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Index ofPresenters INDEX OF PRESENTERS OF INDEX INDEX OFPRESENTERS Conable, AnneE. Christopher, LisaM. Chism, Aaron Chan, Lokki Cebula, Larry Cauvin, Thomas Carriker, Robert Carpenter, Marian Carey, Ryan J. Cantrell, Sara Campbell, EmoryShaw Bzdek, Maren Bustard, Bruce Bush, Rebecca Burg, Steven Bunten, Peter Bruggeman, SethC. Brown, Ellen Brock, Julia Brennan, SheilaA. Bramwell, Lincoln Bracewell, Amy Borden, Phil Bollinger, Heather Boland, Beth Bingmann, Melissa Bergstrom, Randy Beredo, Cheryl Benac, David Beltran-Vocal, MariaA. Bellmore, Audra Belanger, Elizabeth Beisel, Perky Beiler, RosalindJ. Beatty, Bob Baty, LaurieA. Battle, Mary Baron, Christine Barnhart, Terry A. Barlow, JohnMatthew Bailey, Rebecca J. Babal, Marianne Babaian, Sharon Austin, Nancy Arnold, Laurie Arnette, Cherie Arato, Christine Anderson, DanHenry Anderegg, Niles Amato, Rebecca Alsobrook, David Alderman, Derek H. Adamek, Anna Page numberswillbeavailable intheprintversion ofthisprogram. Pleaseusethesearch functionofyour Adobereader tofindpresenters inthisonline version. 30 ...... Hubbs, Jill Hordes, Stanley Holmes, Meghan Gelardi Hebert, KeithS. Harris, Megan Harris, DonnaAnn Harris, Dee Harmon, Brigid Hamilton, William Hamilton, Paula Hall, Sue Hackett, Brian Gudis, Catherine Greenfield, BriannG. Grant, Jordan Gordon, Tammy S. Goldberg, David Glass, Brent Garrett, Patricia Gardner, JamesB. Gannon, Kelly Jae Gann, Emily Galke, Laura Frisch, Michael Freedman, Kate Franz, Kathleen Frahm, Annika Fowler, Laura Milsk Fortier, Paula Anne Finch, Rachael Filene, Benjamin Ferentinos, Susan Faden, Regina Etges, Andreas Engel, Kati Emerson, Ashley El Azhar,Samir Edmunds, R.David Dorrance, Laurel “Lauri” Dohms, Pete Dixon, Anthony Dickey, Jennifer W. Devine, Michael Denton, Lynn DeBolt, Dean Davis, Julie Davidson, Hugh Cyriaque, Jeanne Corcoran, Karen Cooper, Richard Coombs, JohnC. Cooke, Krista Conard, Rebecca ...... Madsen-Brooks, Leslie Macias, Vanessa M. Lyttle, Ashley Lyons, AmeliaH. Lyon, Cherstin M. Lubar, Steve Loza, Mireya Lowhorn, Greg Long, MarkHoward Littleton, Tommy Little, Barbara Liebhold, Peter Lewis, CatherineM. Levy, Philip Lester, ConnieL. Leon, Sharon Law, Zada Lauwers, Delphine Launius, Roger Lanier, Michelle Laney, Monique Lamar, Jay Kvach, John Krulikowski, AnneE. Kretschmann, Vasco Koslow, Jennifer Koed, Betty Kunstmann, Wally E. Knowles, SusanW. Kline, RachelD. King, JuliaA. Kim, Jay(Jee-Yeon) Keyt, Clara Kennedy, Bethany Karper, LutherScott Kane, Katherine Kahler, Angie Justice, Bill Joyner, Genevieve Olivia Joyner, Brian Jordan, BrianMatthew Jones, Trevor Jones, Ginny Jones, Arnita Johnson, Jay Jefferson, AlisonRose James, Larry Jairo Chavez Hutcheson, Maggie Hurst, Eileen Hunt, Paula Hunt, Finola Hunner, Jon ...... Pearson, DonnaRae Patenaude, Sara Parry, Manon Osier, Nicole Ortiz, Paul Olsen, JonBerndt Ogle, Robert O’Donnell, Shannon Nottage, James Norkunas, Martha Noiret, Serge Nickels, Marilyn W. Newell, AlanS. Nelson, James Murray, J.Steven Murray, Amanda Murphy, Frank Munro, Cori Moore, Wayne C. Moore, Tyler DeWayne Moore, Patrick Moore, Nicole Moore, CatherineA. Mooney-Melvin, Patricia Montagna, Dennis Monroe, Elizabeth Monks, Victoria Molloy, Erin Modlin, Jr., E.Arnold Mizell-Nelson, Michael Mittelman, Karen S. Miller, Marla Meringolo, Denise Mena, Chaz Melton, Sarah Meinecke, Sara McQueen, George McLeary, Erin McKiernan, Zachary McEwen, Emily McElhinney, Glenne McDavid, Carol McCormick, Sarah McClellan, Michelle McCleary, Ann McCartney, Karen Martin, Brian Marsh, PhillipS. Marsh, Allison Marinara, Martha Manuel, Jeff Mahoney, Eleanor Madway, Lorraine ...... Index ofPresenters Schoenacher, Ann Scheinfeldt, Tom Scarpino, Philip Sanfilippo, Pam Sandul, Paul J.P. Salo, Edward Safranek, Lauren Rowland, Leslie Rothenberg, Marc Roth, Darlene Rosenthal, Ellen M. Romney, Charles Roach, Edward Rizzo, Mary Rizzo, Joseph Rickard, Jolene Reddish, Sandra Reaven, Marci Ramirez, JanSeidler Price, JayM. Pope, Alexander Poole, Jordan Pinkerton, Connie Piersma, Hinke Perl, Sophie INDEX OFPRESENTERS your FuT DEPENDS o DEPENDS or visit LUC.edu/publichistory. visit or LUC.edu/historyvideo at video our To watch more, learn university. Jesuit only isChicago’s Loyola responsibility, to social Committed focus. history public a with a PhD and MA an both with nation the in programs few the of one offers Chicago University Loyola nation’s past. the protecting and preserving of out acareer Make ...... Stiller, Jesse Stevens, Scott Manning Steen, Ivan D. Stanton, Cathy Spencer, Michael Spears, Ellen Spears, Alan Soule, Naomi Sosebee, M.Scott Smoak, Gregory E. Smith, Sharon Smith, Sandra Smith, Andrea Livi Sirna, Angela Sío-López, Cristina Blanco Simpson, LeeM.A. Shultz, Constance Shubinski, Barbara Sherrod, Rev. Charles Shea, Margo Shaw, LouiseE. Shapiro, Aaron Sergel, Ruth Sebold, Kimberly Schuld, Matthew ...... N ThE Pa Wallace, Alexandra V. Walker, William Wade, Kathy Vivian, Daniel Venditto, Elizabeth Van Wagenen, Valk, Anne Urban, Andrew Tyson, Amy Tyler-McGraw, Marie Troyano, JoanFragaszy Treuer, Anton Tomás, Casimiro Leco Tollison, Courtney Tebeau, Mark Taylor, AmyMurrell Tamburro, Sam Szuter, Christine R. Swigger, Jessie Sutton, RobertK. Stroh, Scott Stringfield, Margo S. Strait, Kevin Stoutamire, William Michael Scott ...... urE ...... Zenzen, JoanM. Zaagsma, Gerben Wright, Jr., Herman Wright, ElizabethadaA. Wosh, Peter J. Woodworth-Ney, Laura Winling, LaDale Wilson, Kathryn Wilson, Amy Willingham, WilliamF. Williams, James Wilhide, Anduin(Andy) Wieseman, Kaitlin Whitsitt, Carolyn Whitehead, Ashley Whisnant, AnneM. Weible, Robert Watson, Whitney Watkins, Andrea Wasserman, Nina Washington, Shelia Warren-Findley, Janelle Ward, James Walters, Tiffany Wallace-Casey, Cynthia ST ...... 31

INDEX OF PRESENTERS NCPHNCPH BOARDS & BoardsCOMMITTEES (as of November 2010)& CommNCPHNCPH BOARDS & BoardsCOMMITTEES & Comm

GOVERNANCE DIVISION Catherine Christen Tom Walsh Steven Burg Heather Miller 2012 OAH/NCPH Program Committee G. Wesley Johnson Award AD HOC COMMITTEES Tom Scheinfeldt Smithsonian Conservation Biology Arizona State University Shippensburg University of Historical Research Associates Kathy Franz, NCPH Cochair Marian Ashby Johnson, Chair George Mason University Institute American University Ashby & Johnson, Consultants Board of Directors Robert Weyeneth Morgen Young Graduate Student Committee Santi Thompson * Members of the Executive Peter Liebhold University of South Carolina Donna Deblasio Alder, LLC Nancy MacLean, OAH Cochair Benjamin Filene Laura Miller, Cochair University of South Carolina Committee are identified with National Museum of American Youngstown State University Duke University University of at Greensboro University of Massachusetts Amherst an asterisk History Michael R. Adamson Bill Turkel Membership Committee Lynn Denton Independent Historian Andrea Burns Jeff Robinson, Cochair University of Western Ontario Marty Blatt, President* Doug Boyd Jeffrey Brown, Chair Texas State San Marcos From the OAH Appalachian State University University of Massachusetts Boston National Historical Park Louie B. Nunn Center for Oral New Mexico State University Brian Delay Catherine Gudis Professional Development Michelle Antenesse International Task Force History University of California, Berkeley Lindsey Reed Robert Weyeneth, Vice Anna Adamek University of California, Committee University if California, Santa Barbara Cal State Fullerton Anna Adamek President* Lyle Dick Canada Science and Technology Riverside Michelle Hamilton , Chair Gary Gerstle Canada Science and Technology Museum Bradley Williams Jen Coleman University of South Carolina Western Canada Service Centre, Museum The University of Western Ontario Vanderbilt University Arizona State University Parks Canada Cherstin Lyon History Consultant Michelle Hamilton Patrick Moore, Secretary/ Peter T. Alter California State University San Katherine Faz Paul Harvey Miriam Farris The University of Western Ontario Treasurer* Heather Goodall Chicago History Museum Rivers, Trails, and Conservation University of Colorado at Colorado Springs Bernardino Outstanding Public History Project Contract Historian Jon Olsen University of West University of Technology, Sydney City Assistance Program, National Park Award Campus Nancy Berlage Allison Marsh Service Jennifer Morgan Samantha Gibson University of Massachusetts Marianne Babal, Past Office Of The Secretary Of Defense University of South Carolina New York University Mark Patrick, Chair Brooklyn Historical Society BOARDS & COMMITTEES President* Gerry Herman Carrie Giauque Manon Parry Lindsay Dumas Wells Fargo Historical Services Northeastern University Denise Meringolo Independent Contractor Sam Roberts David Glassberg Celia James U.S. National Library of Medicine of the American Red Cross University of Maryland, Baltimore Columbia University University of Massachusetts University of South Carolina National Institutes of Health John Dichtl, Executive Director* Holger Hoock Emily Greenwald Keith Erekson County Jonathan Whalley National Council on Public History University of Historical Research Associates Naoko Shibusawa Cynthia Koch Petra Knapp University of Texas at El Paso Barbara Rasmussen Brown University Franklin D. Roosevelt Presidential Library & Independent Historian Madison Area Technical College Randy Bergstrom Alphine Jefferson Rhonda Jones Museum Matthew Godfrey Independent Historian University of California, Santa Randolph-Macon College North Carolina Central University Zaragoza Vargas Roy Oberto Committee on Civil War Barbara LDS Church Historical Department Rebecca K. Shrum University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill University of West Florida K. Tsianina Lomawaima John W. W. Mann Robert Kelley Award Sesquicentennial Brian Hackett Indiana University Purdue University Robert Carriker University of Arizona University of Wisconsin-Eau Claire Shane White Betty Koed, Chair Angie Ramierez Carroll Van West, Chair Northern Kentucky University Indianapolis University of Louisiana, Lafayette University of Sydney US Senate Historical Office University of West Georgia Middle Tennesse State University Alexandra Lord Allison C. Marsh Vickie Lindsey Ivan Steen Michele Gates Moresi* National Historic Landmarks University of South Carolina Steve Lubar Kevin Allen National Air and Space Museum University at Albany, State From the NCPH National Museum of African Program, National Park Service Brown University Working Group on Evaluating Public Massachusetts Department of Conservation and University of New York Brian Martin Deborah Mack & COMMITTEES BOARDS American History and Culture David Martin History Scholarship Recreation Marty D. Matthews History Associates Incorporated Deoborah Mack Museum Consulting Marjorie McLellan Retired Consultant Christine Szuter John Dichtl, Chair Cathy Stanton North Carolina Division of State Wright State University Bruce Bustard Arizona State University Christopher Mason Carlene Stephens National Council on Public History Tufts University Historic Sites Cinda May National Archives and Records Administration Jon Taylor Nantucket Historical Association National Museum of American History Michael C. Robinson Prize Kristin Ahlberg Bruce Noble Indiana State University Anna Adamek University of Central Missouri Gordon Olson, Chair U.S. Department of State Michelle Lanier Canada Science and Technology Chickasaw National Recreation Area Marsha Weisiger North Carolina African American Heritage Patricia Roeser 2011 Program Committee Museum & Oklahoma State Coordinator Will Walker New Mexico State University Lynn Kronzek Bill Bryans Commission & West Texas A&M University Roger Launius, Chair State University of New York-College Lynn C. Kronzek & Associates Oklahoma State University North Carolina Division of State Historic Sites Patrick O’Bannon Emily Weisner Peter Liebhold Joan Saverino at Oneonta National Air and Space Museum National Museum of American Gray & Pape, Inc. National Park Service Bruce Noble Edward Countryman Brent Leggs Independent Historian Christine Arato History Chickasaw National Recreation Area & William Clements Department of History Northeast Office National for Historic Darlene Roth Laura Woodworth-Ney Development Committee National Park Service Oklahoma State Coordinator Preservation Darlene Roth & Associates/Atlanta 2012 OAH/NCPH Convention Local Debbie Ann Doyle Estevan Rael-Galvez Idaho State University Shelley Bookspan, Chair History Center Rosalind Beiler Resource Committee Martha Norkunas American Historical Association Donna Neary Office of the State Historian LifeStory Productions, Inc. University of Central Florida From the OAH Middle Tennessee State University Independent Historian Constance Schulz Kathy Franz Benjamin Filene Long Range Planning Cindy Brandimarte Margo Anderson, Cochair Independent Historian David Benac Joan Zenzen American University Ashley Whitehead University of North Carolina at Committee Texas Parks & Wildlife University of Wisconsin – Milwaukee Greensboro Southeastern Louisiana University Independent Historian West Virginia University Joan Zenzen Marianne Babal, Chair Stephen Meyer, Cochair Susan Ferentinos Bill Bryans Beth Boland Cynthia Koch Independent Historian Wells Fargo Historical Services University of Wisconsin – Milwaukee Organization of American Historians Oklahoma State University Student Project and Graduate Student Franklin D. Roosevelt Presidential Teaching with Historic Places (TwHP) Bill Bryans Travel Award Constance B. Schulz REPRESENTATIVES TO OTHER Library & Museum Michael Devine Heritage Education Services James Marten Nominating Committee Oklahoma State University Independent Historian ORGANIZATIONS Truman Presidential Library National Park Service Marquette University Helen Sheumaker, Chair Elizabeth Fraterrigo, Chair Michelle Hamilton Benjamin Filene University Greg Smoak Loyola University Chicago Marian Carpenter Rob Smith National Coalition for History The University of Western Ontario University of North Carolina at Alan Newell University of Utah Historical Research Associates, Inc. National Civil Rights Museum University of Wisconsin – Milwaukee Alicia Barber Policy Board Kathy Corbett Greensboro University of Nevada, Reno Robert Keith Collins Briann Greenfield The Public Historian Independent Historian Paula Hamilton Arden Williams NCPH Digital Media Group Central Connecticut State University Editorial Staff Georgia Humanities Council San Francisco State University From the NCPH Marya McQuirter Rose Diaz University of Technology Sydney Cathy Stanton, Chair Randy Bergstrom, Editor Jasmine Alinder Independent Historian Origins and Legacies Historical Mary Rizzo Amy Foster Tufts University University of California, Santa Michelle Lanier University of Wisconsin - Milwaukee American Council of Learned Societies Services Univeristy of Central Florida Courtney L. Tollison Barbara North Carolina African American New Jersey Council for the Maren Bzdek Delegate Humanities Michael Gordon Furman University/Upcountry History Museum Jon Hunner Heritage Commission & James Gardner Colorado State University David Glassberg Lindsey Reed, Managing Editor University of Wisconsin – Milwaukee New Mexico State University North Carolina Division of State Jeff Sturchio National Museum of American University of Massachusetts Amherst University of California, Santa New Professional Award Tony Cherian Historic Sites Global Health Council History Kathy Kean Barbara Nicolet High School Stephanie E. Yuhl, Chair Univeristy of Texas at Austin NASA Fellowship Committee OPERATIONS Angela Reed Brian Joyner Patrick Moore Lee Simpson, Review Editor College of the Holy Cross Priya Chhaya Texas Parks And Wildlife Consultants Committee National Park Service John Krugler University of West Florida California State University Marquette University Rebekah Dobrasko National Historic Preservation Trust Finance Committee Robert Weyeneth Hugh Davidson, Chair Bill Justice Sacramento State Historic Preservation Office Patrick Moore, Chair Maricopa County Public Works National Park Service John Dichtl University of South Carolina South Carolina Department of Archives and University of West Florida Book Award National Council on Public History The Public Historian Tara White Amy Canfield Patrick Moore History John Dichtl (ex officio) Peter Wosh, Chair Editorial Board Middle Tennessee State University Lewis-Clark State College University of West Florida Kate Freedman National Council on Public History New York University Teresa Beyer Sherwood University of Massachusetts Amherst Kristin Ahlberg Adina Langer Laramie Main Street Program Manon Parry Aaron Marrs Office of the Historian, US Dee Harris PROGRAMS National September 11 Memorial U.S. National Library of Medicine of Suzanne Fischer Department of State National Archives at Kansas City Museum Office Of The Historian, U.S. Department Henry Ford Museum the National Institutes of Health Of State Excellence in Consulting Award Curriculum and Training Teresa Barnett Kristine Navarro-McElhaney William Willingham Edward Salo, Chair Stephen Gapps Committee Gregory Smoak Anne Murphy University of California, Los Angeles University of Texas at El Paso Independent Historian University of Utah Brockington and Assoc. Australian National Maritime Museum Ann McCleary, Chair University of British Columbia Jo Blatti Alan Newell University of West Georgia Douglas Littlefield Gabrielle Tayac Dan Vivian Elizabeth Hull Laura Feller History Afield Historical Research Associates Littlefield Historical Research National Museum of the American University of Louisville University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill Independent Historian Indian Elizabeth Fraterrigo Jon Olsen Loyola University Chicago University of Massachusetts 32 33 , Experience One of America’s Great House Museums

When it was completed in 1902, Whitehall, Henry Flagler’s estate in Palm Beach, was hailed by the New York Herald as “more wonderful than any palace in Europe, grander and more magnificent than any other private dwelling in the world.”

Today, Whitehall is a National Historic Landmark, and is open to the public as the Flagler Museum, featuring guided tours, changing exhibitions, and special programs including: the Whitehall Lecture Series and the Flagler Museum Music Series. For more information please call (561) 655-2833 or visit our website at www.flaglermuseum.us.

HISTORY® supports the NCPH for promoting the value and signifi cance “An absolute must-see “The Gilded Age is alive and “One of the most sumptuous of history every day. for visitors to Palm Beach” well at the opulent Flagler houses ever built in America.” ~ National Geographic Explorer Museum in Palm Beach.” ~ Motorist ~ Travel + Leisure

henry morrison FLAGLER MUSEUM palm beach, florida One Whitehall Way Palm Beach, FL 33480 ©2010 A&E Television Networks, LLC. All Rights Reserved. 1292. All Rights Reserved. LLC. Networks, A&E Television ©2010 For more information call (561) 655-2833 or visit www.flaglermuseum.us

10-1292_NCPH_ad_8x10.5_FIN.indd 1 11/9/10 11:36 AM Master’s Programs in 96th Annual ASALH Conference  Marriott Richmond  Richmond, VA  For more Marriott Richmond inFormation October 4 – 9, 2011 History Visit www.iup.edu/grad/history Call for Papers Call 724-357-2284 The Association for the Study of African American Life and History (ASALH) is soliciting papers and E-mail Dr. Jeanine Mazak-Kahne at panels for its upcoming 96th Annual Convention. This year’s conference theme is: “African Americans [email protected] and the U.S. Civil War.” Although the program committee welcomes papers and panels on any aspect of African and African American history and culture, special preference will be given to submissions directly related to this year’s theme.

Master of Arts, Master of Arts, Using a wide variety of disciplines, this year’s conference seeks to explore many aspects of African American involvement in the Civil War, 1861-1865. Important topics include African Americans and the Public History History concentration abolitionist movement, African American women and life on the homefront during the war years, African concentration • Prepare for a variety of professional positions in the American participation in the military and African American life and politics during the Reconstruction public sector or for positions in public and community Era, 1865-1877. In addition, recent popular and scholarly debates over causes of the Civil War will be • Advance your skills in practicing history outside a education. explored. “traditional” academic setting. • Choose from concentrations in American and/or • Prepare for a career in archives, museums, European history. In 1861 as the United States stood at the brink of civil war, people of African descent, both slave and free, government agencies, historical societies, historical • Experience a program that combines conventional waited with a watchful eye. They understood that a war between the Union military and the Confederacy editing, historical preservation, and more. history coursework with research. might bring about the “day of jubilee” and the destruction of slavery. When the Confederate troops fired • Pursue a flexible schedule with a thesis or non-thesis • Choose from a thesis or non-thesis program option. upon Fort Sumter on 12 April 1861 and hostilities began, President Abraham Lincoln maintained that the option. paramount cause was to preserve the Union, not to end the practice of slavery. Frederick Douglass, the • Experience coursework that combines conventional most prominent African American leader, declared that regardless of Union intentions, the war would history courses with public history, research, and bring an end to the South’s “peculiar institution.” internships designed to introduce you to the various public history fields. Over the next four years, the four million people of African descent in the United States sought to prove Frederick Douglass right. Free and enslaved African Americans rallied around the Union flag and the cause of freedom. From the cotton and tobacco fields of the South to the small towns and big cities of the North, nearly 200,000 black men joined the Grand Army of the Republic and took up arms to destroy slavery and the Confederacy. The ASALH convention theme for 2011 honors the role of people of African descent in ending slavery and preserving the Union.

Given the recent political and academic debates about the legacy of the Civil War, papers and panels offering interdisciplinary analyses and perspectives of the continuing legacy of the Civil War in American and African American life are particularly welcome.

The deadline for the submission of panel and paper proposals is 30 April 2011. All proposals must be submitted electronically to ASALH through the All Academic online system at http://www.asalh.org/callforpapers.html. Proposals should include title of the paper or panel, author(s) and affiliation(s), an abstract of paper or panel of 200-250 words, and all contact information. Only panel proposal submitters will receive complimentary audio/visual equipment on a first come first serve basis.

For information on how to make electronic submissions, please visit www.asalh.org/96thconvention.html, around January 1, 2011. Visit the FAQ page at http://www.asalh.org/files/FAQs_sheet.doc now for important information regarding submissions.

Academic Program Chair, Derrick P. Alridge University of Georgia [email protected]

THE PUBLIC HISTORIAN EDITOR // The Public Historian is the definitive voice of the public history Randolph Bergstrom profession, providing historians with the latest scholarship and applications from the field. Besides stimulating articles that demonstrate the breadth DETAILS // of public history, each issue also includes book reviews, museum and ISSN: 0272-3433 exhibit reviews, and film and electronic media reviews. eISSN: 1533-8576 February, May, August, November

JOURNAL OF THE SOCIETY OF ARCHITECTURAL HISTORIANS EDITOR // NEW FOR 2010! David Brownlee University of California Press Journals + Digital Publishing is proud to DETAILS // ISSN: 0037-9808 announce that the Society of Architectural Historians has selected UC eISSN: 2150-5926 Press as its new partner in publishing the Journal of the Society of March, June, September, Architectural Historians (JSAH), beginning in 2010. December

PACIFIC HISTORICAL REVIEW EDITORS // Since 1932, the Pacific Historical Review has accurately and adeptly David A. Johnson covered the history of American expansion to the Pacific and beyond, Carl Abbott as well as the post-frontier developments of the 20th-century American West. Published for the Pacific Coast Branch of the DETAILS // American Historical Association, the journal features a wealth of ISSN: 0030-8684 in-depth articles, historiographical and review essays, book reviews, eISSN: 1533-8584 and professional news. February, May, August, November

HISTORICAL STUDIES IN THE NATURAL SCIENCES EDITORS // Historical Studies in the Natural Sciences (HSNS) explores a vast Cathryn Carson, Hasok Chang, number of scientific fields, social histories, and their relevant institutions, Matthias Dörries, A.J. Lustig, including physics, chemistry, astronomy, meteorology, geology, biophysics, W. Patrick McCray radiation biology, biochemistry, molecular biology, and genetics. Widely regarded as a leading journal in the historiography of science and DETAILS // technology, HSNS increased to quarterly publication in 2008 to expand ISSN: 1939-1811 its roster of pioneering articles and notable reviews by the most eISSN: 1939-182X February, May, August, November influential writers in the field

WWW.UCPRESSJOURNALS.COM

PUblic history in historical PersPective Michael Frisch, PhD, Principal A book series edited by mArlA miller, university oF mAssAchusetts Amherst University at Buffalo Technology Incubator www.randforce.com 1576 Sweet Home Road, Suite 216 [email protected] The aim of this series is to explore, from different critical perspectives, how representations of the Amherst, New York 14228 800.554.1047 past in the U. S. and elsewhere have been mobilized to serve a variety of political, cultural, and Offering digital audio and video indexing for collection access, research, and production social ends. Books in the series will offer analyses of interest not simply to public historians but also the wide community of scholars engaged in efforts to understand the role of history in public life. Randforce helps you customize and apply digital indexing methods and tools so you can... editoriAl Advisory boArd Provide direct Access to audio and video passages (full transcriptions become optional) David W. Blight Edward T. Linenthal Explore within and across interviews in a full context cross-referenced database Yale University Editor, Journal of American History Use the richness of voice and expression in research, teaching, and multi-media presentation Gail DuBrow Steven Lubar University of Minnesota Brown University Our Practice Includes: David Glassberg Max Page University of Massachusetts Amherst University of Massachusetts Amherst Community Public History Projects Educational Applications and Teaching American History Projects James Green Liz Sevcenko Oral History Collection Management and Use Qualitative Analysis for Meeting Recordings, Conferences, and University of Massachusetts Boston International Coalition of Sites of Conscience Oral History in Museum, Community, and Research Documentation for Non-Profit Organizations Katherine C. Grier Patricia West Analysis of Audio/Video in Science and Public Health Multi-media Family and Corporate Oral Histories University of Delaware National Park Service Arts, Cultural, and Performance Audio/Visual Indexing Bilingual Applications James Oliver Horton Chris Wilson George Washington University University of New Mexico

Published in the series:

OUT Of THE ATTIC Inventing Antiques in Twentieth-Century New England Canada’s longest running Public History program Briann G. Greenfield

We merge theory with hands-on practice through com munity projects, research assistantships, professional development speakers and sum mer internships. Forthcoming in the series: Everybody’s History: The Lincoln Inquiry and the Place of the Past in American Life by Keith A. Erekson Courses include: Remembering the Forgotten War: Memory and the U.S.–Mexican War, 1848–2008 < Public History: History, Theory & Practice by Michael S. Van Wagenen < Museology & Material Culture Born in the U.S.A.: Birth, Commemoration, and American Public Memory edited by Seth C. Bruggeman < Digital History & Interactive Exhibit Design < Archival Management submissions: < Applied Archaeology & First Nations & Museums Please direct inquiries and manuscriPts to: Clark Dougan, Senior Editor, University of Massachusetts Press ([email protected]) Social Memory < or Marla Miller ([email protected]). Graduates are employed at museums and archives, government agencies and historical organizations. University of MassachUsetts Press For more information, contact Michelle Hamilton, Director, at [email protected] or visit us at Amherst & Boston www.umass.edu/umpress PHONE ORDERS: (800) 537-5487 www.history.uwo.ca/gradstudies/publichistory. The Journal of American History Published by the Organization of American Historians Become a Member of the OAH Today! Join the Organization of American Historians, the largest learned society devoted to all aspects of American history. The OAH promotes responsible and sound historical research, analysis, and presentation through its many programs and activities, while striving to make the history of the United States more accessible to the general public. Not only will membership provide you with a range of important publica- tions and services but it also places you in the center of the conversation where the American past is remembered, discussed, and valued.

Membership Highlights 2011 OAH AnnuAl Meeting Welcomes You to The 2011 Organization of American Receive the Journal of American History Historians Annual Meeting will take in print and online. As the leading scholarly place in Houston, Texas, from Thursday, publication on American history, the jah March 17 to Sunday, March 20 at the Hilton Americas–Houston. is recognized as the journal of record in the field. Published quarterly since 1914, the jah Located in the heart of downtown, the includes cutting-edge scholarship in all areas Hilton Americas–Houston is the Bayou City’s largest convention hotel and offers of U.S. history, as well as reviews of books, guests a central location and easy access films, Web sites, and exhibits. Members enjoy to excellent restaurants and museums. full online access to each issue. Plenary sessions include “Dividing a Nation: Choose to receive the OAH Magazine of The Origins of the Secession Crisis and History, one of the best tools available to the Civil War” and “September 11th: Ten Years After.” Other sessions include teachers of American history. This quarterly presentations of the latest scholarship thematic publication, available in print or in American history, as well as discus- online, includes feature articles and innova- sions on current issues affecting the tive teaching strategies written by prominent history profession, including “History historians and master teachers. Wars: The Texas Textbook Controversy.” Many events will highlight the meet- Add a $15 subscription to jstor — exclusive to ing’s host city and the surrounding OAH members — and access full-text pdf issues area, including an architectural tour of the journal of american history, the Mississippi of the city, a visit to the Houston Ship Valley historical Review (the predecessor of Channel and San Jacinto Monument, a the jah), and the Oah Magazine of history. trip to Galveston, and the chance to see Search, browse, download, and print all but the NASA’s Johnson Space Center. most recent five years of these OAH publications. For more information, visit: http://annualmeeting.oah.org Attend the OAH Annual Meeting at a reduced rate. Experience the best new work in U.S. history research and practice, meet and exchange ideas with other historians, make professional con- tacts, and explore the latest U.S. history books and offerings in the OAH Exhibit Hall.

Access Recent Scholarship Online, a search- able, cumulative database of citations for new books, dissertations, electronic resources, and OAH articles drawn from more than 1,100 journals. Sign up to receive monthly e-mail updates of OrgANizAtiON Of the latest scholarship, customized according to your areas of interest. American Enjoy the Conference! Historians www.oah.org™ Look where some of our alumni are now

LaLauren Safranek CaCarrie Giauque AmAmerican Citizenship Project PrProjectoj Manager NaNational Museum of American YaYawkey Wildlife Center History History Project SmSmithsonian Institution CoColumbia, South Carolina WaWashington, D.C.

Give yourself an edge by studying public history at the University of South Carolina. Earn a Master of Arts degree in public history or select public history Jan Levinson AshlAsAshleyey Bowden as one eld of study in the Ph.D. program. USC also Assistant Outreach Archivistvist CoCoordinatorordi of Resource oers two graduate certicates: “Museum Manage- Richard Russell Library Information Systems ment” and “Historical Archaeology & Cultural University of Georgia MeMercerrc University Resource Management.” Athens, Georgia MaMacon,co Georgia

Anna Kuntz Elam KrKristinais Dunn Johnson Coursework introduces students to both the Librarian/Educator CuCurator of History theoretical and practical challenges in the eld. Teacher Resource Center ReRelic Room and Military Class projects, internships, assistantships, and thesis Seattle Art Museum Museum projects all provide the hands-on experience that is Seattle, Washington CoColumbia, South Carolina so crucial in today's competitive job market. The England and Charleston eld schools bring students out of the classroom and into the world.

JeJennifer Fitzgerald BaBarbara Stokes DiDirector of Community SeSenior Curator Relations MuMuseum of South Texas History REREAL School Gardens EdEdinburg, Texas FoFort Worth, Texas

Program strengths include museum studies,studies historic preservation, community history, oral history, public history of science and technology, and African- American heritage. All of these alumni are recipients of the Darrick Hart Award, which recognizes outstanding contributions made by a graduate student in the eld of public history. The award is given http://www.cas.sc.edu/hist/pubhist. annually in memory of USC alum Darrick Hart, who died in 2002 at the beginning of his career as an archivist and paper conservator. National Council on Public History 2011 Annual Conference Crossing Borders/ Building Communities - Real and Imagined April 6-9, 2011 • Pensacola, Florida

REGISTRATION FORM

1. Personal Data 3. Registration Fees (until February 28, 2011) Please print clearly. Fee Name:  Member $140  Non-Member $165  Student $80 Affiliation: School:______Advisor:______ForThCominG SPrinG 2011 (e.g., institution, company, “independent historian,” etc., as you would like it to appear on your badge)  Guest $30 Federal Writers Project of the I am a guest of: Wanda m. Corn Elizabeth Abel Lawrence W. Levine and Works Progress Administration  Single-day registration $75 Cornelia r. Levine Women Building History Signs of the Times San Francisco in the 1930s Specify day______Public Art at the 1893 Columbian The Visual Politics of Jim Crow The Fireside Conversations The WPA Guide to the City by the Bay Introduction by David Kipen Mailing Address: Exposition $60.00 cloth, $25.95 paper America responds to FDr during PACKAGES Available during Early Registration ONLY Sidebars by Annelise K. Madsen - the Great Depression $24.95 paper IF YOU CHOOSE A PACKAGE, DO NOT REGISTER FOR THESE Biographies and Bibliography by Foreword by Michael Kazin EVENTS IN SECTION 4. Charlene G. Garfinkle $15.95 paper Federal Writers Project of the $49.95 cloth Works Progress Administration Package 1 Registration, Awards Breakfast, and NMNA Banquet (save $10) Los Angeles in the 1930s  Member $209 The WPA Guide to the City of Angels  Non-Member $234 Introduction by David Kipen City, State, Zip:  Student $149 For more titles of related interest please go to www.ucpress.edu $24.95 paper Package 2 Registration, Public History Educators Breakfast, Awards Breakfast, and Telephone: NMNA Banquet (save $10)  Member $233  Non-Member $258 Email: Subtotal Registration

 Please do not include my name and contact information on the list of Registration Fees (from March 1-23, 2011) conference participants which is made available at the conference. Fee REGISTRATION  Member $155  Non-Member $190 Emergency Contact Information  Student $90  Guest $45 Name ______ Single-day registration $85 Phone: ______Specify day______Relationship: ______Subtotal Registration

2. Join NCPH, and save $25 off your registration fee. 4. Special Events Your annual membership includes four issues of the journal and four issues of the newsletter. Fee Fee  Opening Reception – Wed $5  New Member  Renewing Member  Individual $70  Speed Networking - Thurs FREE  Individual (Outside US and Canada) $90  Consultant’s Reception - Thurs FREE  Student $30  First-time Attendee /New Member Breakfast - Thurs $22  Student (Outside US and Canada) $50  Offering Masters Degree in History with a concentration in  New Professional $40 Public History Educator’s Breakfast - Fri $24   New Professional (Outside US and Canada) $60 National Museum of Naval Aviation Banquet - Fri $55 Public History since 1986. For more information, visit  Sustaining $125  Sponsor/Partner (individual or organization) $300  Awards Breakfast and Business Meeting - Sat $24 www.umass.edu/history/ph , email  Patron (individual organization) $500  Shrimp Boil Fundraiser – Student - Sat $32  Shrimp Boil Fundraiser – NON-Student - Sat $42 [email protected] or call (413) 545-1330. Subtotal Membership Subtotal Special Events

48 49 Registration Form page 2

 Yes  No Do you have any special needs? 8. Total If yes, please list: The National Council on Public History Subtotals Membership (Section 2) Registration Fees (Section 3) Putting history to work in the world Special Events (Section 4) Tours (Section 5) 5. Tours Join the NCPH today! Become a member and receive: Non-walking tours include transportation. Workshops (Section 6) Fee Endowment Contribution (Section 7) For three decades, NCPH has The Public Historian  Slavery and Civil Rights in the South: Mobile’s — a print and online journal offering the best original research, Forgotten History (lunch included) $54 promoted professionalism among TOTAL to be paid case studies, reviews, and coverage of the ever-expanding  Bienville to Battleships: Mobile Historic Tour history practitioners and their (lunch included) $54 collaborative engagement with international field of public history  Pensacola Historic Landscape Walking Tour $12 the public. We are a membership Professional Development  Naval Live Oaks and Fort Pickens 9. Payment Information association of consultants, curators, (lunch included) $38 — through workshops, working groups, and networks of fellow  Black Water and Yellow Pine: Northwest Florida’s government historians, professors public history practitioners Antebellum Industrial Complex (lunch included) $36  Check (Drawn in U.S. funds on a U.S. Bank, payable to NCPH) & students, archivists, teachers,  Colonial Archaeological Trail Walking Tour $12  Credit Card  Cash (Onsite Only) cultural resource managers, film Public History News  From Black Slaves to the Blue Angels: Exploring & media producers, historical — a print and e-newsletter of recent developments in the field NAS Pensacola $24  Visa  Discover  MasterCard  American Express interpreters, policy advisors,  Historic Pensacola Waterfront Walking Tour $12 Electronic Access preservationists, and many others.  Living-Learning Workshop in Action $6 Credit Card # — to the online listserv H-Public, NCPH’s LinkedIn and  Public History Community Service Project at Members confer at the annual Facebook groups, and to individual subscriptions to ACLS Expiration Date: Month ______Year ______Historic Fort Pickens FREE meeting each spring and share Humanities E-book Security Code (on back of card, except American Express)______their expertise in our journal, The Discounts on the Annual Meeting Subtotal Tours Signature Public Historian, the newsletter, Public History News, on the email — Pensacola, April 2011, and Milwaukee, April 2012 Date: ______listserv, H-Public, and in other 6. Workshops Leadership Opportunities REGISTRATION evolving venues. — help to shape NCPH and the field by serving on committees and Fee Early Registration forms and checks must be received, not task forces  Role of Interpretation in Institutional Sustainability $10 postmarked, by February 28, 2011. Public history is an effort by  THATCamp NCPH (digital “unconference”) $21 Regular Registration forms and checks must be received, not historians and their various publics postmarked, by March 23, 2011.  Entrepreneurship and the Practice of History $40 to collaborate in making the past No emailed, faxed, or mailed registrations can be accepted after useful. It generally takes place in  Reading Artifacts: A Workshop in Material Culture $27 March 23, 2011. Registrations after this date will be handled onsite settings beyond the traditional  Breaking Down Borders: Building Community in at the conference. classroom. Heritage Tourism Trails $22 Tickets for special events, tours, and workshops are limited. Subtotal Workshops Make Checks Payable to:

Conference Mentor Network NCPH 327 Cavanaugh Hall – IUPUI  I would like to be mentored during the conference. 425 University Blvd.  I would like to serve as a conference mentor. Indianapolis, IN 46202

Fax to: (317) 278-5230 Membership Categories 7. Endowment Contribution Student $30 NCPH Endowment Contribution With your support NCPH is able to offer a growing Awards Program New Professional* $40 and other new initiatives for greater diversity, support for professionals, international participation, and professional development opportunities. $ Join online at Individual $70 Sustaining $125 Subtotal Endowment Contribution www.ncph.org Institutional Subscriptions are available from the University of California Press. Thank you for participating in the 2011 Annual Meeting.

* Recent graduates or others who have been employed in public history for less than three years