 Sukys, Paul 53 Volk, Kyle 34 Prelinger, Megan 30 Sandoval‑Strausz, Summers, Mark 49 Z Prieto, Laura 49 Andrew K. 53 Summers, Martin 40 W Zagarri, Rosemarie 34 Sargent, Daniel 38 Sutton, Matthew Avery 31 Wajda, Shirley 35 Zeiler, Thomas 51 Q Savage, Kirk 33 Sutton, Robert K. 30 Waldron, Florence Mae 50 Zelizer, Julian 45 Quinn, Kelly 54 Scanlon, Jennifer 29 Sword, Kirsten 44 Walker, Susannah 53 Zimmerman, Jonathan 42 Schiavo, Laura 35 Syrett, Nicholas 47 Walker, William 41 R Schneider, Dorothee 50 Wall, Wendy 54 Rabban, David 45 Schneider, Eric 41 T Ware, Susan 54 Rader, Karen 49 Schoenwald, Jonathan 36 Taillon, Paul 45 Warren, Kim 41 Radford, Gail 45 Schrag, Zachary 41 Tally, William J. 43 Warren, Wilson 41 Raftery, Judith R. 48 Schreier, Jesse 34 Tamura, Eileen 48 Washington, Margaret 43 Ratner‑Rosenhagen, Schudson, Michael 52 Terborg‑Penn, Rosalyn 42 Waterhouse, Benjamin 47 Jennifer 42 Schulz, Constance 33 Thelen, David 52 Waters, Rauchway, Eric 33 Schwalm, Leslie 45 Thomas, Bettye Collier 55 Robert Anthony 40 Reejhsinghani, Anju 33 Schweninger, Loren 42, 46 Thomas, Karen Kruse 30 Webster, Colleen 53 Reich, Steven 33 Scott, William 42 Thompson, Weinberg, Carl 31, 43, 53 Rejeb, Lotfi Ben 37 Scroop, Daniel 34 Heather Ann 40 Weisbard, Eric 54 Reverby, Susan 30 Sears, Christine 46 Thompson, H. Paul 51 Weisenfeld, Judith 37 Ribuffo, Leo 44 Self, Robert 36 Thompson, Welke, Barbara 29 Richardson, Shah, Nayan 36 Sharita Jacobs 30 Wenger, Tisa 36 Heather Cox 34 Sharples, Jason 34 Thurber, Timothy 44 Westhoff, Laura 43

2010 OAH Annual Meeting • Washington, D.C. • 59 About the OAH

Executive Office Journal of American History Editorial Office 111-112 North Bryan Avenue 1215 East Atwater Avenue P.O. Box 5457 Bloomington, IN 47401-3703 Bloomington, IN 47407-5457 Tel: (812) 855-2816; Fax: (812) 855-9939 Tel: (812) 855-7311; Fax: (812) 855-0696 Edward T. Linenthal, Executive Editor Katha Kissman, Interim Executive Director

Founded in 1907 as the Mississippi Valley Historical Association, the Organization of American Historians (OAH) is now the largest professional and learned society dedicated to the teaching and study of American history. The organization promotes excellence in the scholarship, teaching, and presentation of American history, and encourages wide discussion of historical questions and equitable treatment of all practitioners of history. OAH is supported primarily through membership and subscription fees, charitable contributions, income from an annual conference each spring, and the support of Indiana University, which houses the executive and editorial offices. The organization’s 9,000 members in the U.S. and abroad include college and university professors; students; precollegiate teachers; archivists, museum curators, and other public historians; a variety of scholars employed in government and the private sector; and institutional subscribers, such as libraries, museums, and historical societies.

Staff Katherine Finley, OAH Executive Director (March 2010) Katha Kissman, Interim Executive Director Join the Organization of American Historians Edward T. Linenthal, Executive Editor, Journal of American History Individual Membership—receive four issues of the Journal of American Ben Aloe, Production Editor, OAH Newsletter History and a copy of the Annual Meeting Program both in print and online, Renay Anderson, Member Services Specialist along with online access to the OAH Magazine of History and Recent Scholarship Stephen D. Andrews, Associate Editor, Journal of American History Online. Rates are based on annual income. Karen Barker, Accounting Assistant History Educator Membership—receive four issues of the OAH Magazine Nic Champagne, Web Specialist of History as well as a copy of the Annual Meeting Program in print and Nancy J. Croker, Director of Operations online. Have access to the Journal of American History online Penny Dillon, Web Specialist Student Membership—choose either four print issues of the OAH Magazine Susan Eckelmann, Editorial Assistant, Journal of American History of History or the Journal of American History. Also, receive the Annual Meeting Susan Ferentinos, Public History Manager Program, as well as online access to Recent Scholarship Online and all OAH Charles Fish, Technology Assistant publications. Courtney Flannery, Data Entry Clerk, Journal of American History OAH Magazine of History Subscription—receive four issues per year. Tanisha Ford, Education Coordinator Ginger Foutz, Membership Director Individual Membership History Educator Membership Terry Govan, Advertising Manager  $ 40 income under $20,000  $ 50  $ 55 income $20,000 – 29,999 Jason Groth, Meetings Assistant  $ 75 income $30,000 – 39,999 Student Membership Kara Hamm, Awards and Committee Coordinator  $ 85 income $40,000 – 49,999  $ 35  OAH Magazine of History, or  Journal of American History Ashley Howdeshell, Administrative and Development Associate  $105 income $50,000 – 59,999  $ 115 income $60,000 – 69,999 OAH Magazine of History Deneise Hueston, Production Assistant, Journal of American History  $ 130 income $70,000 – 79,999 subscription  Hanna Kim, Data Entry Clerk, Journal of American History $ 150 income $80,000 – 99,999  $ 15 per year for students  $ 190 income over $100,000  $ 20 per year for members Elisabeth M. Marsh, Assistant Editor, Journal of American History  $250 contributing member  $ 30 per year for nonmembers Kevin Marsh, Assistant Editor, Journal of American History  $ 50 emeritus  $ 55 associate Additional charges John Nieto-Phillips, Associate Editor, Journal of American History  +$40 dual [select income category,  $ 20 for postage outside the U.S. and add $40 to share one copy Eric Petenbrink, Editorial Assistant, Journal of American History of the Journal of American History ]  $ 45 fifty-year [for members who Visit www.oah.org/members/mbrinfo.html Michael Regoli, Director of Production and Internal IT for additional information on benefits and have been with the OAH for fifty institutional subscriptions. Sarah Rowley, Editorial Assistant, Journal of American History or more years] Waseem Sibo, Public History Assistant Aidan J. Smith, Assistant Editor, Journal of American History To Join, visit www.oah.org or call 812.855.7311. Kimberly M. Stanley, Editorial Assistant, Journal of American History Amy Stark, Director of Meetings and Conventions Carl Weinberg, Editor, OAH Magazine of History Annette Windhorn, Lectureship Coordinator Cynthia Gwynne Yaudes, Associate Editor, Journal of American History

60 • 2010 OAH Annual Meeting • Washington, D.C. OAH Committees OAH Executive Board Nominating Board International Committee Officers Spencer R. Crew, George Mason University, Chair William C. Pratt, University of Nebraska-Omaha, Chair Elaine Tyler May, University of Minnesota, President George Chauncey, Yale University Victor R. Greene, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee David A. Hollinger, University of California, Rosemary Kolks Ennis, Sycamore High School (OH) Maurice Isserman, Hamilton College Berkeley, President Elect Christine Leigh Heyrman, University of Delaware Edward T. Linenthal, Executive Editor, OAH, ex officio Alice Kessler-Harris, Columbia University, Amy J. Kinsel, Shoreline Community College G. Kurt Piehler, University of Tennessee Vice President Kathleen S. Kutolowski, The College at Ian Tyrrell, University of New South Wales Robert Griffith, American University, Treasurer Brockport, SUNY Katha Kissman, Interim Executive Director, OAH Nancy MacLean, Northwestern University Membership Committee Edward T. Linenthal, Executive Editor, OAH Kimberley L. Phillips, College of William & Mary Stephen Kneeshaw, College of the Ozarks, Chair Past Presidents Daryl Michael Scott, Howard University Northeast Region Pete Daniel, National Museum of American History Amilcar Shabazz, University of Massachusetts, Am‑ Nell Irvin Painter, Princeton University The Journal of American History Editorial Board herst, Chair, Northeast Region Richard White, Stanford University Dee E. Andrew, California State University, East Bay Mary Bogin, Onondaga Community College Elected Members Thomas Bender, New York University Christopher Brick, Brown University , University of Wisconsin-Madison Paul S. Boyer, University of Wisconsin-Madison Cecelia Bucki, Fairfield University Philip Deloria, University of Michigan (emeritus) Gary Donato, Mass Bay Community College Doris D. Dwyer, Western Nevada College Ann Fabian, Rutgers University Melanie Gustafson, University of Vermont James Grossman, The Alison Games, Georgetown University Leigh H. Hallett, University of Maine, Orono Ramón A. Gutiérrez, University of Chicago María Cristina García, Cornell University Rebecca R. Noel, Plymouth State University Kim Ibach, Natrona County School District #1 Kristin Hoganson, University of Illinois, Axel R. Schäfer, Keele University Mary Kelley, University of Michigan Urbana-Champaign Naoko Shibusawa, Brown University Theda Perdue, The University of North Katha Kissman, OAH, ex officio Michael Spear, Kingsborough Community College Carolina, Chapel Hill Karen J. Leong, Arizona State University Margaret Susan Thompson, Syracuse University Martha A. Sandweiss, Princeton University Charlene Mires, Villanova University Mid-Atlantic Region Ex Officio Member Dylan Penningroth, Northwestern University William D. Carrigan, Rowan University, Chair, Mid- Jay S. Goodgold, Cochair, Leadership Advisory Council, Jonathan M. Schoenwald, Hunter College Atlantic Region Independent Investor Mark Smith, University of South Carolina Andrew B. Arnold, Kutztown University Joan C. Browning, Independent Scholar Executive Committee OAH Magazine of History Editorial Board Elizabeth Kelly Gray, Towson University Elaine Tyler May, President, Chair Keith Berry, Hillsborough Community College Walter Greason, Ursinus College David A. Hollinger, President Elect Kevin Byrne, Gustavus Adolphus College Timothy Hack, Salem Community College Alice Kessler-Harris, Vice President Billie Jean Clemens, Swain County High School (NC) Elizabeth A. Kessel, Anne Arundel Community College Robert Griffith, Treasurer Kimberly Gilmore, The History Channel John T. Kneebone, Virginia Commonwealth University Pete Daniel, Immediate Past President Cathy Gorn, National History Day Laurie Lahey, The George Washington University Katha Kissman, Interim Executive Director, Lisa Kapp, Saint Ann’s School (NY) Adam Rothman, Georgetown University OAH, ex officio Rita G. Koman, Independent Scholar David Suisman, University of Delaware Edward T. Linenthal, Executive Editor, OAH, ex officio Stephanie Rossi, Wheat Ridge High School (CO) Greg Cuthbertson, University of South Africa Gideon Sanders, McKinley Technology High Southern Region Finance Committee School (DC) Cary D. Wintz, Texas Southern University, Chair, Elaine Tyler May, President, Chair Cynthia Stout, Independent Historian Southern Region David A. Hollinger, President Elect Laura Westhoff, University of Missouri-St. Louis Raymond Arsenault, University of South Pete Daniel, Immediate Past President Linda Sargent Wood, Arizona State University Florida, St. Petersburg Robert Griffith, Treasurer, ex officio Jessica Cannon, Rice University Katha Kissman, Interim Executive Director, OAH Newsletter Advisory Board Stephen Davis, Lonestar College, Kingwood OAH, ex officio Kristin L. Ahlberg, U.S. Department of State, Chair Robert Korstad, Duke University Edward T. Linenthal, Executive Editor, OAH, ex officio Joan C. Browning, Independent Scholar Thomas C. Mackey, University of Louisville Jay S. Goodgold, Cochair, Leadership Advisory Council, Clyde A. Milner II, Arkansas State University Stephen H. Norwood, University of Oklahoma ex officio Stephen Vaughn, University of Wisconsin-Madison Sarah Potter, University of Memphis Shirley Teresa Wajda, Independent Scholar Fernando Purcell, Pontificia Universidad Parliamentarian Católica de Chile Jonathan Lurie, Rutgers University, Newark Committee on Committees Joshua Rothman, University of Alabama Janet Schmelzer, Tarleton State University William P. Jones, University of Charles Vincent, Southern University and Leadership Advisory Council Wisconsin-Madison, Chair A & M College William H. Chafe, Duke University, Cochair Peter A. Kraemer, U.S. Department of State Melissa Walker, Converse College Jay S. Goodgold, Independent Investor, Cochair Maria E. Montoya, New York University Kyle F. Zelner, University of Southern Mississippi Edward L. Ayers, President, University of Richmond Jeannie Whayne, University of Arkansas Midwest Region Ira Berlin, University of Maryland, College Park Ron Briley, Sandia Preparatory School Stephen Kneeshaw, College of the Ozarks, Chair, Alan Hermesch, Alan Hermesch Public Relations, LLC Matthew Garcia, Brown University Midwest Region Carroll H. Leggett, Public Relations/Public Affairs Brian Horrigan, Minnesota Historical Society Melodie J. Andrews, Minnesota State Elaine Tyler May, University of Minnesota, ex officio Peggy Renner, Glendale Community College Mark E. Mitchell, The Mitchell Archives University, Mankato Edward Carroll, Heartland Community College Victor Navasky, The Nation (Publisher Emeritus) and Committee on Community Colleges The Columbia Journalism Review (Chairman) Kathleen P. Chamberlain, Eastern Michigan University Mark Roehrs, Lincoln Land Community College, Chair Eric Franco, Edgewood College Valerie Paley, New-York Historical Society David A. Berry, Community College Humanities As‑ Paul S. Sperry, Sperry, Mitchell & Company, Inc. Glennon Graham, Columbia College Chicago sociation, ex officio Richard L. Hughes, Illinois State University Jeffrey L. Sturchio, President & CEO, Global Jennifer Helton, Independent Scholar Health Council Charles Lauritsen, Des Moines Area Community Amy J. Kinsel, Shoreline Community College College-West Geoffrey C. Ward, Independent Scholar Maureen Murphy Nutting, North Seattle Barbara Winslow, Brooklyn College of the City Univer‑ Christopher C. Lovett, Emporia State University Community College Robert MacDougall, University of Western Ontario sity of New York Thomas J. Osborne, Santa Ana College Paul Martin Wolff, Williams & Connolly, LLP Steve Messer, Taylor University Lisa Ossian, Des Moines Area Community College Andrea Mott, North Dakota State University Melissa M. Soto-Schwartz, Cuyahoga Mark R. Scherer, University of Nebraska at Omaha Community College David Silkenat, North Dakota State University Andrés Tijerina, Austin Community College

2010 OAH Annual Meeting • Washington, D.C. • 61 Donald C. Simmons Jr., Dakota Wesleyan University Elaine Tyler May, University of Minnesota Ad Hoc Committee on Academic Freedom Frank Towers, University of Calgary David S. Trask, Guilford Technical Community Kevin Gaines, University of Michigan, Chair Western Region College (retired) Raymond Arsenault, University of South Florida, St. Cheryl A. Wells, University of Wyoming, Chair, Petersburg Western Region Committee on Teaching Sara M. Evans, University of Minnesota Katherine G. Aiken, University of Idaho Margaret Harris, Southern New Hampshire University, Matthew Basso, University of Utah Chair Ad Hoc Committee on Ethics Mina J. Carson, Oregon State University Kenneth G. Alfers, Mountain View College and Professional Standards Sarah E. Cornell, University of New Mexico Keith Berry, Hillsborough Community College James D. Anderson, University of Illinois at Urbana- Wade Davies, University of Montana Kevin Byrne, Gustavus Adolphus College Champaign, Chair Thomas Gaskin, Everett Community College Carole N. Devito, The Dwight-Englewood School (NJ) Patrick Allitt, Emory University Christina Gold, El Camino College Steven Mintz, Columbia University Kathleen Neils Conzen, University of Chicago Cecilia Gowdy-Wygant, Front Range Gideon Sanders, McKinley Technology High School (DC) Alexandra (Sasha) Harmon, University of Washington Community College Sandra Gioia Treadway, Library of Virginia Michael Green, College of Southern Nevada Committee on the Status of Women in the John W. Heaton, University of Alaska, Fairbanks Historical Profession Ad Hoc OAH-Japanese Association for Jill A Horohoe, Arizona State University Elizabeth Higginbotham, University of Delaware, Chair American Studies Japan Historians’ Greta de Jong, University of Nevada, Reno David Chang, University of Minnesota Collaborative Committee Curtis Martin, Modesto Junior College Betty A. Dessants, Shippensburg University Juri Abe, Rikkyo University, Cochair Fusako “Sako” Ogata, Tezukayama University Emma Lapsansky-Werner, Haverford College Andrea Geiger, Simon Fraser University, Cochair Richard C. Rath, University of Hawai’i at Mānoa Constance B. Schulz, University of South Carolina Jane Wolford, Chabot College Christopher Jespersen, North Georgia College Linda Sargent Wood, Arizona State University and State University 2010 Program Committee Kohei Kawashima, Musashi University Tim Borstelmann, University of Nebraska, Kim E. Nielsen, University of Wisconsin-Green Bay Committee on the Status of African American, Lincoln, Chair Latino/a, Asian American, and Native American Naoki Onishi, International Christian University Kristin L. Ahlberg, U.S. Department of State Sayuri Guthrie Shimizu, Michigan State University (ALANA) Historians and ALANA Histories Margot Canaday, Princeton University Thomas J. Sugrue, University of Pennsylvania Lionel Kimble Jr., Chicago State University, Chair María Cristina García, Cornell University Amrita Chakrabarti Myers, Indiana University Sharon M. Leon, George Mason University OAH Delegates, Liaisons, and Representatives Lydia R. Otero, University of Arizona Tiya A. Miles, University of Michigan to Other Councils, Commissions, Adrienne Petty, The City College of New York, CUNY Jon Sensbach, University of Florida George J. Sánchez, University of Southern California Howard J. Shorr, Clackamas Community College and Committees AHA/NASA Fellowship in Aerospace History Committee Committee on National Park 2010 Convention Local Resource Committee Cheryl R. Ganz, Smithsonian National Postal Museum Service Collaboration Keri Lewis, U.S. Department of State, Chair American Council of Learned Societies Laura J. Feller, Independent Historian Kristin L. Ahlberg, U.S. Department of State Sarah Deutsch, Duke University Kathleen Franz, American University, ex officio Beth M. Boland, National Park Service National Council for History Education Frederick E. Hoxie, University of Illinois at Katrina R. Dodro, National History Day Eric R. Smith, Illinois Mathematics and Science Academy Urbana-Champaign Kathleen Franz, American University National Historical Publications and Records Commission Todd Moye, University of North Texas Cathy Gorn, National History Day Julie Saville, University of Chicago Robert K. Sutton, National Park Service, ex officio Robyn Muncy, University of Maryland, College Park National Museum of Afro-American History and Culture Jon E. Taylor, University of Central Missouri Joseph P. Reidy, Howard University Planning Council Anne Mitchell Whisnant, The University of North Gideon Sanders, McKinley Technology High School (DC) Kenneth W. Goings, The Ohio State University Carolina, Chapel Hill 2011 Program Committee Willi Paul Adams Award Committee Committee on Part-time and Adjunct Employment Peter Kolchin, University of Delaware, Cochair Anne L. Foster, Indiana State University, Chair Donald W. Rogers, Central Connecticut State Univer‑ Joanne Meyerowitz, Yale University, Cochair Manfred Berg, Universität Heidelberg sity and Houstatonic Community College, Chair Manfred Berg, Universität Heidelberg Kristin Hoganson, University of Illinois at Urbana- Donn Hall, Ivy Tech Community College of Indiana, Holly Brewer, North Carolina State University Champaign Bloomington Campus Hasia Diner, New York University Nelson Ouellet, Université de Moncton Elizabeth Hohl, Fairfield University David G. Gutiérrez, University of California, San Diego Jörg Nagler, Friedrich-Schiller-University, Jena Arlene Lazarowitz, California State University, Martha S. Jones, University of Michigan Long Beach Moon-Ho Jung, University of Washington Erik Barnouw Award Committee Howard Smead, University of Maryland, College Park Paul Kramer, Vanderbilt University Naomi R. Lamoreaux, University of California, Elspeth H. Brown, University of Toronto, Chair Committee on Public History Los Angeles Lary May, University of Minnesota Gerald E. Shenk, California State University, Monterey Bay Kathleen Franz, American University, Chair 2011 Convention Local Resource Committee Louis P. Hutchins, National Park Service Ray Allen Billington Prize Committee Gregory E. Smoak, Colorado State University John B. Boles, Rice University, Chair Matthew A. Wasniewski, Office of History Carlos Kevin Blanton, Texas A & M University Pablo Mitchell, Oberlin College, Chair and Preservation, U.S. House of Representatives Kathleen A. Brosnan, University of Houston Kathleen DuVal, The University of North Carolina, Julia Sandy-Bailey, Shepherd University Alexander X. Byrd, Rice University Chapel Hill David L. Davis, College-North Harris David Rich Lewis, Utah State University Strategic Planning Committee David G. Gutiérrez, University of California, San Diego Binkley-Stephenson Award Committee Pete Daniel, National Museum of American History, Patrick J. Kelly, The University of Texas, San Antonio Cochair J. Kent McGaughy, Houston Community Claire Strom, Rollins College, Chair Linda Shopes, Pennsylvania Historical and Museum College Northwest Thavolia Glymph, Duke University Commission (retired), Cochair Martin V. Melosi, University of Houston Randal L. Hall, Rice University Stephen D. Andrews, The Journal of American History Cary D. Wintz, Texas Southern University Jay S. Goodgold, Independent Investor Nancy Zey, Sam Houston State University Avery O. Craven Award Committee Alice Kessler-Harris, Columbia University Diane C. Vecchio, Furman University, Chair Katha Kissman, Interim Executive Director, Carl Moneyhon, University of Arkansas at Little Rock OAH, ex officio LeeAnn Whites, University of Missouri Edward T. Linenthal, Executive Editor, OAH, ex officio

62 • 2010 OAH Annual Meeting • Washington, D.C. OAH Committees Award Committee Roy Rosenzweig Distinguished David Thelen Award Committee Glenda Gilmore, Yale University, Chair Service Award Committee Edward T. Linenthal, Executive Editor, OAH, Chair Raymond Arsenault, University of South Florida, Richard White, Stanford University, Chair Kate Delaney, Massachusetts Institute of Technology St. Petersburg Philip Deloria, University of Michigan Udo Hebel, Universität Regensburg Annette Atkins, St. John’s University/College Kim Ibach, Natrona County School District #1 Hans Krabbendam, Roosevelt Study Center of St. Benedict Martha A. Sandweiss, Princeton University Larisa M. Troitskaia, Center for North American Stud‑ Mark K. Bauman, Editor, Southern Jewish History; ies, Institute of World History, Russian Academy Atlanta Metropolitan College (retired) Mary K. Bonsteel Tachau Teacher of the Year of Sciences Howard Brick, University of Michigan Award Committee Don Falls, Southeast High School (FL), Chair Award Committee Ellis W. Hawley Prize Committee Michael Flamm, Ohio Wesleyan University Pete Daniel, National Museum of American Patrick G. Williams, University of Arkansas, Chair Frederick W. Jordan, Woodberry Forest School (VA) History, Chair , University of Pennsylvania Ned Blackhawk, Yale University Charles L. Lumpkins, Pennsylvania State University Jonathan M. Bryant, Georgia Southern University

OAH-IEHS John Higham Travel Grants Francille Rusan Wilson, University of Southern Cali‑ Past Officers fornia, Chair Presidents Ray A. Billington (1962-1963) Clarence S. Paine, Nebraska State Elliott Barkan, California State University, Francis A. Sampson (1907) Avery O. Craven (1963-1964) Historical Society San Bernardino (emeritus) Thomas M. Owen (1907-1908) John W. Caughey (1964-1965) Francis A. Sampson, State Historical Lon Kurashige, University of Southern California Clarence W. Alvord (1908-1909) George E. Mowry (1965-1966) Society of Missouri Orin G. Libby (1909-1910) Thomas C. Cochran (1966-1967) Benjamin F. Shambaugh, State Darlene Clark Hine Award Committee Benjamin F. Shambaugh (1910-1911) Thomas A. Bailey (1967-1968) Historical Society of Iowa Wanda A. Hendricks, University of South Andrew C. McLaughlin (1911-1912) C. Vann Woodward (1968-1969) Warren Upham, Minnesota Carolina, Chair Reuben G. Thwaites (1912-1913) Merrill Jensen (1969-1970) Historical Society Randall K. Burkett, Emory University James A. James (1913-1914) David M. Potter (1970-1971) Barbara Ransby, University of Illinois at Chicago Isaac J. Cox (1914-1915) Edmund S. Morgan (1971-1972) Secretary-Treasurers Dunbar Rowland (1915-1916) T. Harry Williams (1972-1973) Clarence S. Paine (1907-1916) Huggins-Quarles Award Committee Frederic L. Paxson (1916-1917) John Higham (1973-1974) Clara S. Paine (1916-1952) Amrita Chakrabarti Myers, Indiana University, Chair St. George L. Sioussat (1917-1918) John Hope Franklin (1974-1975) James C. Olson (1953-1956) Lionel Kimble Jr., Chicago State University Harlow Lindley (1918-1919) Frank Freidel (1975-1976) William Aeschbacher (1956-1969) Lydia R. Otero, University of Arizona Milo M. Quaife (1919-1920) Richard Leopold (1976-1977) Adrienne Petty, The City College of New York, CUNY Chauncey S. Boucher (1920-1921) Kenneth M. Stampp (1977-1978) Executive Secretaries/Directors George J. Sánchez, University of Southern California William E. Connelley (1921-1922) Eugene D. Genovese (1978-1979) David Miller (1970) Solon J. Buck (1922-1923) Carl N. Degler (1979-1980) Thomas D. Clark (1970-1973) Richard W. Leopold Prize Committee Eugene C. Barker (1923-1924) William A. Williams (1980-1981) Richard Kirkendall (1973-1981) Roger D. Launius, Smithsonian Institution, Chair Frank H. Hodder (1924-1925) Gerda Lerner (1981-1982) Joan Hoff (1981-1989) Andy Ambrose, Tubman African American Museum James A. Woodburn (1925-1926) Allan G. Bogue (1982-1983) Arnita A. Jones (1990-1999) Lu Ann Jones, National Park Service Otto L. Schmidt (1926-1927) Anne Firor Scott (1983-1984) Lee W. Formwalt (1999-2009) Joseph Schafer (1927-1928) Arthur S. Link (1984-1985) Lerner-Scott Prize Committee Charles W. Ramsdell (1928-1929) William E. Leuchtenburg (1985-1986) Treasurers Linda Reed, University of Houston, Chair Homer C. Hockett (1929-1930) Leon F. Litwack (1986-1987) William Aeschbacher (1969-1976) Heidi Ardizzone, University of Notre Dame Louise P. Kellogg (1930-1931) Stanley N. Katz (1987-1988) Robert K. Murray (1977-1984) Alecia P. Long, Louisiana State University Beverley W. Bond, Jr. (1931-1932) (1988-1989) Cullom Davis (1984-1993) John D. Hicks (1932-1933) Louis R. Harlan (1989-1990) Gale Peterson (1993-2003) Lawrence W. Levine Award Committee Jonas Viles (1933-1934) Mary Frances Berry (1990-1991) Robert W. Cherny (2003-2008) (1991-1992) Robert Korstad, Duke University, Chair Lester B. Shippee (1934-1935) Robert Griffith (2008- ) Lawrence W. Levine (1992-1993) Leslie Butler, Dartmouth College Louis Pelzer (1935-1936) (1993-1994) Lewis A. Erenberg, Loyola University Chicago Edward E. Dale (1936-1937) Editors Clarence E. Carter (1937-1938) Gary B. Nash (1994-1995) Benjamin Filene, The University of North Mississippi Valley Historical Review William O. Lynch (1938-1939) Michael Kammen (1995-1996) Carolina, Greensboro Benjamin F. Shambaugh James G. Randall (1939-1940) Linda K. Kerber (1996-1997) Geri Hastings, Catonsville High School (MD) (1908-1914) (Proceedings) Carl F. Wittke (1940-1941) George M. Fredrickson (1997-1998) Clarence W. Alvord (1914-1923) Arthur C. Cole (1941-1942) William H. Chafe (1998-1999) Liberty Legacy Foundation Award Lester B. Shippee (1923-1924) Charles H. Ambler (1942-1943) David Montgomery (1999-2000) Joseph Crespino, Emory University, Chair Milo M. Quaife (1924-1930) Theodore C. Blegen (1943-1944) Kenneth T. Jackson (2000-2001) Kenneth R. Janken, The University of North Carolina, Arthur C. Cole (1930-1941) William C. Binkley (1944-1946) Darlene Clark Hine (2001-2002) Chapel Hill Louis Pelzer (1941-1946) Herbert A. Kellar (1946-1947) Ira Berlin (2002-2003) Susan E. O’Donovan, University of Memphis Wendell H. Stephenson (1946-1953) Ralph P. Bieber (1947-1948) Jacquelyn Dowd Hall (2003-2004) William C. Binkley (1953-1963) Dwight L. Dumond (1948-1949) James O. Horton (2004-2005) Oscar O. Winther (1963-1964) Louis Pelzer Memorial Award Committee Carl C. Rister (1949-1950) Vicki L. Ruiz (2005-2006) Edward T. Linenthal, Executive Editor, OAH, Chair Elmer Ellis (1950-1951) Richard White (2006-2007) The Journal of American History John M. Belohlavek, University of South Florida Merle E. Curti (1951-1952) Nell Irvin Painter (2007-2008) Oscar O. Winther (1964-1966) Margaret S. Creighton, Bates College James L. Sellers (1952-1953) Pete Daniel (2008-2009) Martin Ridge (1966-1978) Stephen Kercher, University of Wisconsin-Oshkosh Fred A. Shannon (1953-1954) Elaine Tyler May (2009-2010) Lewis Perry (1978-1984) John T. Schlotterbeck, DePauw University Walter P. Webb (1954-1955) Paul Lucas (1984-1985) Edward C. Kirkland (1955-1956) Founders David Thelen (1985-1999) James A. Rawley Prize Thomas D. Clark (1956-1957) William S. Bell, Montana Historical Joanne Meyerowitz (1999-2004) Karin A. Shapiro, Duke University, Chair Wendell H. Stephenson (1957-1958) & Misc. Library David Nord (2004-2005) Nelson Lichtenstein, University of California, William T. Hutchinson (1958-1959) Edgar R. Harlan, Historical Edward T. Linenthal (2005- ) Santa Barbara Frederick Merk (1959-1960) Department of Iowa Clare A. Lyons, University of Maryland, College Park Fletcher M. Green (1960-1961) George W. Martin, Kansas State Paul W. Gates (1961-1962) Historical Society

2010 OAH Annual Meeting • Washington, D.C. • 63 Building a Lasting Legacy

The following individuals represent our most generous supporters. We are grateful for their continued investment in OAH. This list reflects gifts made in six categories from January through September, 2009.

Founders Society Millennial Club Michael A. Bernstein The History Channel Richard A. Baker Charles L. Booth Gordon M. Bakken Robert B. Carey Charles and Mary Beard Society David Brody Lizabeth Cohen Lee W. Formwalt William D. Cohan Robert A. Divine Vincent P. DeSantis Alice L. George Two Thousand and Jacquelyn D. Hall William M. Seven Associates David Hollinger Hammond Robert W. Griffith Richard S. Kirkendall Stanley Harrold Donald A. Ritchie Maeva Marcus Tera W. Hunter Valerie Paley Lary and Elaine Millennium Ten Society Hermann K. Platt Tyler May Darrel Bigham William Preston Merck & Co., Inc. Lee W. Formwalt Marcus Rediker Susan Reverby Jay S. Goodgold Kenichiro Tsuchihashi Kathryn Kish Sklar R. Douglas Hurt Peter Wallenstein Barbara Stewart Paul Sperry and Beatrice Mitchell Sterling Stuckey Albert E. and Stephanie G. Wolf Mississippi Valley Club Laurel T. Ulrich Annette Atkins Daun van Ee Neal Baker Francille Rusan Wilson

Donor Benefits • History teachers at the school receive the OAH 3. Special recognition at the distinguished members Founders Society ($25,000 or more) Magazine of History and other membership reception at the annual meeting 1. One issue of the OAH Magazine of History benefits dedicated to you • Access to all back issues of the Journal of Ameri- Millennial Club ($1,000 - $1,999) 2. Complimentary: can History and the Mississippi Valley Historical 1. Complimentary: • Membership for one year Review on JSTOR • Registration for one annual meeting • Registration for a future annual meeting • Gift membership for an individual of your choice • Access to all back issues of the Journal of Ameri- • Gift history educator membership for two high 3. Recognition in the Annual Meeting Program can History and the Mississippi Valley Historical schools. History teachers at both schools receive 4. Special recognition at the distinguished members Review on JSTOR the OAH Magazine of History and other reception at the annual meeting 2. Recognition in the Annual Meeting Program membership benefits 3. Special recognition at the distinguished members • Access to all back issues of the Journal of Ameri- Charles & Mary Beard Society reception at the annual meeting can ($5,000 to $9,999) History and the Mississippi Valley Historical 1. Complimentary: Mississippi Valley Club ($500 to $999) • Membership for one year Review 1. Complimentary access to all back issues of the • Registration for one annual meeting on JSTOR Journal of American History and the Mississippi • Journal of American History subscription to the • Gift membership for an individual of your choice Valley Historical Review on JSTOR library of your choice • Journal of American History subscription to the 2. Recognition in the OAH Newsletter library of your choice • Access to all back issues of the Journal of Ameri- can History and the Mississippi Valley Historical 3. Recognition in the Annual Meeting Program Centennial Club ($100 to $499) 4. Special recognition at the distinguished members Review on JSTOR • Recognition in the OAH Newsletter reception at the annual meeting • Gift membership for an individual of your choice 2. Recognition in the Annual Meeting Program Friends of OAH (up to $99) Frederick Jackson Turner Society 3. Special recognition at the distinguished members ($10,000 to $24,999) reception at the annual meeting • Recognition in the OAH Newsletter 1. One issue of the OAH Magazine of History 2007 Associates ($2,000 to $4,999) dedicated to you 2. Complimentary: 1. Complimentary: • Membership for one year • Membership for one year • Registration for a future annual meeting • Registration for one annual meeting • Gift history educator membership for a high • Access to all back issues of the Journal of Ameri- school. can History and the Mississippi Valley Historical Review on JSTOR 2. Recognition in the Annual Meeting Program

64 • 2010 OAH Annual Meeting • Washington, D.C. Distinguished Members

Fifty Year Members Elwin F. Hartwig Loren E. Pennington Patron Members Jo Tice Bloom Constance Areson Harry Anderson Richard H. Haunton William W. Phillips Brian Q. Cannon John P. Bloom Clark Clarence J. Attig Hugh D. Hawkins Donald K. Pickens Hal S. Chase Louis H. Blumengarten Stanley Coben Henry F. Bedford Samuel P. Hays Mark A. Plummer Ruth C. Crocker Allan Bogue Dale Collins Robert F. Berkhofer, Jr. Leopold Hedbavny, Jr. C. P. Poland, Jr. Gwendolyn M. Hall Eileen Boris Patrick T. Conley John P. Bloom Richard G. Hewlett William Preston, Jr. Kenneth T. Jackson Tim Borstelmann James L. Cooper Allan Bogue John W. Hillje Norris W. Preyer P. Nelson Limerick Douglas E. Bowers Roger W. Corley James Boylan Melvin G. Holli Francis Paul Prucha, SJ Elizabeth Anne Carl B. Boyd, Jr. Wallace Cory David Brody Ari Hoogenboom Carroll W. Pursell Payne Peter Boyle Nancy F. Cott Richard H. Brown Ernest Hooper Raymond Robinson Ben Procter T. Dwight Bozeman Theodore R. Crane Michael J. Brusin Travis Beal Jacobs Malcolm J. Jeffrey T. Sammons John H. Bracey, Jr. Lewis H. Cresse William T. Bulger James E. Johnson Rohrbough Donald Spivey Mary Ann Brady William J. Cronon O. L. Burnette, Jr. Jacob Judd William E. Rooney Lola Van Wagenen Vernon S. Braswell James B. Crooks John C. Burnham Richard M. Judd Donald M. Roper Lynn Brenneman Jon A. Cucinatto Jack J. Cardoso James H. Kahn Elliot A. Rosen Life Members Lynne T. Brickley Charles T. Cullen Jo Ann Carrigan William Kamman Dorothy Ross C. Blythe Ahlstrom Nwabueze W. Brooks Leonard P. Curry Stanley Coben J. Alexander Karlin John E. Saffell Norio Akashi Richard D. Brown George H. Curtis Paul K. Conkin Ralph Ketcham Harry N. Scheiber Michele L. Aldrich William G. Brown, Jr. Harl A. Dalstrom James L. Cooper Richard S. Kirkendall A. W. Schulmeyer George E. Allen Robert V. Bruce David B. Danbom Robert J. Cornell Helen Knuth Frederick Schult ,Jr. Glenn Altschuler Michael J. Brusin E. J. Danziger, Jr. Leonard P. Curry Harold E. Kolling Roy V. Scott James L. Anderson Jonathan M. Bryant James West Davidson Harl A. Dalstrom Richard N. Kottman Ronald E. Seavoy James D. Anderson Cecelia Bucki Richard O. Davies David Brion Davis Howard R. Lamar RichardH. Sewell Jacob A. Antoninis Mari Jo Buhle Calvin D. Davis Rodney O. Davis Daniel Lane, Jr. Joel Silbey Abraham Aponte George D. Bullock Cullom Davis Kenneth E. Davison R. Alton Lee R. Freeman Smith Joyce Appleby Nicholas C. Burckel David Brion Davis Lawrence B. de Graaf William E. RichardW. Smith Tadashi Aruga O. L. Burnette, Jr. Lawrence B. Davis Vincent P. DeSantis Leuchtenburg Wilson Smith Douglas M. Astolfi Rand Burnette Thomas H. Davis III Merton L. Dillon David Saul Levin Joseph G. Smoot Clarence J. Attig James MacGregor Thomas J. Davis Robert A. Divine Daniel Levine Harvey Snitiker Arthur H. Auten Burns Kenneth E. Davison Lyle W. Dorsett Leon F. Litwack Winton U. Solberg Fred A. Bailey Orville Vernon Burton Lawrence B. de Graaf Melvyn Dubofsky Gloria L. Main Raymond Starr John W. Bailey, Jr. Bruce I. Bustard Carl N. Degler E. Duane Elbert James M. McPherson Edward M. Steel, Jr. W. David Baird Desmond X. Butler John A. D’Emilio Sister Mary Eliza‑ Samuel T. McSeveney Joseph F. Steelman William L. Barney Martin J. Butler Alan Derickson beth, CHS John V. Mering Ivan D. Steen Michael Barnhart Peter M. Buzanski Vincent P. DeSantis George B. Engberg Robert L. Middlekauff Ray Stephens Dean O. Barnum Stanley Caine Sarah Deutsch Conrad J. Engelder E. A. Miles Ralph A. Storm Alwyn Barr Ross J. Cameron Charles B. Dew Stanley L. Falk Mary Emily Miller Richard W. Strattner Hal S. Barron D’Ann Campbell John R. Dichtl Robert H. Ferrell Edmund S. Morgan Dennis F. Strong Beth T. Bates Charles F. Carroll Duane N. Diedrich James F. Findlay, Jr. Robert K. Murray Robert Polk Thomson Ross W. Beales, Jr. P. Thomas Carroll Merton L. Dillon Walden S. Freeman Edward J. Muzik Ralph R. Tingley Henry F. Bedford Clayborne Carson C. G. Dilworth Larry Gara Lee M. Nash Eckard V. Toy, Jr. Doron Ben-Atar Dan T. Carter Leonard Dinnerstein Frank Otto Gatell James W. Neilson Robert L. Tree Edward M. Bennett Charles D. Cashdollar John M. Dobson Richard A. Gerber John K. Nelson H. L. Trefousse Philip J. Bergan Jonathan Cedarbaum Donald B. Dodd Gordon Gillson Charles E. Neu Allen W. Trelease James M. Bergquist William H. Chafe Helen Dodson Francis R. Gilmore Irene D. Neu Melvin I. Urofsky Robert H. Berlin Frank Chalk Jay P. Dolan Charles N. Glaab Walter T. Nugent William J. Wade William Berman David M. Chalmers James P.Donohue, Jr. Norman A. Graebner George B. Oliver Paul W. Wehr David Bernstein George Chalou Jacob H. Dorn Victor R. Greene Herbert S. Parmet Sydney Stahl Weinberg Mary F. Berry Robert W. Cherny James H. Ducker Gerald N. Grob Robert D. Parmet Robert M. Weir Eugene H. Ber‑ Michael B. Chesson Dean Eberly Samuel B. Hand William E. Parrish Harold J. Weiss Jr. wanger Lawrence O. Alfred E. Eckes Craig R. Hanyan L. V. Patenaude John E. Wickman Terry D. Bilhartz Christensen Owen Dudley Louis R. Harlan Otis A. Pease William H. Wilson Roger E. Bilstein William E. Edwards Lowell H. Harrison William H. Pease Gordon S. Wood Richard Blackett Christensen Tom G. Edwards Peter T. Harstad Robert M. Blackson William G. Eidson 2010 OAH Annual Meeting • Washington, D.C. • 65 E. Duane Elbert WilliamH. Greer, Jr. Suzanne Fellman Harold D. Langley Ronald E. Mickel Lawrence A. Peskin Sister Mary Eliza‑ Kenneth J. Grieb Jacob Bruce L. Larson Dennis N. Mihelich Robert K. Peters beth, CHS John Reich Grieser Travis Beal Jacobs Virginia Lashley E. A. Miles Gale E. Peterson RichardN. Ellis Robert W. Griffith John P. Jenkins Catherine Grollman Mary Emily Miller Larry R. Peterson Martin I. Elzy David Grimsted Richard Jensen Lauritsen J. Paul Mitchell Fred D. Pfening Yasuo Endo James R. Grossman Wayne H. Jiles Alan Lawson Haskell Monroe Christopher Phelps George B. Engberg Jeffrey R. Gunderson Dorothy E. Johnson Daniel Leab David Montgomery RichardB. Pierce II Conrad J. Engelder Ramon A. Gutierrez Jack J. Johnson John L. LeBrun Margaret J. Moody Mark A. Plummer Glenn T. Eskew Hamsey Habeich James E. Johnson R. Alton Lee Edmund S. Morgan Stephen Ross Porter Richard W. Etulain Barton C. Hacker Marilynn Johnson Mark H. Leff John H. Morris E. Daniel Potts David R. Farrell Robert W. Haddon Arnita A. Jones Richard W. Lenk, Jr. Stephanie A. Morris WilliamC. Pratt Drew Faust Gunnar Haeggmark Daniel P. Jordan Gerda Lerner Philip R. Muller Francis Paul Prucha, SJ Roger J. Fechner Jacquelyn D. Hall Richard M. Judd William E. Laura Kathryn Allan Purcell Norbert Finzsch Alonzo L. Hamby Laura Kalman Leuchtenburg Munoz Edward A. Purcell, Jr. John J. Fitzgerald Samuel B. Hand William Kamman H. A. Leventhal Peter Murray Carroll W. Pursell Michael W. Fitzgerald Bert Hansen Michael G. Kammen David Saul Levin Robert K. Murray George C. Rable Susan Flader James Hantula Steven Karges Allan J. Lichtman Edward J. Muzik John C. Raby Marvin E. Fletcher Louis R. Harlan Peter Karsten John E. Little Alfred F. Myers Fred D. Ragan Gerald T. Flom Robert L. Harris, Jr. Stanley N. Katz Daniel C. Littlefield Natalie A. Naylor R. Lyn Rainard Eric Foner Lowell H. Harrison Charles A. Keene Leon F. Litwack Humbert S. Nelli Harry W. Readnour Mark S. Foster Peter T. Harstad Elizabeth Hamer Steven D. Livengood Anne Kusener Nelsen Edwin A. Reed Frank K. Foulds Susan M. Hartmann Kegan Nancy C. Luebbert Clifford M. Nelson Thomas V. Reeve II Grover C. Franklin Hugh D. Hawkins William Henry Kellar Frederick C. Luebke John L. Nethers Willis G. Regier Rachel Franklin- Robert P. Hay Robin D. Kelley David E. Luellen Irene D. Neu Donald E. Reid Weekley Willard M. Hays Lawrence C. Kelly Karen Lystra Robert D. Neuleib John P. Reid William W. Freehling William D. Hechler Benjamin N. Carol MacGregor John J. Newman Robert L. Reid Walden S. Freeman Leopold Hedbavny, Jr. Kightlinger Richard S. Macha Roger L. Nichols John T. Reilly Richard M. Fried Douglas Helms William M. King David Macleod Alexandra M. C. Thomas Rezner Frank A. Friedman Nathaniel J. Wilma King John G. Macnaughton Nickliss Paul Rich Mary O. Furner Henderson Richard S. Kirkendall James H. Madison Margie Noel Steven A. Riess Donna R. Gabaccia James E. Hendrickson Rachel N. Klein Pauline Maier Ellen Nore Paul T. Ringenbach James P. Gaffey Gary Hermalyn Anne M. Klejment Eduard M. Mark Robert C. Ritchie Cheryl R. Ganz Theodore Hershberg Timothy E. Kline William C. Marten Jesse L. Nutt, Jr. Priscilla Roberts Frank Otto Gatell Evelyn Brooks James T. Kloppenberg Takeshi Mashimo James Oakes Kenneth G. Robison Edwin S. Gaustad Higginbotham Helen Knuth Robert K. Massey, Jr. James P. O’Brien George L. Robson, Jr. Larry R. Gerlach Darlene Clark Hine William A. Koelsch Takeshi Matsuda Michael O’Brien Earl M. Rogers Gary L. Gerstle Harwood P. Hinton Sally Gregory John C. Maxwell Akiko Ochiai William E. Rooney David M. Gerwin Joan Hoff Kohlstedt George T. Mazuzan George B. Oliver Roberta Rorke Ralph V. Giannini Paul S. Holbo Richard H. Kohn William L. McCorkle Otto H. Olsen Vivien E. Rose Glen A. Gildemeister Melvin G. Holli Harold E. Kolling Thomas K. McCraw Lorena Oropeza Christine Meesner Timothy J. Gilfoyle William F. Holmes Clayton R. Koppes William T. McCue Richard J. Orsi Rosen Gordon Gillson Ernest Hooper Gary J. Kornblith Gerald W. McFarland C. H. O’Sullivan Joseph Rosenberg Harvey Goddard Jerry Berl Hopkins Richard N. Kottman Michael McGiffert Alan M. Osur Susan Rosenfeld Nancy M. Godleski James O. Horton J Morgan Kousser Patrick E. McLear Philip W. Parks Rodney A. Ross Brian Gordon Walter R. Houf Alan M. Kraut Linda O. McMurry John W. Partin Rodney J. Ross Martin K. Gordon Frederick E. Hoxie John D. Krugler Richard M. McMurry June O. Patton Steven Rosswurm Sidney Gottesfeld James K. Huhta Fumiaki Kubo James M. McPherson Otis A. Pease Leslie Rowland John Pike Grady Carol Sue Humphrey Raoul Kulberg Samuel T. McSeveney William H. Pease Vicki L. Ruiz Alan Graebner Robert S. Huston Bruce R. Kuniholm John A. Meador Robert H. Peebles Thomas G. Ruth Norman A. Graebner Heather Huyck Judy Kutulas Robert M. Mennel Loren E. Pennington Carmelita S. Ryan William Graebner Haruo Iguchi Lester C. Lamon John V. Mering Frank Pereira Richard W. Sadler George D. Green H. Larry Ingle Daniel Lane, Jr. Marion G. Merrill Lewis C. Perry Nancy Sahli Julie Greene Carl T. Jackson Gerald F. Lange Joanne J. Meyerowitz Allan Peskin C. E. Schabacker Victor R. Greene

66 • 2010 OAH Annual Meeting • Washington, D.C. Ronald Schaffer Tim Tucker Edward Agran James L. Axtell Pamela J. Bennett Paul S. Boyer Michael Schaller Sandra F. VanBurkleo Wilbert H. Ahern Edward L. Ayers Maxine F. Benson Peter Boyle F. H. Schapsmeier James S. Vanness C.Blythe Ahlstrom Charles G. Backfish Philip J. Bergan T. Dwight Bozeman Harry N. Scheiber James R. Voelz Elizabeth Aikin Elizabeth Bailey Albert I. Berger John H. Bracey, Jr. Loretta L. Schmidt Yvonne C. von Norio Akashi Fred A. Bailey James M. Bergquist James C. Bradford Johanna Schoen Fettweis Catherine L. John W. Bailey, Jr. Robert H. Berlin Mary Ann Brady Thomas D. Richard T. von Albanese W. David Baird Hyman Berman Betty J. Brandon Schoonover Mayrhauser Michele L. Aldrich Dean P. Baker William Berman Allan Brandt John Schroeder David A. Walker Sam Alewitz Jean H. Baker George Berndt Vernon S. Braswell Ingrid Winther Peter Wallenstein John K. Alexander Richard A. Baker Virginia Bernhard James D. Bratt Scobie Ronald John Walski Jon Alexander Gordon M. Bakken David Bernstein Timothy H. Breen Anne Firor Scott Gordon H. Warren June G. Alexander Wesley G. Balla Mary F. Berry William Breitenbach Ronald E. Seavoy John J. Waters Keith J. Alexander Jack Stokes Ballard Eugene H. Lynn Brenneman Gustav L. Seligmann, Jr. Paul W. Wehr Ruth M. Alexander Brian Balogh Berwanger Elaine G. Breslaw Shelby Shapiro Sydney Stahl Thomas G. Alexander Regina Bannan Charlene Bickford Howard Brick Richard N. Sheldon Weinberg Kenneth G. Alfers Helen Bannan- W.E. Bigglestone Lynne T. Brickley S. C. Shepherd, Jr. Harold J. Weiss, Jr. George E. Allen Baurecht Darrel Bigham Roger D. Bridges James Francis Shigley Richard Weiss David F. James M.Banner, Jr. William Roger Biles Elwood L. Bridner, Jr. Paul H. Smith Nancy J. Weiss Allmendinger Lois W. Banner Terry D. Bilhartz Kaye Briegel Wilson Smith Malkiel Harriet Alonso Charles Pete Banner- George A. Billias Ron Briley John M. Spencer Joan C. Wells Glenn Altschuler Haley Roger E. Bilstein William Brinker Kurt R. Spillmann Lowell E. Wenger CharlesF. Ames Brady M. Banta Frederick M. Binder Alan Brinkley Carole Srole E. Milton Wheeler David L. Anderson Kenneth A. Barber Michael Birkner Margaret Brinsley J. Barton Starr Roger S. White Douglas Anderson Elliott Barkan Richard Blackett Ronald S. Brockway Raymond Starr Henry O. Whiteside Fred W. Anderson Redmond J. Barnett Robert M. Blackson John J. Broesamle Anthony Stavola Michael N. Wibel James L. Anderson William L. Barney George T. Blakey John L. Brooke Samuel N. Stayer Sarah W. Wiggins Margo Anderson Michael Barnhart Thomas E. Blantz Albert S. Broussard Mark J. Stegmaier James C. Williams Paul Anderson Dean O. Barnum Burton J. Bledstein Jeffrey P. Brown Jerry G. Stephens John C. Williams Terry H. Anderson Alwyn Barr Carol K. Bleser Joshua Brown Ray Stephens Joel R. Williamson Virginia DeJohn Hal S. Barron Mary H. Blewett Norman D. Brown L. L. Stevenson Terry P. Wilson Anderson Robert G. Barrows David W. Blight Richard D. Brown Jeffrey C. Stewart Wayne Wilson Dee E. Andrews Keith M. Barton Robert M. Bliss T. Beckley Brown Mark A. Stoler William H. Wilson Joyce Appleby Michael L. Barton Avital Bloch William G. Brown, Jr. Brit Allan Storey Allan M. Winkler Richard Aquila Norma Basch Jack S. Blocker Blaine T. Browne Ralph A. Storm Richard L. Wixon Jo Ann E. Michael C. Batinski Peter J. Blodgett Blaine A. Brownell Richard W. Strattner Susan Wladaver- Argersinger James L. Baughman Jo Tice Bloom Dickson D. Bruce, Jr. Shigeru Sugiyama Morgan Peter H. Argersinger Dale Baum Frederick J. Blue Robert V. Bruce John A. Sylvester Yujin Yaguchi Susan M. Armeny Keith W. Baum Barbara Blumberg David Brundage Yoshiko Takita John Yarbrough Susan H. Armitage John F. Bauman Kenneth J. Blume Peter H. Buckingham David Thelen Rafia Zafar Thom M. Armstrong Mark K. Bauman Louis H. Richard Buel, Jr. Gerald E. Thomas John F. Zeugner Douglas M. Arnold Roland M. Baumann Blumengarten Walter L. Buenger Richard J. Thomas William Larry Ziglar Cindy S. Aron James L. Baumgardner Stuart Blumin John D. Buenker Robert D. Thomas, Jr. James A. Zimmerman R. O. Arsenault Ross W. Beales, Jr. John Bodnar Mari Jo Buhle Jerry J. Thornbery Natsuki Aruga Thomas R. Beazley Howard P. Bodner John J. Bukowczyk Bert H. Thurber Twenty-Five Year Tadashi Aruga Bruce Becker Brian C. Boland Robert D. Bulkley, Jr. Ralph R. Tingley Members Stephen V. Ash William B. Bedford Marianne Bonner George D. Bullock Vincent F. Torigian Terrie Aamodt D. Leroy Ashby Janet R. Bednarek Rochelle Bookspan Nicholas C. Burckel Eckard V. Toy, Jr. Carl J. Abbott Douglas M. Astolfi Joel H.Beezy Stephanie E. Booth Alex Burckin Robert L. Tree Mark Abbott Annette Atkins Robert L. Beisner Eileen Boris David Burner Joseph Trent Douglas C. Abrams Jeanie Attie John M. Belohlavek Gabor S. Boritt Rand Burnette Joe Trotter George R. Adams Arthur H. Auten Doron Ben-Atar Elizabeth Bouvier James MacGregor Hiroshi Tsunematsu Christopher Agnew Steven M. Avella Thomas Bender Douglas E. Bowers Burns Nancy Bernkopf Michael K. Averbach Michael L. Benedict Lawson Bowling Edwin G. Burrows Tucker Allan M. Axelrad Edward M. Bennett Carl B. Boyd, Jr. Orville Vernon

2010 OAH Annual Meeting • Washington, D.C. • 67 Burton Robert W. Cherny Nicholas J. Cords Allen F. Davis Ronald P. Dufour James E. Fell, Jr. Paul E. Bushnell Michael B. Chesson Roger W. Corley Calvin D. Davis Lynn Dumenil Daniel Feller Bruce I. Bustard Carl H. Christensen Joseph J. Corn Cullom Davis Thomas R. Dunlap Michael Fellman Ronald E. Butchart Lawrence O. Janet Cornelius Donald G. Davis, Jr. Colleen A. Dunlavy Norman B. Ferris Desmond X. Butler Christensen Cecilia S. Cornell Hugh H. Davis Durwood Dunn Mark T. Fiege Martin J. Butler William E. Wallace Cory Lawrence B. Davis Doris D. Dwyer Marvin Fieman Peter M. Buzanski Christensen Janet L. Coryell Stephen Davis Terrence E. Dwyer Robert Filby Rolfe G. Buzzell Jonathan M. Chu Frank Costigliola Thomas H. Davis III David L. Dykstra John M. Findlay Kevin B. Byrne Howard P. Chudacoff George B. Cotkin Thomas J. Davis Eileen M. Eagan Joseph R. Fink Patricia H. Byrne John H. Churchman Nancy F. Cott Jane S. De Hart Charles W. Eagles Roy E. Finkenbine Patrick Cady Michael Churchman Robert J. Cottrol David M. Dean Larry J. Easterling James Finnigan Stanley Caine Paul A. Cimbala David T. Courtwright Peter R. Decker Dean Eberly Claude S. Fischer Charles W. Calhoun John Cimprich Francis Couvares Carl N. Degler, TTEE Michael H. Ebner Leslie E. Fishbein Albert Camarillo Clifford E. Clark, Jr. Stephen J. Cox James Lyle DeMarce Alfred E. Eckes John J. Fitzgerald Ross J. Cameron Malcolm C. Clark Thomas R. Cox L. Steven Demaree R. David Edmunds Joseph C. Fitzharris Ballard C. Campbell Christopher S. Clarke Bruce Craig John A. D’Emilio Jerome E. Edwards John J. Fitzpatrick D’Ann Campbell Robert H. Claxton Elaine F. Crane Matthew Dennis Lillie J. Edwards Susan Flader John Campbell Paul G.E. Clemens Theodore R. Crane Michael Dennis Owen Dudley Maureen A. Flanagan W. E. Campbell Kendrick A. Ed Crapol John D’Entremont Edwards John H. Flannagan, Jr. Philip L. Cantelon Clements Hamilton Cravens Alan Derickson Tom G. Edwards Thomas Fleming Dominic J. Capeci, Jr. Charles Coate Alastair T. Crawford James E. Devries Douglas R. Egerton Marvin E. Fletcher Robert B. Carey James C. Cobb Charles W. Crawford Charles B. Dew William G. Eidson Gerald T. Flom David L. Carlton Luca Codignola-Bo John E. Crawford Steven Deyle Robin L. Einhorn William E. Foley Clifton Carmon Edward M. Coffman Suzanne J. Crawford Thomas V. Dibacco Peter Eisenstadt J. K. Folmar Mark C. Carnes Bruce S. Cohen Lewis H. Cresse John D. Dibbern Stanley M. Elkins Eric Foner E. Wayne Carp Charles L. Cohen Ruth C. Crocker Dennis Dickerson Richard N. Ellis Elizabeth Fones-Wolf Gerald Carpenter Howard D. Cohen William J. Cronon Duane N. Diedrich Lucius F. Ellsworth Kenneth Fones-Wolf Marius M. Carriere Ira Cohen James B. Crooks Thomas A. Dietz James W. Ely, Jr. George B. Forgie Charles F. Carroll Lizabeth Cohen Janet W. Crouse Anne P. Diffendal Martin I. Elzy Lee W. Formwalt David J. Carroll Patricia C. Cohen Maurice A. Crouse C. G. Dilworth Carroll Engelhardt Gaines M. Foster P. Thomas Carroll Ronald D. Cohen Jeffrey J. Crow Hasia R. Diner Stanley Engerman Mark S. Foster Rosemary F. Carroll William Cohen Jon A. Cucinatto Bruce J. Dinges Michael E. Engh, Sr. Frank K. Foulds Clayborne Carson Thomas B. Colbert David H. Culbert Robert J. Dinkin Thomas R. English John J. Fox Dan T. Carter Donald B. Cole William H. Leonard Dinnerstein Elizabeth Enstam Stephen Fox Purvis M. Carter Stephen Cole Cumberland Michael D’Innocenzo Claude C. Erb David Francis Virginia P. Caruso Michael Coleman John T. Cumbler John Dittmer Daniel R. Ernst Noralee Frankel Richard J. Carwardine John H. Colhoun Robert E. Curran John M. Dobson Edward J. Escobar Grover C. Franklin Charles D. Cashdollar Dale Collins James T. Currie Donald B. Dodd Ellen T. Eslinger V. P. Franklin Joan E. Cashin Rebecca Conard Daniel F. Curtin Helen Dodson Richard W. Etulain John B. Frantz James Caskey Richard H. Condon George H. Curtis Justus D. Doenecke Joyce Mason Evans James W. Fraser Pedro Castillo Joseph A. Conforti Peter H. Curtis Jay P. Dolan Sara M. Evans Peter J. Frederick Alfred A. Cave Vivian Bruce Conger Robin R. Cutler James Donnelly William McKee Linda Freed Andrew R. Cayton Patrick T. Conley Wayne Cutler James P. Donohue, Jr. Evans Estelle B. F.J. Celeste, Sr. Margaret Connell- William W. Cutler III Jean Dooley Nora Faires Joshua Freeman William H. Chafe Szasz Daniel Czitrom Jacob H. Dorn Vincent J. Falzone Richard M. Fried Frank Chalk James R. Connor David Dalton Erika L. Doss Ena L. Farley Frank A. Friedman David M. Chalmers David W. Conroy Kathleen M. Dalton Dennis B. Downey David R. Farrell Lawrence J. George Chalou Dennis H. Conway David B. Danbom Don H. Doyle James J. Farrell Friedman John W. Chambers Cita Cook Pete Daniel Virginia G. Drachman Elizabeth Faue Oris D. Friesen Robert Chandler Edward M. Cook, Jr. Douglas H. Daniels Michael J. Dubin Donald Faugno John R. Frisch Gordon H. Chang F. Alan Coombs Roger Daniels Thomas Dublin Drew Faust Christian G. Fritz Thomas L. Charlton Terry A. Cooney Gerald Danzer Ellen Carol DuBois Roger J. Fechner Richard H. Frost Charles W. Cheape William J. Cooper, Jr. E. J. Danziger, Jr. James H. Ducker Ronald L. Feinman Joseph A. Fry Suellen Cheng Andrew J. Davidson Ann Patricia Duffy Richard T. Fry

68 • 2010 OAH Annual Meeting • Washington, D.C. Fumiko Fujita Robert Goldberg David Gurowsky Willard M. Hays Helen Lefkowitz Richard R. John Richard P. Fuke Janet Lynne Golden Melanie Gustafson William D. Hechler Horowitz Thomas Johnsen Michael F. Funchion David R. Goldfield Gerald Gutek Douglas A. Hedin Thomas A. Horrocks Carolyn W. Johnson Patrick J. Furlong Joanne Goldman Roland L. Guyotte Jean Heffer Masahirof Hosoya Dorothy E. Johnson Mary O. Furner Robert Goldman Edward F. Haas Mary Ann Heiss Walter R. Houf Jack J. Johnson Donna R. Gabaccia Steve Golin Hamsey Habeich Douglas Helms Daniel W. Howe John W. Johnson Nancy Gabin J. Gomery Samuel Haber William L. Helton John Howe Owen V. Johnson John Gaddis Evelyn Gonzalez John R. Habjan, S.M. Joseph P. Helyar Stanley R. Howe Reinhard O. Johnson James P. Gaffey Joyce D. Goodfriend William H. Hackett Nathaniel J. Henderson Charles F. Howlett Richard R. Johnson Louis Galambos James W. Gordon Sheldon Hackney James E. Hendrickson Frederick E. Hoxie Walter T. Johnson Mark Allen Gal‑ Martin K. Gordon Robert W. Haddon Pamela M. Henson Randal L. Hoyer Manfred Jonas breath Robert M. Gorin Jr. Joseph Haebler Dan Hermann David R. Huehner Arnita A. Jones James Matthew Gallman Cathy Gorn Gunnar Haeggmark Richard E. Herrmann James K. Huhta David A. Jones Richard A. Gantz Sidney Gottesfeld D. Harland Hagler David Herschler Richard L. Hume Jacqueline Jones James B. Gardner Robert J. Gough John H. Haley III Theodore Hershberg Carol Sue Humphrey Kathleen W. Jones Lloyd Gardner Terrence J. Gough David T. Halkola Norma Hervey Richard H. Hunt Kenneth M. Jones Jane N. Garrett John J. Grabowski Deborah C. Hall Nancy A. Hewitt R. Douglas Hurt Daniel P. Jordan Thomas M. Gaskin John Pike Grady Mitchell Hall William L. Hewitt James L. Huston Frederick W. Jordan Jane E. Gastineau Alan Graebner Van Beck Hall John C. Heyeck Robert S. Huston William L. Joyce Edwin S. Gaustad William Graebner Carl V. Hallberg Robin Higham Richard L. Hutchison Richard W. Judd Mariane B. Geiger Harvey J. Graff Mark H. Haller James A. Hijiya Reed Hutner George Juergens Suzanne Geissler- Henry F. Graff Alonzo L. Hamby Michael R. Hill Heather Huyck Mary Cecilia Bowles Robert B. Grant David E. Hamilton James W. Hilty Thomas Hyder Jurasinski, O.S.B.M. Judith F. Gentry Carl R. Graves Thomas D. Hamm Darlene Clark Hine Raymond M. Hyser John T. Juricek David A. Gerber Susan E. Gray Jack L. Hammersmith William C. Hine John W. Ifkovic Karl Kabelac D. R. Gerlach Susan W. Gray James E. Hansen Ray Hiner, Jr. Robert J. Imholt Robert J. Larry R. Gerlach Barbara Graymont James Hantula Harwood P. Hinton Richard H. Immerman Kaczorowski Gary L. Gerstle George D. Green Jerry Harder Wayne K. Hinton H. Larry Ingle Carl F. Kaestle Louis S. Gerteis Michael D. Green David E. Harley Joseph P. Hobbs Robert M. Ireland Michael G. Kammen Ralph V. Giannini Cheryl Greenberg Sandra D. Harmon Sheldon Hochheiser Nancy G. Isenberg Walter D. Kamphoefner Michael D. Gibson Douglas Greenberg R. Eugene Harper Graham Russell William H. Issel Harvey Kantor William W. Giffin Kenneth Greenberg David E. Harrell Hodges Maurice Isserman Steven Karges James N. Giglio James S. Greene J. William Harris James A. Hodges Peter J. Iverson Ronald D. Karr James Gilbert Rick S. Gregory Marc L. Harris Dirk Hoerder Howard Jablon Peter Karsten Glen A. Gildemeister Charles Grench Paul W. Harris David J. Hoeveler Thomas Jablonsky Amalie M. Kass Mark T. Gilderhus Kenneth J. Grieb Robert L. Harris, Jr. Joan Hoff Carl T. Jackson John F. Kasson Timothy J. Gilfoyle Jim Griffin Cynthia Harrison Peter C. Hoffer Kenneth T. Jackson Joy S. Kasson Paul A. Gilje Michael D. Griffith Stanley Harrold Sylvia D. Hoffert Kathryn A. Jacob Michael B. Katz John S. Gilkeson, Jr. Robert W. Griffith William D. Harshaw Abraham Hoffman David M. Jacobs Stanley N. Katz Howard F. Gillette, Jr. James Grimes William F. Hartford Ronald Hoffman Steven H. Jaffe Polly W. Kaufman Steven M. Gillon David Grimsted Susan M. Hartmann Don L. Hofsommer David Jaffee Yasuhide Kawashima Brian M. Gilpin Anthony Gronowicz Hendrik Hartog Michael J. Hogan Herbert F. Janick Michael Kazin Lori Ginzberg Robert A. Gross Larry Hartzell Paul S. Holbo Glen S. Jeansonne William R. Keagle David H. Glassberg Michael Grossberg Adele Hast Jack M. Holl Alphine W. Jefferson Ann Durkin Keating Philip Gleason James R. Grossman Herman M. Hattaway J. William Holland Julie R. Jeffrey Thomas M. Keefe John M. Glen Larry H. Grothaus Laurence M. Hauptman David Hollinger John W. Jeffries Charles A. Keene Myra C. Glenn Adolph H. Grundman Alan R. Havig William F. Holmes Lawrence J. Jelinek Elizabeth Hamer Susan A. Glenn Carl J. Guarneri James F. Hawk Michael F. Holt William D. Jenkins Kegan Gary A. Glovins Gayle Gullett Ellis W. Hawley Michael Homel Joan M. Jensen Kenneth W. Keller Stanly Godbold, Jr. Joan R. Gundersen Robert J. Haws Adrienne D. Hood Richard Jensen Brooks M. Kelley Harvey Goddard Jeffrey R. Gunderson Robert P. Hay Clifton D. Hood John B. Jentz Mary Kelley Nathan Godfried Peter Gunn Mary Hayes Jerry Berl Hopkins Dwight Jessup Dennis L. Kellogg Joyce S. Goldberg Jeffrey S. Gurock Richard S. Haynes Gerald C. Horne Wayne H. Jiles David H. Kelly Daniel Horowitz

2010 OAH Annual Meeting • Washington, D.C. • 69 Dennis P. Kelly Virginia J. Laas David Rich Lewis Howard F. Mahan McCormick Wilbur R. Miller Lawrence C. Kelly Barbara E. Lacey Gene D. Lewis Pauline Maier Thomas K. McCraw Frederick V. Mills, Sr. M. Ruth Kelly Richard L. Lael Tab W. Lewis Dennis J. Maika William T. McCue Jeffrey Mirel Douglas Kendall Walter LaFeber Douglas A. Ley Rachel P. Maines John J. McCusker J. Paul Mitchell David M. Kennedy Vivian Laflamme Walter M. Licht Stephen Maizlish Terrence J. McDonald Kell Mitchell Robert C. Kenzer Ellen Condliffe Nelson Lichtenstein William Major Gerald W. McFarland Eugene P. Moehring Linda K. Kerber Lagemann William D. Liddle Sarah S. Malino Larry A. McFarlane Ole O. Moen Alice Kessler-Harris Lester C. Lamon Richard K. Lieberman David K. Maloney William S. McFeely Raymond A. Mohl Thomas Kessner Naomi R. Lamoreaux David L. Lightner Peter C. Mancall Michael E. McGerr James C. Mohr Daniel Kevles George R. Lamplugh Terrence J. Lindell Matthew Mancini Michael McGiffert Haskell Monroe Richard B. Kielbowicz Earl O. Landau Blanche M. G. Robert G. Mangrum Charles F. McGovern David Montgomery Douglas C. Kinder Roger Lane Linden Bruce H. Mann Daniel McInerny Dee Ann Montgomery Ray J. Kinder Stuart G. Lang Gerald F. Linderman Kent L. Mann Christopher McKee Margaret J. Moody Doris E. King Gerald F. Lange James M. Lindgren Michelle Mannering James S. McKeown Patricia Mooney- Peter J. King Harold D. Langley Lawrence M. Lipin Richard L. Manser Blaine McKinley Melvin William M. King James C. Lanier Charles H. Lippy Janet M. Manson Patrick E. McLear David T. Moore Rachel N. Klein Donald P. Lankiewicz Julia E. Liss Joseph S. Marcum Eileen M. McMahon Suzanne E. Moranian S. Jay Kleinberg V. A. Lapomarda James A. Litle Alan I Marcus Robert J. McMahon Regina A. Morantz- Anne M. Klejment John W. Larkin Judy Barrett Litoff Maeva Marcus Robert C. McMath Sanchez Susan E. Klepp Lawrence H. Larsen John E. Little Eduard M. Mark Sally McMillen Iwan Morgan Timothy E. Kline Bruce L. Larson Daniel C. Littlefield Robert Markman Linda O. McMurry John H. Morris James T. Kloppenberg Robert W. Larson Steven D. Livengood James C. Maroney Richard M. McMurry Stephanie A. Morris James C. Klotter Virginia Lashley Jeffery Livingston Carol A. Marsh John C. McWilliams Michael A. Morrison Thomas A. Klug Carol Lasser Charles A. Lofgren John F. Marszalek John A. Meador Charles T. Morrissey Stephen Kneeshaw Richard Latner Robert E. Long James Marten Thomas B. Mega Wilson J. Moses George W. Knepper Terry S. Latour Stephen L. William C. Marten Jeffrey L. Meikle George D. Moss Dale T. Knobel Bruce Laurie Longenecker Charles H. Martin Martin V. Melosi Earl Mulderink III William A. Koelsch Catherine Grollman Paul K. Longmore James Kirby Martin Thomas R. Melton Philip R. Muller Sally Gregory Kohlstedt Lauritsen John W. W. Loose Robert F. Martin Robert M. Mennel WilliamH. Mullins Richard H. Kohn Alan Lawson James J. Lorence Waldo E. Martin, Jr. Bernard Mergen Lucy E. Murphy Paul Koistinen Steven F. Lawson Albert O. Louer Kenneth C. Martis James H. Merrell Peter Murray Peter Kolchin Jama Lazerow Anne C. Loveland Takeshi Mashimo Marion G. Merrill John M. Murrin Clayton R. Koppes Dimitri D. Lazo Richard Coke Lower Robert K. Massey, Jr. Paul E. Mertz R. David Myers Gary J. Kornblith Daniel Leab Richard Lowitt Donald G. Mathews Stephen Meyer Richard J. Myers Andrea Kornbluh Judith W. Leavitt M. Philip Lucas Robert Mathis Joanne J. Meyerowitz Richard W. Nagle Mark Kornbluh John L. LeBrun Kenneth M. Takeshi Matsuda William C. Miceli, Sr. David Nasaw Robert Korstad Mark H. Leff Ludmerer Glenna Matthews Edward H. Michels Gary B. Nash J. Morgan Kousser Melvyn P. Leffler Nancy C. Luebbert Allen J. Matusow Ronald E. Mickel Natalie A. Naylor Knud U. Krakau Timothy Lehman Frederick C. Luebke John A. Matzko Dennis N. Mihelich James M. Neal Alan M. Kraut Kurt E. Leichtle David E. Luellen John C. Maxwell George Miles Humbert S. Nelli David W. Krueger James L. Leloudis Ralph E. Luker Elaine Tyler May Char Miller Anne Kusener Nelsen John D. Krugler Jesse Lemisch Jonathan Lurie Glenn A. May Glenn T. Miller Anna K. Nelson Bruce Kuklick Richard W. Lenk, Jr. Maxine N. Lurie Lary L. May Howard S. (Dick) T. K. Nenninger Gary Kulik Gediminas Leonas Karen Lystra Martha May Miller John C. Nerone Allan Kulikoff Janice M. Leone Mark Lytle Robert E. May Howard Miller John L. Nethers Bruce R. Kuniholm Gerda Lerner Richard S. Macha Michael Mayer J. Donald Miller Lois Nettleship Regina G. Kunzel Alan Lessoff William P. MacKinnon Edith P. Mayo Janice J. Miller Robert D. Neuleib Karen Kupperman H. A. Leventhal Nancy MacLean George T. Mazuzan John E. Miller John J. Newman Kathleen S. Ralph B. Levering David Macleod Judith N. McArthur Kerby A. Miller Michael L. Nicholls Kutolowski Bruce Levine John G. Macnaughton John M. McCardell, Jr. Leonard G. Miller Roger L. Nichols Charles R. Kutzleb Susan B. Levine Jack P. Maddex, Jr. Wilfred M. McClay M. Catherine Miller Alexandra M. Peter J. Kuznick David Levering Thomas R. Maddux Robert McColley Patrick B. Miller Nickliss Anthony Kuzniewski, S.J. Lewis James H. Madison William L. McCorkle Randall M. Miller Paul H. Nieder David E. Kyvig Charles H. Sally M. Miller 70 • 2010 OAH Annual Meeting • Washington, D.C. Fredrick H. Nielsen John W. Partin Daniel Pope C. Thomas Rezner Rotundo Dorothee Schneider Stephen Nissenbaum Peggy Pascoe David L. Porter Benjamin D. Rhodes Dennis C. Rousey Eric Schneider Gregory H. Nobles Elaine Pascu Susan L. Porter Leo Ribuffo Leslie Rowland James C. Schneider Margie Noel Sue C. Patrick Barbara M. Posadas Myra L. Rich William D. Rowley John C. Schneider Thomas J. Noer James T. Patterson E. Daniel Potts Paul Rich E. Scott Royce Thomas D. Patrick B. Nolan James C. Paul Angela D. Powell Jean Richardson Marion W. Schoonover Mark A. Noll Justus F. Paul Lawrence N. Powell Daniel K. Richter Roydhouse Alan M. Schroder Steven Noll Arnold M. Pavlovsky Virginia Pratt Tom Richter Massimo Rubboli John Schroeder David P. Nord Elizabeth Anne William S. Pretzer Steven A. Riess Joan Shelley Rubin Carl R. Schulkin John R. Nordell, Jr. Payne Linda K. Pritchard Robert W. Righter T. Michael Ruddy Bruce J. Schulman Chris Nordmann Samuel C. Pearson Ben Procter Paul T. Ringenbach John W. Rudie Constance B. Schulz Ellen Nore Jane M. Pederson Noel H. Pugach Moses Rischin Vicki L. Ruiz Robert D. Debra L. Northart William D. Pederson Allan Purcell Donald A. Ritchie Leila J. Rupp Schulzinger Mary Beth Norton Robert H. Peebles Edward A. Purcell, Jr. Robert C. Ritchie Robert J. Rusnak David Schuyler Stephen H. Norwood Gary Pennanen John M. Pyne John Roach Cynthia E. Russett Thomas F. Schwartz Joel R.Novick Theda Perdue Louis Pyster James L. Roark Thomas G. Ruth Neil Schwartzbach Ronald L. Numbers Frank Pereira Stephen G. Rabe William G. Robbins Carmelita S. Ryan Loren L. Jesse L. Nutt, Jr. Maria A. Perez-Stable George C. Rable Jere W. Roberson Henry B. Ryan Schweninger Maureen M. Nutting Edwin J. Perkins John C. Raby Charles E. Roberts James Gilbert Ryan Ingrid Winther Elizabeth I. Nybakken Martin S. Pernick Benjamin G. Rader Rita Roberts Mary P. Ryan Scobie Mary J. Oates Jeffrey Perry Gail Radford Nancy Marie Robert Rydell Anne Firor Scott Barbara Oberg Lewis C. Perry Fred D. Ragan Robertson Richard W. Sadler William Scott James W. Oberly Allan Peskin Bruce A. Ragsdale Jo Ann O. Robinson Jeffrey J. Safford Howard P. Segal James P. O’Brien Robert K. Peters R. Lyn Rainard George L. Robson, Jr. Allen Safianow Terry L. Seip Michael G. O’Brien Peter L. Petersen Edgar F. Raines, Jr. Robert Rockaway Nancy Sahli Gustav L. Seligmann, Jr. Stephen J. Ochs C. H. Peterson Jack N. Rakove Laurie A. Rofini Sharon Salinger Robert M. Senkewicz Broeck N. Oder Gale E. Peterson Michael G. Rapp Donald W. Rogers Neal Salisbury Gloria Sesso Richard J. Oest‑ Jon A. Peterson Stephen L. Raskin Earl M. Rogers Nick Salvatore Kevin D. Sexton reicher Joyce S. Peterson Mark B. Rayer William D. Rogers George J. Sanchez William G. Shade Arnold A. Offner Larry R. Peterson C. Elizabeth Fred W. Rohl Jonathan D. Sarna Carole Shammas Howard A. Ohline Trudy Huskamp Raymond Richard C. Rohrs John E. Sauer Herbert Shapiro Paul F. O’Keefe Peterson David Raymond Lincoln C. Rolling Edward N. Saveth M. Rebecca Sharpless Gary Y. Okihiro Marilyn Pettit Harry W. Readnour William J. Rorabaugh C. E. Schabacker Gardiner H. Otto H. Olsen Jerrald K. Pfabe Patrick D. Reagan Roberta Rorke Judith K. Schafer Shattuck, Jr. Keith W. Olson Fred D. Pfening Marcus Rediker David J. Roscoe Ronald Schaffer Barton C. Shaw Robert C. Olson E. Harrell Phillips Edwin A. Reed F. Duane Rose Michael Schaller Jack Shaw Peter S. Onuf William B. Pickett William J. Reese Mark H. Rose Mark S. Schantz Harlow W. Sheidley Kenneth O’Reilly Charles K. Piehl Thomas V. Reeve II David A. Rosenberg F. H. Schapsmeier Marianne Sheldon Richard J. Orsi Preston E. Pierce Gary W. Reichard Joseph Rosenberg Virginia J. Scharff Richard N. Sheldon Grey Osterud Doris H. Pieroth Donald E. Reid Morton M. Rosenberg Ronald Schatz S. C. Shepherd, Jr. C. H. O’Sullivan Victor M. Pilson John P. Reid Susan Rosenfeld William O. Scheeren Michael S. Sherry Alan M. Osur John F. Piper, Jr. Robert L. Reid Theodore Rosenof Kenneth P. Scheffel Johanna N. Shields James M. O’Toole Dwight T. Pitcaithley Joseph P. Reidy David K. Rosner Richard Scheiber James Francis Shigley Fraser M. Ottanelli Harold Platt Janice L. Reiff Rodney A. Ross Kenneth A. Scherzer Michael Shirley Chester J. Pach, Jr. Hermann K. Platt John T. Reilly Rodney J. Ross Richard R. Schieffelin Francis R. Shor Dominic A. Pacyga Elizabeth Pleck David M. Reimers Steven J. Ross Theron F. Schlabach Neil L. Shumsky Nell Irvin Painter Edward J. Pluth Robert V. Remini Steven Rosswurm Ronald A. Schlundt Barbara Sicherman Phyllis Palmer Emil Pocock James Renberg Randolph A. Roth Janet Schmelzer Stephen N. Siciliano Patricia A. Palmieri Richard W. Pointer Marguerite (Peggy) Morey D. Rothberg Gregory G. Schmidt Mary Corbin Sies H. K. Park Anne Marie Pois Renner Marc Rothenberg Leigh Schmidt Paul Siff Philip W. Parks Keith Polakoff John P. Resch Mary Logan Loretta L. Schmidt Henry J. Silverman Jenni Parrish Eunice G. Pollack William C. Reuter Rothschild David F. Schmitz Philip T. Silvia, Jr. T. Michael Parrish Fred E. Pollock John F. Reynolds Edward Anthony Gerald M. Schnabel Christina Simmons

2010 OAH Annual Meeting • Washington, D.C. • 71 Garen Simmons George Staples Brent Tarter William M. Tuttle, Jr. David J. Weber Thomas R. Roger D. Simon Darwin H. Stapleton John Tarver Reed Ueda Robert M. Weible Winpenny WilliamM. Simons J. Barton Starr Thad W. Tate Laurel T. Ulrich Lynn Y. Weiner Stanley B. Winters Arthur W. Simpson Bruce M. Stave Leah Marcile Taylor Stanley J. Underdal Gene Weinstein Cary D. Wintz Daniel J. Singal Anthony Stavola Richard S. Taylor Jeffery S. Underwood Robert Weisbrot Stanley Wishnick Ralph B. Singer, Jr. Samuel N. Stayer Paul H. Tedesco Nancy C. Unger Stephen G. Weisner Susan Wladaver- George H. Skau J. E. Stealey Rosalyn Terborg- Betty Miller Richard Weiss Morgan WilliamB. Skelton Peter N. Stearns Penn Unterberger Nancy J. Weiss Victoria Woeste Kathryn Kish Sklar Mark J. Stegmaier Thomas E. Terrill Wayne J. Urban Malkiel Kelly A. Woestman Douglas Slaybaugh John W. Steiger James L. Thane, Jr. Daun van Ee Joan C. Wells Marianne S. Wokeck Edward W. Sloan David Steigerwald David Thelen Sandra F. VanBurkleo Lowell E. Wenger Stephanie G. Wolf David Sloane Harry H. Stein Dorothy Thomas Philip VanderMeer Richard H. Werking Margaret Wolfe Richard S. Slotkin Judith Stein Gerald E. Thomas D. E. Vandeventer John M. Werly Henry J. Wolfinger Melvin Small Stephen J. Stein Richard J. Thomas James S. Vanness Thomas R. Wessel Glenn L. Wollam Edwin Smead Bruce E. Steiner Robert D. Thomas, Jr. Pershing Vartanian Robert F. Wesser Nancy Woloch Elbert B. Smith Jerry G. Stephens John A. Thompson Alden T. Vaughan Carroll Van West Raymond Wolters Gregory A. Smith Lester D. Stephens Margaret S. Thompson Stephen L. Vaughn Robert B. Westbrook Peter H. Wood Jeffery A. Smith Errol Stevens Wayne W. Thompson Frank P. Vazzano Robert R. Weyeneth Richard E. Wood John David Smith Lewis Tomlin Stevens Jerry J. Thornbery Robert W. Venables Mervin B. Whealy Harold D. Woodman Judith E. Smith Sharon Stevens J. Mills Thornton Wendy Venet E. Milton Wheeler Nan E. Woodruff Merritt Roe Smith L. L. Stevenson Bert H. Thurber Anne Cipriano Joanne E. Wheeler James M. Woods Norman W. Smith Barbara Stewart Craig Thurtell Venzon David E. Whisnant Michael V. Woodward Paul H. Smith C. Evan Stewart David M. Tiffany Martha H. Verbrugge Ethel White Peter J. Wosh Paul M. Smith, Jr. Harry Stokes Janet A. Tighe Charles Vincent Richard White Michael Wreszin Sherry L. Smith M. Mark Stolarik Joseph R. Timko Peter Virgadamo Roger S. White James E. Wright Susan L. Smith Mark A. Stoler Barbara L. Tischler John F. Votaw, Sr. Shane White Bertram Wyatt- Thomas G. Smith Neil Storch Larry E. Tise Louis A. Vyhnanek Henry O. Whiteside Brown Raymond W. Smock Brit Allan Storey Marilyn Tobias Theodore R. Wachs Allan R. Whitmore Donald Yacovone Rick Smoot Richard Stott Dorothy Tobin Louise C. Wade Michael N. Wibel Virginia Yans Susan Smulyan Steven M. Stowe Eugene M. Tobin Timothy Walch Keith R. Widder Allen Yarnell John Snetsinger William M. Stowe, Jr. Bruce Tobis Clarence E. Walker Jonathan M. Wiener Shirley J. Yee Jim Snyder Susan Strasser Peter A. Tofuri David A. Walker Sarah W. Wiggins Ryo Yokoyama Jean R. Soderlund Renate Strelau Bryant F. Tolles, Jr. J. Samuel Walker Jacqueline Wilkie Alfred F. Young Pamela Sodhy Arvarh E. Strickland Christopher L. William O. Walker Joe B. Wilkins, Jr. Arthur P. Young Rayman Solomon Marian E. Strobel Tomlins Daniel J. Walkowitz Joanne Sassi Willcox Mary Young James K. Somerville Shelton Stromquist Robert Brent Toplin Peter Wallenstein C. Fred Williams J. William Youngs James M. SoRelle Nancy L. Struna Vincent F. Torigian Joanne R. Walroth Frederic M. Williams Gerald Zahavi David W. Southern Thomas J. Sugrue Eugene P. Trani Page James C. Williams Joanna Schneider Eric C. Spector C. K. Sullivan David S. Trask James A. Walsh, Jr. John C. Williams Zangrando John M. Spencer William Sullivan Sandra G. Treadway James P. Walsh Leonard W. Williams Robert L. Zangrando Paul S. Sperry Sara Brooks Sundberg Joseph Trent Lorena S. Walsh Lillian S. Williams Richard A. Zansitis Paul R. Spickard John F. Sutherland Judith Trolander Ronald John Walski Richard Hal Williams Charles A. Zappia Kurt R. Spillmann Martha H. Swain William Trollinger, Jr. Ronald G. Walters William F. Willingham David Zarefsky Donald Spivey James R. Sweeney George W. Troxler John R. Waltrip James F. Willis Robert F. Zeidel Frederick M. John A. Sylvester Hiroshi Tsunematsu Daniel Franklin Daniel J. Wilson John F. Zeugner Spletstoser Harold James Nancy Bernkopf Ward John R. M. Wilson Robert H. Zieger Luther W. Spoehr Sylwester Tucker Susan W. Ware Lisa Wilson William Larry Ziglar Denise S. Spooner Marcia G. Synnott Tim Tucker John Harley Warner Terry P. Wilson James A. Zimmerman Margaret Spratt Ferenc M. Szasz Linda M. Tulloss Gordon H. Warren Wayne Wilson Gary P. Zola Judith Spraul- Robert P. Tabak J. A. Turcheneske, Jr. Deborah D. Waters Barbara C. Wingo David A. Zonderman Schmidt Jack Tager Bruce Turner John J. Waters Kenneth J. Winkle Thomas Zoumaras John Stagg Harold D. Tallant Thomas R. Turner Harry L. Watson Allan M. Winkler Warren Zuger Patricia Y. Stallard Duane A. Tananbaum Mark Tushnet John S. Watterson Kenneth L. Winn John F. Zwicky Judith M. Stanley Jane J. Tannenbaum Joan Waugh Herbert C. Winnik

72 • 2010 OAH Annual Meeting • Washington, D.C. Advertiser and Exhibitor Index

Exhibit Booth/Advertising Page Alexander Street Press...... 109/— Oxford University Press...... 122,124/118,119,139 Bard Graduate Center...... —/140 Palgrave Macmillan...... 206/138 Bedford/St. Martin’s...... 205,207,209/75 Paratext...... 225/— Bloomsbury Publishing...... ­—/137 Pearson...... 409,411,413/130, 141 Cambridge University Press...... 223/102, 103, 104 Penguin Group (USA)...... 410/134 Columbia University Press...... 218/126 Perseus Books Group...... 306/114,115 Cornell University Press...... 307/88 Potomac Books...... 121/142 Council for International Exchange of Scholars...... 313/— Princeton University Press...... 115/— Duke University Press...... 221/94, 120, 121 Random House, Inc...... 309,311/116,117 Early American Place...... —/106 Routledge...... 227,229,231/84,85 Fordham University Press...... 315/133 Rowman & Littlefield Publishers...... 110,112/— The Gilder Lehrman Institute of American History...... 407/— Stanford University Press...... —/139 Harlan Davidson, Inc...... 312/— National Museum of American ...... 213,215/110, 111 History, Smithsonian Institution...... —/96 Houghton Mifflin Company...... —/91 Temple University Press...... 310/132 Indiana University Press...... —/124, 125 Transaction Publishers...... 123/— Inside Higher Ed...... 330/— University of Arkansas Press...... 118/— Intercollegiate Studies Institute...... 119/— University of California Press...... 212/86,87 Ivan R. Dee, Publisher...... 304/— University of Chicago Press...... 211/122,123 Johns Hopkins University Press...... 228/76, 77 University of Georgia Press...... 400/107 Kent State University Press...... 310/129 University of Illinois Press...... 300,300A/78,79 LexisNexis...... 308/— University of Massachusetts Press...... 305/89 Louisiana State University Press...... 113/127 University of Missouri Press...... 319/105 Macmillan and Hill and Wang...... 208,210/92 University of North Carolina Press...... 404,406/98,99,100,101 OAH Magazine of History...... 415/97 University of Notre Dame Press...... 315/— Mark Twain’s Mississippi...... 405/— University of Pennsylvania Press...... 216/112,113 McGraw-Hill Higher Education...... 317/95 University of Virginia Press...... 314/80,81 MIT Press Journals...... —/90 University Press of Kansas...... 214/108,109 National Archives and Records Administration...... 220,222/— W. W. Norton & Company...... 217,219/82,83 National Building Museum...... —/141 Wadsworth Cengage Learning...... 224,226/93 Newsbank...... 316/— White House Historical Association...... —/140 Northern Illinois University Press...... 201/135 Wiley-Blackwell...... 117/128 NYU Press...... 111/131 Center...... 125/— OAH Distinguished Lectureship Program...... —/96 Yale University Press...... 116/136 Omohundro Institute of Early American History and Culture...... 408/—

2010 OAH Annual Meeting • Washington, D.C. • 73 Exhibit Floorplan

74 • 2010 OAH Annual Meeting • Washington, D.C.