<<

PROGRAM

of the

SEVENTY-EIGHTH ANNUAL MEETING

of the american . J}i~torical a~~ociation

December 28, 29, 30

THE NAMES OF THE SOCIETIES MEETING WITHIN . OR JOINTLY WITH THE AMERICAN HISTORICAL ASSOCIATION ARE LISTED ON PAGE 77

I CRANE BRI~TON Professor of Histor)l) PRESIDENT OF THE AMERICAN HISTORICAL ASSOCIATION The American Historical Association

OFFICERS President: , Harvard University Vice-President: JULIAN P. BOYD, Princeton University Treasurer: ELMER LOUIS KAYSER, George Washington University Executive Secretary and Managing Editor: VV. STULL HOLT, 400 A Street, S.E., Washington 3, D. C. Assistant Executive Secretary: \VALTER RUNDELL, JR.

COUNCIL Ex Officio, The President, Vice-President, Treasurer, Executive Secretary and M a1Jaging Editor

Formel' Presidents , , , University of \Visconsin , Harvard University LOUIS R. GOTTSCHALK, CARLTON J. H. HAYES, WILLIAM L. LANGER, Harvard University , Yale University CHARLES H. McILWAIN, Harvard University , Harvard University , Huntington Library , Rochester, New York ARTHUR MEIER SCHLESINGER, Harvard University BERNADOTTE E. SCHMITT, Alexandria, ROBERT LIVINGSTON SCHUYLER, Columbia University , Columbia University THOMAS JEFFERSON \VERTENBAKER, Princeton University

Elected M elnbers ROBERT BYRNES, Indiana University JorIN CAUGHEY, University of , Los Angeles \V. CLEMENT EATON, University of Kentucky \VALTER JOHNSON, University of Chicago CitIARLES MULLETT, University of Missouri GAINES POST, University of \Visconsin GORDON VVRIGHT, Stanford University LOUIS WRIGHT, Folger Library 3 PACIFIC COAST BRANCH OFFICERS President: ABRAHAM P. NASATIR, San Diego State College Vice-President: JOHN GALBRAITH, University of California, Los Angeles S ecretary-Treasurer: JOHN A. SCHUTZ, Whittier College

Planning and Arrangements, 1963 Meeting

COMMITTEE ON PROGRA)'1

Chairman: HILARY CONROY, University MORTON KELLER, University of Pennsyl- of Pennsylvania vania PAUL H. BEIK, Swarthmore College MERZE TATE, Howard University NORMAN P. ZACOUR, Franklin and Mar­ CAROLlliE ROBBINS, shall College , Columbia University

CmnnTTEE ON LOCAL ARRANGKMENTS

Chairman: CLEMENT G. MOTTEN, Temple JOSEPH GEORGE, Villanova university University \VILLIA:'Ir GIBSON, Cheyney State College LEON J. AGOURIDES, Rider College LOIS V. GIVEN, Historical Society of C. RICHARD ARENA, St. Joseph's College Pennsylvania FRANK BARNES, National Park Service ISABEL RAPP HARDY, League of \Vomen EDWARD R. BARON, Temple University Voters WHITFIELD J. BELL, American Philosophi- , Bryn Mawr College cal Society PATRICIA HERLIHY, Cabrini College JANE SCHWARZ BENJAMIN, Holy Family DENNIS J. MCCARTHY, LaSalle College College SISTER CONSUELO MARIA, Chestnut Hill SAMUEL R. BRIGHT, JR., Temple Univer­ College sity GEORGE I. OESTE, Philadelphia Public EDWIN B. BRONNER, Haverford College Schools ROBERT E. CARLSON, West Chester State VINCENT PONKO, Villanova University College \VILLIAM ROBERTS, Pennsylvania State ALAN CASSELS, University of Pennsyl­ University vania FREDERICK B. TOLLES, Swarthmore Col­ SISTER MARY CONSUELA, Immaculata Col­ lege lege JOHN J. \VOODS, Rosemont College JAMES C. DAVIS, University of Pennsyl­ ALLEGRA WOODWORTH, The Shipley vania School SAMUEL RAYl\IOND DOBBS, Camden County ROBERT ZANGRANDO, Rutgers University, Historical Society South Jersey MARVIN L. EDWARDS, Beaver College SARAI ZAUSMER, Dropsie College 4 GENERAL INFORMATION HEADQUARTERS: The Sheraton Hotel, 1725 Pennsylvania Boulevard, Phila­ delphia 3, Pennsylvania (Telephone : LOcust 8-3300). At the headquarters hotel 750 rooms have been reserved for members of the American Historical Association at a special flat rate of $8.00 single and $r3.00 twin. Additional reservations, all within four blocks of the Sheraton, include 350 rooms at the Warwick Hotel, 17th and Locust Streets, also at $8.00 single and $13.00 twin; 250 rooms at the Penn Center Inn, 20th and Market Streets, at $9.00 single and $13.00 twin; and 100 rooms at the Robert Morris Hotel, lith and Arch Streets, singles, $6.50, $7.50; twins, $11.00; and doubles, $g.5o-$ro.00. Members should make early reservations using the enclosed reservation card or write directly to the hotel of their choice, mentioning the AHA to ensure receiving the special rates arranged for this meeting. The Sheraton will automatically make and confirm reservations at the other hotels when its facilities are fully booked. REGISTRATION: The registration desk will be in the Penn Center Room on the Concourse (lower) floor of the Sheraton Hotel. It will be open Friday, December 27, from 3 p.m. until 9 p.m.; Saturday, December 28, from 8 a.m. until 6 p.m.; Sunday, December 29, from 8 a.m. until 6 p.m.; and Monday, December 30, from 9 a.m. until noon. The registration badge for admittance to sessions and all tickets for luncheons and dinners listed in this program may be obtained at the registratidn desk. There will be no advance registration, and so members are urged to fill out the enclosed registra­ tion form and present it with the proper fees to the registration desk im111ediately UPOtl a1·ri'ml. LUNCHEONS AND DINNERS: All luncheons are priced at $4.00 and all din­ ners at $6.50, including taxes and gratuities. Tickets desired should be indicated on the enclosed registration form and purchased at the time of registration. Checks will be accepted if made out to the American Historical Association for the exact total of registration and meals. There will be no advance sale nor can refunds be made. Because the Annual Meeting dates this year straddle a weekend members are espcially requested to make all 'meal .reservations as early as possible, preferably before 10 a.m. on Satur­ day, December 28. In any case reservations can be accepted only until 10 a.m. on the day of a luncheon or 2 p.m. for dinners. LOCATOR FILE: Names of registered members in attendance and their local addresses while at the meeting will be available at the Locator File which will be at the entrance to the Main Ballroom. PROFESSIONAL REGISTER: At the meeting the services of the Professional Register will be available. Candidates for positions may register or reregister, and departmental representatives seeking staff members may make inquiries at Register Offices on the fifth floor of the Sheraton Hotel. Vacancy notices will be posted. De­ partmental representatives will facilitate arrangements by informing Association head­ quarters of their needs before the meeting, and each c,U1didate should inform the Register of his presence and address as soon as he arrives in Philadelphia. GROUP MEETINGS AND REUNIONS: Some historical societies and groups have arranged special sessions which camlOt be listed in the general program. Mimeo­ graphed announcements concerning them will be available at the Information Desks when these are supplied to the Local Arrangements Committee Chairman. Information concerning group reunions such as smokers and breakfasts will also be posted at the Information Desks. All groups desiring to hold such meetings or reunions should arrange for them directly with the Convention Bureau of the hotel, sending a copy of the correspondence to the Local Arrangements Committee Chairman. 5 RELIGIOUS SERVICES: As the Annual Meeting this year extends over the weekend, information on religious services and activities will be available at the Infor­ mation Desks. SPECIAL EVENTS: The Saturday, December 28, luncheon of the Conference on Latin American History and the subsequent afternoon joint session with the AHA will both be held at The University Museum, 34th and Spruce Streets (University of Pennsylvania campus), where members and guests may inspect the Museum's Latin American treasures. A special session of the Annual Meeting will be held Saturday afternoon, December 28, in the newly restored Congress Hall, Independence National Historical Park, 6th and Chestnut Streets. Those attending this session will be the guests of the National Park Service for "Historical Punch" to be served in the Main Banking Room of the historic Second Bank of the immediately following the session. The National Park Service will also have guides available for visits to the other buildings of the Independence Hall group and for walking tours to neighboring points of historic interest such as Carpenters' Hall, Christ Church, Elfreth's Alley, and Benjamin Franklin's grave. A Sunday afternoon tour of the historic mansions of Fairmount Park is being arranged by a ladies committee. All interested will be welcome, but advance registra­ tion must be made at the Information Desks before 6 p.m., Saturday, December 28. Special historical exhibits will be presented at the library of the American Philo­ sophical Society, 5th Street below Chestnut (opposite Independence Hall), and at the Historical Society of Pennsylvania, 13th and Locust Streets.

6 THE RISE OF THE WEST A History of the Human Community William H. McNeill. Challenging the view that a number of separate civiliza­ tions pursued essentially independent careers, Professor McNeill argues instead that the cultures of mankind had important interrelations at every stage of their history. "The Rise of the West is the most lucid presentation of world history in narrative form that I know. ·While the story leads up to the predominance of the West in the modern age, it also takes full account of the expansion of eastwards, as well as westwards, from its birthplace in the Fertile Crescent. I am sure that anyone who reads this book will gain from it a greater insight into the long and complicated historical process that has resulted in the world in which we are Jiving today."-ARNOLD TOYNBEE "This is a most suggestive, stimulating book, a remarkable tour de force in general history."-CRANE BRINTON "Mr. McNeill's work is a model of how to tame the infinite."-G. E. von GRUNEBAUM " ... some intellectual hero must have the combined learning and wisdom and daring to pass the major elements of man's pilgrimage through a single mind. Mr. McNeill has done our generation this heroic service.... one of the most exciting histories of our times ..."-STRINGFELLOW BARR, New York Herald Tribune " ... a remarkable new synthesis of world history .. ."-Time 864 pages, 140 ilIus., index $12.50 Also by William H. McNeill HISTORY HANDBOOK OF WESTERN CIVILIZATION This unique short textbook provides a narrative chronology of the develop­ ment of Western civilization which is less than half as bulky as the usual text, thus permitting the assignment of relatively extensive collateral readings in primary and secondary sources. A comprehensive list of selected outside readings is included. 740 pages, $4.50

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7 NEW TITLES IN AMERICAN HISTORY THE AMERICAN DEMOCRATIC TRADITION: A History By Arthur A. Ekirch, Jr., American University The only single volume to analyze both the idea and the practice of democracy for all of American history, this book also offers an eloquent inquiry into the nature of democracy-including a persuasive argument for it as "one of the noblest ideals of mankind." Making wide use of original sources, Dr. Ekirch carefully delineates between political democracy and theories of liberalism, equalitarianism, majority rule, and public welfare. 1963, Hardbound: 352 pages; $5.95 1963, PaperCOlle1': 352 pages, $2.50

READINGS IN TWENTIETH CENTURY AMERICAN HISTORY Edited by Donald R. McCoy and Raymond G. O'Connor, The Republican Party Platform of 1896, a newspaper report of the Washington race riots of 1919, Acheson's letter on the loss of , Walter Reuther on auto­ mation-these merely suggest the scope of the more than 200 selections. Reflect­ ing the views of all sectors of society, the readings are arranged to fit readily into the usual pattern of textbook organization. 1963, Paper, 643 pages, $3.95

THE SOUTH SINCE 1865 By John Samuel Ezell, University of Oklahoma Here is the first detailed account of the South's eventful history since the Civil "Var-the forces that shaped her return to the national life, the rise of urbanism, labor's efforts to organize, the Negro problem, education, Southern politics. It shows how the "New South" has come to parallel closely the larger American culture while still retaining her own characteristics. 1963,520 pages, $8.50

READINGS IN AMERICAN HISTORY Edited by Glyndon G. Van Deusen, Professor Emeritus, and Herbert J. Bass, University of Maine Vol. I to 1877, 1963, PajJe1', 461 pages, $3.50 Vol. II since 1865,1963, Paper, 448 pages, $3.50

THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA: A History By Dexter Perkins and Glyndon G. Van Deusen, Professors Emeritus, University of Rochester Vol. I to 1876,1962,832 pages, $7.50 Vol. II since 1865,1962,859 pages, $7.50 THE MACMILLAN COMPANY 8 FROM MACMILLAN AND THE FREE PRESS

AMERICAN IDEAS: Source Readings· in the Intellectual History C)f the United States Edited by Gerald N. Grob and Robert N. Beck, Clark University This major anthology illustrates the movement of American thought through five major periods: the Puritan era, the. Enlightenment, the early nineteenth­ century romantic period, the post-Civil War industrial age, and finally, the American mind in the turbulent twentieth century. Selections are from the works of representative figures of each period. A Free Press Book 1963, Hardbound: 984 pages, 112.50 1963, Papercover: Two Volumes, 480 &- 512 pages, 13.95 ea.

POLITICS, PRINCIPLE, AND PREJUDICE, 1865-1866 Dilemma of Reconstruction America By LaWanda Cox, , and John H. Cox, City College of New York A brilliant re-evaluation of original source material-and two pieces of historical detection-form the basis of this reinterpretation of the political struggle that reached its climax in the attempt to impeach Andrew Johnson. "One of the most exciting and most illuminating studies in American history that I have read in many a year."-Richard N. Current, University of Wisconsin. A Free Press Book 1963,294 pages, 16.00

THE TRIUMPH OF CONSERVATISM: A Reinterpretation of American History, 1900-1916 By Kolko Bold ideas about the emerge as Mr. Kolko reappraises the figures of the period and vividly relates the political history to the economic conditions. Using hitherto closed manuscript collections, he develops the thesis that the dominant tendency in the American economy at the onset of the twentieth cen­ tury was toward growing competition and decentralization rather than increasing monopolization. A Free Press Book 1963,352 pages, 17.50

RECENT AMERICA: Conflicting Interpretations of the Great Issues Edited by Sidney Fine, University of Michigan 1962, Paper, 478 pages, 13.50

THE AMERICAN PAST: Conflicting Interpretations of the Great Issues Edited by Sidney Fine and Gerald S. Brown, University of Michigan

Vol. I to 1865, 1961, Papel', 619 pages, 13.75 Vol. II through the '50's, 1961, Paper, 562 pages, 13.75

60 Fifth Avenue, , N. Y. 10011 9 ADDITIONAL HISTORY TITLES FROM MACMILLAN AND THE FREE PRESS IDEAS AND INSTITUTIONS IN WESTERN CIVILIZATION A Five-Volume Series in Papercover General Editor, Norman F. Cantor, Columbia University "The contents are carefully chosen, with a perceptive eye toward historical rele­ vance and a continuing awareness that they must illustrate the historic develop­ ment of the ... admirably successful."-Sidney A. Burrell, Barnard College, Columbia University I. THE ANCIENT WORLD: to 300 A.D., Paul J. Alexander, Uni- versity of Michigan, 321 pages . II. THE MEDIEVAL WORLD: 300-1300, Norman F. Cantor, 320 pages III. RENAISSANCE AND REFORMATION: 1300-1648, G. R. Elton, University of Cambridge; 317 pages IV. FROM ABSOLUTISM TO : 1648-1848, Herbert H. Rowen, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, 328 pages V. THE MODERN WORLD: 1848 to the present, Hans Kohn, Col- lege of the City of New York, 315 pages 1963, $2.00 per volume MEDIEVAL HISTORY The Life and Death of a Civilization By Norman F. Cantor " ... judgments of great consequence about the course of history. Cantor has cleanly severed scores of historical Gordian knots."-John W. Baldwin, The 1963,636 pages, $8.50 LATIN AMERICA: A General History By John Edwin Fagg, " ... the story is told well and in detail; the comments are pungent and the style unpedestrian. This may possibly be the best textbook of its kind."-His­ panic American Report 1963, 1079 pages, $9.75 THE COURSE OF RUSSIAN HISTORY, Second Edition By Melvin C. Wren, Montana State University Incorporating the findings of recent scholarship, this edition continues as " ... one of the most readable and valuable histories of .. ."-Southwestern Social Science Quarterly on the first edition 1963,798 pages, $8.00 Also THEORIES OF HISTORY Edited by Patrick Gardiner, Oxford University. A Free Press Book· 1959,549 pages, $8.95 UTOPIA AND ITS ENEMIES By George Kateb, . A Free Press Book 1963,288 pages, $5.50

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Civilization in the West Crane Brinton, Harvard University; John B, .. . Christopher, University of Rochester; dnd .. . Robert Lee Wolff, Harvard University. Here in one compact volume is a history of W~t... em man from the beginnings of civilization to the present. Combining narrative and in"' terpretive history, the authors consider all areas of man's development. Beyond the political backbone, however, they emphasize .. cultural and intellectual history to illustrate·· the historical comparison of changing ideas and processes in contrast to man himself· who does not change. They try to maintain a balance between the general conclusion . and the selected factual ellPerience support­ ing it; They offer the reader what is sig­ nificant and essential in the events and de- . velopments ... of the past, enabling· him to understand better tp.e present and itsprob- ' lems and to look forward with· a more realistic view of the future. There is par­ ticular stress on the eighteenth and nine­ teenth centuries as the seedbeds of many. present-Clay institutions and problems.

Geographical areas other than theW~tare . mentioned when they Significantly affect Western civilization; eastern Europe receives unusually full treatment for a one-volum~ work. Additional reading suggestions hav~ been limited entirely to paperbacks, taking. full cognizance of today's paperback revolu­ tion and the increasing reliance of .eollege· students on these editions. March 1964 approx.700pp...... Text price $8.95 • ~l - • from Prentice-Hall,Inc.

12 for basic history courses The Structure of American History , .Columbia University; William Miller; and Daniel Aaron, Smith College. This is a new, short, fact-studded . paperback history of the United States from Columbus to Ken­ nedy, half as long as the average one-volume American History text. Readers' reports convey the spirit and success of the book: :~he book is well-written, crammed with meaningful data, and logical throughout . . . Whole sections and chapters come off brilliantly." .'Jt seems to me that youhave managed to hit on a style which is at once extremely light and readable and that at the same time " serVes as a medium for some genuinely analytical content, brief ~ .. %ough it may be." January 1964 approx. 416pp. paper Text price $4.75 iElements of the ;American Tradition: Readings in American Values Selected f1"om the Public Documents of the American Past 'William Miller. Composed wholly of original source readings from American public documents, this book begins with the first' Virginia Charter in 1606 and continues through contemporary •... ,aocuments. Selected to elaborate the values by which Americans <~have conducted their public affairs, many of the documents are . presented in their entirety, together. with excerpts from other iiational, state, and local public documents. Certain "selections" Within the book· are composed of a number of extracts which :develop a theme, such as the evolution of "slavery" in the laws of ~Virginia. Each selection is headed by a quotation from itself to arouse interest, and by an introduction placing it in its historical '. '.. setting. A general introduction to the book discusses the history and uses of the National Archlves. Great stress is laid throughout on the iIhportance to the American citizen of familiarity with the public documents of his country's past. March 1964 approx.256pp. Text price to be announced ·For approval copies, write: Box 903 l!nglewood Cliffs, N. /. 13 , .

United States History comes alive as Thomas A. Bailey presents it in THE AMERICAN PAGEANT ' Second Edition Used in more than 450 colleges, this has indeed be­ come a classic because of the soundness of its presen­ tation and the vigor of its style. Major emphasis is on causes and effects, on underlying trends and movements. 1,037 pp. $8.00 and THE AMERICAN SPIRIT United States History as Seen by Contemporaries Scholarly, witty, lively . . . Professor Bailey's new collection of readings that capture noise and bustle, the clash and controversy of our history, with par­ ticular emphasis on the people who made it. Hard­ bound~ 986 pp. $8.00 Two paperback volumes, $3.75 each D. C. HEATH AND COMPANY 16, Englewood, N. J., Chicago 16, 5. Atlanta 3. Dallas 1, London. Toronto

THE SHOE STRING PRESS, throughout its eleven-year history, has pursued an ideal almost unique among pub­ lishers-to make SJ,llall editions of scholarly books "pay. their way." In 1952 the Press published one book; in 1963 it has published forty-five. Today the Press maintains over one hundred books in print, and continues. to expand its service to the academic community through a distinguished selection of original titles and reprints-many of them appearing under the subsidiary imprint "Archon Books," adopted in 1961. Books published by The Shoe String Press are printed on high-quality paper and bound in cloth; a royalty is paid on every book the Press sells. The publication of written history is among the Press's major interests, and it welcomes manu­ script submissions from historians. Inquiries should be ad­ dressed: ARCHON BOOKS-THE SHOE STRING PRESS, INC. 60 Connolly Parkway Hamden, Connecticut 06514 (203) 248-6307

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A stimulating collection which serves to commemorate the conflict which first . divided and finally united our nation. ·ANDERSONVILLE-John McElroy-Abridged PERSONAL MEMOIRS OF U. S. GRANT­ Premie(t162, 75¢ • Premier tI48, 75¢ • A modern abridgment. , THE CONFEDERATE RAIDER ALABAMJ\­ PICKETT'S CHARGE-George R. Stewart­ Raphael Semmes-Premier tI46, 75¢ • Selections from MEMOIRS OF SERVICE Premier tl91, 75¢ • ." AFLOAT DURING THE WAR BETWEEN THE PROLOGUE TO SUMTER-Philip Van Doren STATES. Stern-Premier tI15, 75¢ • 'DECISIVE BATTLES OF THE CIVIL WAR-Lt. SOLDIER LIFE IN THE UNION AND CONFED· Col. Joseph Mitchell-Premier tI47, 75¢ - ERATE ARMIES-Philip Van Doren Stern­ GENERAL LEE-Fitzhugh Lee-tllO, 75¢ • Premier tl14, 75¢ • Selections from ", HERNDON'S LIFE OF LINCOLN-William H. HARDTACK AND COFFEE and DETAILED " Herndon and Jesse W. Weik-Premier tI09. MINUTIAE OF SOLDIER LIFE IN THE ARMY 75¢ • OF NORTHERN VIRGINIA. I RODE WITH STONEWALL-Henry Kyd STONEWALL JACKSON AND THE AMERICAN Douglas-Premier t113, 75¢ • CIVIL WAR-G. F. Henderson. Abridged. 'OUR HOUSE DIVIDED-Former title: A HIS­ ,TORY OF THE PEOPLE OF THE UNITED Premier tI61, 75¢ • ISTATES DURING LINCOLN'S ADMINISTRA- THE TWENTIETH MAINE-John J. Pullen­ • JTloN-John McMaster-Premier t1l2, 75¢ Premier tI64, 75¢ •

FOR A CATALOG OF PAPERBACKS FOR SCHOOLS & COLLEGES WRITE TO: THE EDUCATION DEPARTMENT FAWCETT WORLD LIBRARY GREENWICH, CONN.

IS THE UNITED STATES IN WORLD HISTORY, Third Edition

By JOHN B. RAE, Harvey Mudd College, and THOMAS H. D. MAHONEY, 'MassachuseHs Institute of Technology. Available in March, 1964.

," An extensive revision of a leading tezetbook which examines United States history in relation to world history, from the background of European ci~i1ization when America was discovered to the United States in the 1960's. In this edition the emphasis on intellectual and cultural factors has been increased. An outstanding text for American history ·courses.

SOUTHEAST ASIA: Its Historical Development

By JOHN CADY, . Available in January, 1964.

This major new text covers the principal developments in the history of the peoples of Southeast Asia from the early centuries A.D. to the end of . World War II. The author considers the development of distinctive na­ tional, personalities within an ethnic and economic overview of the com­ monly shared influences of India, Cflina, and eventually Europe, , and the United States. Main currents of historical development are coy­ ,ered in detail, and the language is non-technical and clear. Double-page 'chronological summaries of successive historical periods are included.

UNITED STATES HISTORY By GILMAN M. OSTRANDER, Michigan State University. In press.

A relatively brief textbook to be used in the introductory American His­ tory course at the college level, covering the whole of An;terican History from European origins to the present. While the authpr has reached cer­ ';:tain conclusions and made personal interpretations of major historical events, the approach of the book has been simply that of bringing fo­ ,gether in a brief compass the main course of American political, diplo­ s:natic, economic,social and intellectual history. Its briefness in no way sacrifices completeness. It supplies the basic information briefly enough to permit concentration on the detailed problems that the instructor wishes, throlJgh special paperback assignments and outside reading. The text is written in a very lively and readable style.

New York 36, N. Y. ""BOOK, . COMPANY, I7 AND IDS ~~HISTORY" By F. E. Adcock

One of the world's foremost authorities on Thucydides explores the great historian's life at the center of world-shaking events and how it helped to form his peculiarly modern approach to the writing of history. Sir Frank deals first with the narrative, the speeches, Thucydides's dialectic and ethics, the course of the Ten Years' War, and the importance of Sicily. Against this background, he then offers incisive interpretations of passages from the History. $3.95

JOHN MALCOLM LUDLOW The Builder of Christian Socialism By N. C. Masterman

The life of the founder and leader of Christian Socia1ism offers con­ siderable enlightenment on the guiding philosophy of this important nineteenth-century movement toward social reform. Masterman em­ phasizes the confusion of goals within. the movement, the radica1 European and even cosmopolitan character with which Ludl9w infused it, and its role as 1ink between nineteenth-century 1iberalism and the corporate collectivism that succeeded it. $5.50

THE MONASTIC ORDER IN ENGLAND \ Second Edition By Dom David Knowles

This classic work on the early history of English monasticism, from 940 to the Fourth Lateran Council in 1216, has been revised in detail to incorporate the most recent scholarly research. Dom David has also greatly expanded the bibliography and has added new notes on such subjects as tlle Regula Magistra, Cistercian origins and economic history, the origins of the lay brothers, St Bernard, the foundation of Fountains Abbey, Ailred of Rievaulx, the diviSIon of revenues, and the Responsiones of Gregory the Great. $13.50

On display at Exhibit 4

CAMBRIDGE UNIVERSITY PRESS 32 East 57th Street, New York, New York 10022 ~ -

18 ',1 ,

READINGS IN WESTERN CIVILIZATION, THIRD EDITION _ GEORGE H. KNOLES AND RIXFORD K. SNYDER A versatile and popular volume for courses in Western Civilization and European His­ tory. Students will find the whole range of western culture illuminated through their reading of these well chosen selections from the fields of history, literature, art, science and religion. $7.50 list

AMERICAN. ISSUES: THE SOCIAL RECORD , FOURTH EDITION MERL CURTI, WILLARD THORP, CARLOS BAKER This distinguished collection of readings has earned highest praise from instructors and students alike. Well designed for courses in American Social and Intellectual History, this latest revision includes new materials reflecting the principal issues that have occu­ pied the American people since the Second World War. $7.50 list

RUSSIA: A History, FOURTH EDITION SIDNEY HARCAVE Lon~ a favorite with students, this authoritative history of Russia ranges from the pre­ Petnne period to the present. Several maps in color have been added to this edition, and treatment of early Russian history has been expanded. Highly readable and well illus­ "trated throughout. $6.75 list ONE HUNDRED YEARS OF RUSSIAN FOREIGN POLICY, 1814-1914

·0 BARBARA JELAVICR The remarkable continuity of the Russian course is traced as successive leaders devel­ . oped and extended guidelines originally laid down by Peter the Great. An introductory "chapter surveys the period from Peter through Napoleon. and a conduding chapter

o· points to the survival of certain drives and objectives in the foreign policy of Soviet Russia today. Paperbound Winter LINCOLN AND THE FIRST SHOT RICHARD N. CURRENT °A distinguished historian reviews in detail the events from Lincoln's arrival in Washing­ ton as President-elect in March, 1861. to the Confederate attack on Fort Sumter-Lin­ coln's April Policy. Notes and bibliography. Paperbound Winter THE ELECTION OF ANDREW JACKSON ROBERT V. REMINI Covers the first "modern" presidential election in American history and the commanding 'personalities who shaped It-Adams, Jackson. Clay. Webster. Calhoun, Van Buren and others. Notes and bibliography. PaperbOund Winter

Lippincott

East Washirigton Square, Philadelphia 5, Pennsylvania 'Harper & Row, Publishers announces THE UNITED STATES An Jnterpretive '}{istory -R. Kent Fielding & Eugene Edward Campbell Interpretive rather than encyclopedic, this survey history emphasizes continuities and focuses on those issues which have had the greatest impact on the formation of American institutions. Some special features: discussion of competitive colo­ nial policies showing transfer and adaptation to environment; growth of a distinc­ tive American institutional character; emphasis on the historical character of the Articles of. Confederation and the Constitution; institutional changes under Jacksonian impulses, the Civil War, and the Industrial Revolution; the search for an American foreign policy; perceptive analysis of Hoover's policies and the policy; comprehensive statement of the policies underlying contempo­ rary domestic and foreign policy. Maps. 725 pp. + index; $6.95

FRANCE SINCE 1789 Paul A. Gagnon An interpretive history of from the ongms of. the French Revolu­ tion to the present. Primarily political, it is organized according to various regimes which have succeeded the fall of the Bourbon monarchy. The main political crises and wars are set in the economic, social, and cultural environ­ ments which shaped their outcomes. The author takes an explicit point of view, includes discussions of controversial issues, and offers stimulating interpretations of these issues. Maps. 541 pp. + index; $7.25 ' recent PREHISTORY AND THE BEGINNINGS OF CIVILIZATION Jacquetta Hawkes & Sir Leonard Woolley-Volume I of the HISTORY OF MAN­ KIND, produced under the auspices of UNESCO. Herbert Muller says, "This is a: first-rate history, at once thoroughly scholarly and highly readable. Both authors are admirably fair-minded." Illustrations. 956 pp. Text Edition, $9.75 (available for quantity sale to schools and colleges only)

49 East 33d St.,J\Tew Yorki6, J\T. Y 20 ...,

An entirely new project developed by the University of Okla- THE homa Press, enlisting the scholar- ship of the world's foremost historical and cultural interpreters, the series now co.ntains ten volumes, CENTERS WI th twenty-five more scheduled for I¢"4 and after. The completed series will embrace OF 150 great cities during partic­ ular periods of their flowering. Those thus far published: Atllens in tile Age of Pericles, ~e;~~1~; CIVILIZA TI 0 N Robinson, Jr. of Brown University / SMraz: Persian City of Saints and SERIES Poets, by A. J. Arberry of . Pembroke College, University of Cambridge, England / Con­ stantinople in tile Age of Justinian, by Glanville Downey of Harvard University / Fez in. tile Age of tile Marinides, by Roger Le Tourneau of the Univer­ sity of Aix-en-Provence / Rome in tile Augustan Age, by Henry Thompson Rowell of Johns Hopkins Uni­ versity / Antiocll In tile Age of T Ileodosius tile Great, by Glanville Downey of Harvard University / Dublin in tile Age of William Butler Yeats and James Joyce, by Richard M. Kain of the University of Louisville / Gaza in tile Early Sixtll Century, by Glanville Down­ ey of Harvard University / Istanbul and tile Civili­ zation of tile Ottoman Empire, by Bernard Lewis of the School of Oriental and African Studies, London / Aix-la-Cllapelle in tile Age of Cllarlemagne, by Richard E. Sullivan of Michigan State University

$2.75 each througll your local bookseller, or UNIVERSITY OF OKLAHOMA pREss NORMAN

21

" ~ - ,~ a new reading adventure in medicine and the arts

ESSAYS ON THE ARTS AND THE HISTORY AND PHILOSOPHY OF MEDICINE by FELIX MARTI-IBANEZ, M. D. Editor-in-Chief 0/ the Medical Newsmagazine, MD; Former Professor and Chairman, Department of the History of Medicine, New York Medical College

This new collection of articles and essays traverses the vast expanse of human experience to present a fresh and exciting view of the world of medicine and the arts. ARIEL: ESSAYS ON THE ARTS AND THJ? IDSTORY; AND PIDLOSOPHY OF MEDICINE combines new concepts, Partial Table of Contents original observations, and imaginative thinking in a I. THROUGH THE MAGIC book that will give many hours of reading pleasure. DOOR OF WORDS / Tile One of the outstanding features of this collection of 42. Fabric and Creation of a Dream essays and articles is the inclusion of the author's 13 • More Magic in Words· Friends for the Road·No Books on the original expanded versions of his introductions to the Ferry from Hong Kong. Tell instalbnents of THE EPIC OF MEDICINE, which origi­ Me VII. THE MARVELS OF 4 MAN / Ti,e Mask and the Mirrol" The Miracle Tool • The Eye and the Glance VIII. THE PHILOSOPHY OF i MEDICINE/ Doctors Must Tell. Man, as Nature and as History 4 ~~~~ ...... 0 bill me t :IX. RELIGIO MEDICr To Be a Doctor· The Young ;t: ...... ~ ...... , t!nclostd, we t Princes· The Legacy 0/ St. Luke INDEX ++~~~~~~~~~~~++~~~~~~~~++~ .MD PUBLICATIONS, INC.! NEW YORK

22 Outstanding books for college 'courses ••••••••••

CHINA, JAPAN, and the POWERS MERIBETH E. CAMERON, Mount Holyoke College; THOMAS H. D. MAHONEY, Institute of Technology; ond GEORGE E. McREYNOLDS, University of Connecticut Widely used textbook provides a balanced introduction to the history of the major Far Eastern Peoples over the past two centuries. The book traces Western relations with China, Japan, and Korea from first contacts through the rise of Communist China and the revival of post-war Japan. The main theme centers on the impact of the West on Eastern Asia and the revolutionary ferment that has resulted. 2nd Ed., 1960. 714 pp., map!. $8.00 _

EUROPEAN POLITICS and -GOVERNMENT CLIFFORD A. L. RICH, Oklahoma State University; ROBERT O. GIBBON, Wisconsin Stcae College, Eou Claire; LOWELL G. NOONAN, San Fernando Valley State College; HELMUT BADER, EI Camino College; and KAREL HULICKA, State University of New Yark at Buffalo A detailed and comprehensive account of the politics and government of five major European powers: Great Britain, France, Germany, Italy, and the U.S.S.R. Specialists on each country analyze the causal determinants of pplitical action, provid- - ing a sound basis for comparative conclusions. Book systematically focuses attention on the governing process in order to impart a clear understanding of how the major European systems compare to that of the United States. 1962. 780 pp., illus. $8.00

GOVERNMENT and POLITICS in LATIN AMERICA Edited by HAROLD EUGENE DAVIS, American University Written by 11 contributing experts, this volume presents a balanced picture of the common political problems and pervasive trends in Latin America. The book depicts the rapidly changing, often violent political and social life in which emergent political forces are taking shape; analyzes governmental institutions in relation to power structures and in terms of their functions; and examines problems that challenge these governments today. 1958. 539 pp., illus. $750

JAPAN'S MODERN CENTURY , Haverford College An eminent authority traces the course of Japan's phenomenal transformation from __ a semi-feudal agrarian country to a modern industrial nation. Drawing from many : sources as well as his own experience, the author re-interprets fundamental questions -. in Japanese history. He describes the period in which Japan borrowed and adapted from the West, gained and lost an empire in East Asia, and arrived at her present world position. 1955. 524 pp., illus. . $750

The cRonald Press Company ...... 15 East Z6~J:> street/ New York, N.Y. 23 ALLYN AND BACON Since 1868 . . . Leading Publishers of Textbooks NEW PUBLICATIONS HISTORICAL VISTAS: Readings in United States History edited by Grady McWhiney and Robert Wiebe, both of Volume I: 1607-1877. Volume II: 1865. to Present. Encouraging an analytical approach to United States history, this new two­ volume collection of readings provides rich supplementary material for T-',! survey courses. Section introductions explain examples of four different views of the American past: continuous, dichotomous, pluralistic, and dy­ namic. Each selection deals with a separate aspect of history. Vol. I: 562 pp. Vol. II: est. 576 pp. Paperbound. $4.95 each.

HISTORY OF ASIA by Woodbridge Bingham, University of California, Berkeley; Hilary Conroy, University of Pennsylvania; Frank William Ikle,' University of New Mexico Volume I: Formation of , from Antiquity to 1600. Volume II: Imperial Greatness, Westerners and New Nations, Since 1600 From antiquity to the present, this new two-volume introductory survey of the history of Asia covers Southwest Asia, India, Southeast Asia, China, Korea, and Japan. Stresses cultural contributions; discusses modern prob­ lems of adjustment. Reading lists for both beginning and advanced students. Maps plus over 100 photographs in each volume. Vol. I: Coming in Spring. est. 498 pp. $9.75 tent. Vol. II: Tentative Fall, 1964 publication.

AMERICAN CIVILIZATION: An Introduction to Social Science by Maurice Boyd; University of Florida, and Donald. E. Worcester, Texas Christian University Supplying a historical base for courses in social science or American. civili­ zation, this new text offers an integrated treatment of the disciplines of social science. Emphasizes social change in both the United States and the world .. Designed to give an understanding of contemporary U. S. civilization andof America's world relationships. est. 788 pp. $8.95 tent.

READINGS IN· SOCIAL SCIENCE edited by Maurice Boyd and Donald E. Worcester Coming in Spring, 1964, this outstanding selection of readings can be used in conjunction with AMERICAN CIVILIZATION by the same authors--'- . or as an effective complement to any basic social. science text Paperbound.

for examination copies, write to: Arthur B. Conant ALLYN AND BACON COLLEGE DIVISION 150 Tremont Street, Boston 11, Massachusetts 24

r, , ,

A SURVEY OF EUROPEAN CIVILIZATION 1962 Impression Wallace K. Ferguson and Geoffrey Bruun

Complete Edition 1012 pages $10.50 Part I: To 1660 480 pages $ 7,75 Part II: Since 1660 532 pages $ 7.75 Since 1500 702 pages $ 8.95 Student's and Instmct01-'s Manuals available

READINGS IN EUROPEAN CIVILIZATION SINCE 1500 Edited by Richard It. Powers

719 pages paper covers 1961 $4.95

A HISTORY OF EAST ASIAN CIVILIZATION Volume I-East Asia: The Great Tradition

Edwin O. Reischauer and John K. Fairbank

739 pages 1960 $8.95

THE WORLD BEYOND EUROPE An Introduction to the History of Africa, India, Southeast Asia, and the Far East

George Alexander Lensen

200 pages paper covers 1960 $1.95

"~a Houghtqn M(fflln CQfflpa:ny ~ BOSTON' NEW YORK' ATLANTA' GENEVA Ill' DALLAS' PALO ALTO , <

THE FEDERAL UNION A History of the United States to 1877 Fourth Edition John D. Hicks, George E. Mowry, and Rohert E. Burke

< a late February 1964 publication Student's and Instructor's Manuals will be available.

THE AMERICAN NATION A History of the United States from 1865 to the Present Fourth Edition John D. Hicks, George E. Mowry, and Rohert E. Burke 95ipages 1963 $8.95 Student's and Instructor's Manuals are available.

READINGS INi AMERICAN HISTORY Third Edition-Volumes I and" Edited hy Rohert C. Cotner, John S. Ezell, Gilbert C. Fite, and Joe B. Frantz

Volume I: 1492 to 1865 < about 450 pages paper covers a late 1963 publication Volume II: 1865 to the Present paper covers a late February 1964. publication

PATHS OF AMERICAN THOUGHT Edited hy Arthur M. Schlesinger, Jr., and Morton White 624 pages September 1963 $6.00

EUROPE IN TRANSITION, 1300-1520 Wallace K. Ferguson 625 pages of text 40 pages of illustrations 1963 $8.00

,~Ii Houglitqn MijfGn Cfffflpa:ny ~ BOSTON' NEWYORK'ATIANTA' GENEVA.ILL· DALLAS' I'ALO ALTO i "

ILLUSION AND NECESSITY The Diplomacy of Global War, 1939-1945 John L. Snell about 228 pages paper covers an October 1963 publication

THE SECOND WORLD WAR AND AFTER Geoffrey Bruun and Dwight E. Lee 196 pages paper covers a late 1963 publication

HISTORIAN'S HANDBOOK A Key to the Study and Writing of History

Second Edition Wood Gray and Others about 96 pages paper covers an early 1964 publication

PROBLEMS OF WORLD DISARMAMENT Edited by Charles A. Barker 170 pages 1963 paper covers $1.75 cloth covers $2.50

SOURCES OF WESTERN CIVILIZATION in two volumes Edited by Daniel D. McGarry and Clarence L. Hoh!, Jr. Volume I: From the Ancient World to the Reformation Era 506 pages paper covers 1962 $3.50 Volume II: From the Seventeenth Century to the Present 507 pages paper covers 1963 $3.50

-~D ffuuglJwnM~fJlln Gnnpany ~ BOSTON' NEW YORK - ATLANTA' GENEVA, ILL' DAllAS" PALO ALTO CHARLES SCRIBNER'S SONS College Department • New York

THE HERITAGE OF Jl1AN By . This monumental history covers the period from the Stone Age to the presenfin forty-eight brilliant chapters which stress man's achievements in art, government, commerce, science, literature, philosophy, and religion. xiv, 881 pages. 125 illustrations. 41 maps. $9.50

THE RISE OF AMERICAN ECONOMIC LIFE By Arthur Cecil Bining and Thomas C. Cochran. A general introduction to American economic history, from colonial begin­ nings to the complex expansion of the present. The develop­ mental approach and the clear exposition add to the usefulness of this text for beginning college courses. Professor Cochran has extensively revised and updated the text by the late Arthur Cecil Bining. Newly designed maps and additional illustrations. Fourth Edition. 800 pages. November, 1963. $8.00

A ·HISTOR Y OF CIVILIZATION A general history of Western civilization, integrating all impor­ tant aspects of the development of culture in Europe and the Americas. Revision of both volumes is currently in progress. Over 600 illustrations and nearly 200 maps. Each, $6.75 -Volume 1. EARLIEST TIMES TO THE MID·SEVEN· TEENTH CENTURY. By C. Harold King. Volume 2. THE MID-SEVENTEENTH CENTURY TO MOD· ERN TIMES. By Arthur J. May. • from Johns Hopkins

AMERICA ENCOUNTERS JAPAN From Perry to MacArthur By WILLIAM L. NEUMANN. A study of American attitudes toward Japan as sociological and psychological factors in the development of U. S. foreign policy in the Far East. Mr. Neumann's revisionist critique has stirred controversy among historians and political sci­ entists. 368 pages. $650

AMERICAN STRATEGY IN WORLD WAR II A Reconsideration By KENT ROBERTS GREENFIELD. These essays by the widely-known military historian reappraise some of the troublesome central ques­ tions of the war. Among these: Military justification for eight major decisions of American strategy; Anglo-American tension over the tim­ ing and weight of tIle cross-Channel offensive against Hitler's Reich; President Roosevelt's influence in the shaping of American strategy; Effectiveness of air power as a revolutionary weapon of strategy. . 160 pages. $4.50

THE ENGLISH LANDED ESTATE IN THE NINETEENTH CENTURY: Its Administration By DAVID SPRING. A book about landownership and agriculture in nineteenth century England with emphasis on the administration of large landed estates during the years from 1830 to 1870. A chapter is devoted to a great English estate and single landowner, the seventh Duke of Bedford. 216 pages. $5.00

AMA: VOICE OF AMERICAN MEDICINE By JAMES GORDON BURROW. A definitive documented history of the Ameri<;an Medical Association-one of the country's finest profes­ sional organizations, toughest unions, and most powerful lobbies. Woven into this historical narrative are most of the great medical issues of the 20th century including the struggle for a pure food and drug law and a federal health department, compulsory and volun- , tary health insurance, response to the New Deal, Fair Deal, and to Medicare. 430 pages. $7.50

Johns Hopkins books are displayed at the exhibit of the Associatio~ of American University Presses.

THE JOHNS HOPKINS PRESS Baltimore, Maryland 21218 ..

The Millennium of Europe By Oscar Halecki--Pr.face by H. Brugmans UNIVERSITY OF Another masterpiece by this well-known historian, introducing a unique concept of history, which NOTRE studies the continuity of European existence. . DAME 464 pp. $8.95 St. Ambrose-His Life and Times PRESS By Angelo Paredi--Translated by Joseph Costelloe, SJ. A turbulent and challenging chapter in Western civilization-the strife-tom fourth century Roman Empire-has been brilliantly captured in this work. 450 pp. 16 illust. $7.95 The Americanist Heresy in Roman Catholicism, 1895-1900 By Thomas 7. McAvoy, C.S.C. , The only full-scale study of the differences existing within the American Catholic hierarchy of the late, nineteenth century. Paperback NDP-29 336 pp. $1.91. The Limits and Divisjons of' European History ~. Notre Dame, By Olear Halecki--Paperbafk NDP-14 $1.95 Indiana The New World of Henri Saint-Simon By Frank E. Manuel A contribution to the history of ideas. Paperback NDP-28 448 pp. $2.25 WRITE FOR COMPLETE CATALOG

HISTORY: WRITTEN AND LIVED BY PAUL WEISS .. "In it America's outstanding metaphysician extends his system to historical experience ... Both his general approach and his specific' I' illumination of historical time merit discussion by historians."-;- American Historical Review 5~ X 8;;2, 256' pages, $5.85

SOUTHERN ILLINOIS UNIVERSITY PRESS Carbondale, Illinois • ..

American Association for State and Local History

One Thousand Dollar Prize and Grant-in-Aid Program

FOR: significant research protects in local history '_ The American Association for State and Local History has established an annual prize and a grant-in-aid program to encourage the study, writing and " publication of sound, interpretive local history. TERMS OF THE PRIZE The Association will award $1,000 to the author of the unpublished, book­ length manuscript in local history that, in the opinion of its Research and Pub­ lication Committee, makes the most distinguished contribution to United States and Canadian historiography. Only manuscriptS of sound scholarship, genuine significance and stimulating interpretation will be' considered. A revised doctoral or master's dissertation is eligible only if recommended in writing by the professor under whom it was written. Manuscripts must be submitted by October 15. The author's acceptance of the award will convey to the Association publica­ tion rights. The prize manuscript and other meritorious manuscripts approved by the Research and Publication Committee will be published by the University of North Carolina Press. Prize manuscript, 1963: Intellectual Life in Jefferson's Virginia, 1790-1830, by Richard Beale Davis. Published, 1963: Immigrant City, by Donald B. Cole, .anC!.;§alll:J,,on King at Oregqn, by Gordon B. Dodds. , • " ...... '~ _'L - TERMS OF GRANT~IN-AID In conjunction with the American Association' for State and Local History prize, the Association has established a grant-in-aid program for Significant research projects in local history. Grants made under this program will be limited 'to necessary·trayel expenses, photocopy and clerical assistance and similar items, specifically excluding compensation in lieu of salary. Doctoral candidates are not eligible for these grants. The preSident of the Association will make the awards on recommendation of the Research and Publication Committee. Ap- _ plicants for the grant-in-aid program are requested to submit the proper forms no later than October 15.

Address' all correspondence, manu­ Clement M. Silvestro, Director scripts, applications and requests American Association for State and Local for application forms to:, History 151 East Gorham Street Madison, Wisconsin 53703

39 THE AMERICAN HISTORICAL ASSOCIATION Founded in 1884 Chartered by Congress in 1889 . Office: 400 A STREET, S.E., WASHINGTON, D. C. 20003 MEMBERSHIP: Persons interested in historical studies, whether profes­ sionally or otherwise, are invited to membership. Present membership ca. 10,700. Members elect the officers by ballot. MEETINGS: An annual meeting with a three-day program is held during the last days of each year. Many professional historical groups meet within or jointly with the Association at this time. The Pacific Coast Branch holds separate meetings on the Pacific Coast and publishes the Pacific Historical Review. PUBLICATIONS AND SERVICES: The official organ, the American Historical Review, is published quarterly and sent to all members. It is available by subscription to others. In addition, the Association pub­ lishes its Annual Report, prize monographs, pamphlets designed to aid teachers of history, bibliographical as well as other volumes, and a news­ letter. To promote history and assist historians, the Association offers many other services. It also maintains close relations with international, spe,cialized, state, and local historical societies through conferences and correspondence. PRIZES: The Herbert B. Ada1ns Prize of $300 awarded in the even-num­ bered years for a work in the field of European history. The George Louis Beer Prize of $300 awarded annually for a work on any phase of European international history since 1895. The Albert f. Beveridge Award, given annually for the best manuscript in the history of the Western Hemisphere, with a cash value of $1,500 and assurance of publication. The John H. Dunning Prize of $300 awarded in the even­ numbered years for a monograph on any subject relating to American history. The littleton-Griswold Prize in Legal History of $500 to be awarded biennially for the best published work in the legal history of the American colonies and the United States to 1900. The RobertLiv­ ingston Schuyler Prize of $100 awarded every five years for the best work in modern British and Commonwealth history (next award, 1¢6). The WafttmullPrize of $500 awarded biennially for a work on the history of ,India originally published in the United States (next award, 1964). . DUES: There is no initiation fee. Annual regular dues are $10.00, student $5.00 (faculty signature required), and life $200. All members receive the American Historical Review, the AHA Ne'U}sletter, and the pro­ gram of the annual meeting. CORRESPONDENCE: Inquiries should be addressed to the Executiv:e Secretary at 400 A Street, S.E., Washington, D.C. 20003. 40 , . . "~

Schedule of Sessions (at the Sheraton Hotel unless otherwise noted)

FRIDAY, DECEMBER 27 IO:OO A.M. CONSTITUTION ROOM MEETING OF THE COUNCIL

SATURDAY, DECEMBER 28 MORNING SESSIONS

I 9:30 A.M. WEST BALLROOM Joint Session with The Southern Historical Association

IMAGE AND REALITY: THE SOUTH IN THE 1920'S Chairman: Joseph J. }/fathezvs, Emory University The Modern Image of the Savage South George B. Tindall, University of North Carolina and the Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton The Southern Lady: Image and Reality Ann~ Scott, Duke University Comment William R. Taylor, University of Wisconsin

II 9:30 A.M. HALL OF FLAGS Joint Session with . The American Catholic Historical Association

"! LIBERAL CATHOLICISM AND FRANCO-AMERICAN RELA­ TIONS IN THE 1860'S .Chairman: Lynn M. Case, University of Pemisylvania Edouard de Laboulaye: "Liberal" Catholic and "Americanist" during the Second Empire Walter D. Gray, University of Notre Dame , France, and the Vatican: Certain Aspects of Ameri­ can, French, and Vatican Diplomacy, 1866-1870 Arnold Blumberg, Towson (Md.) State College Comment Sister M. Caroline Ann Gimpl, Marylhurst College 41 " .

SATURDAY, DECEMBER 28

ill 9:30 A.M. CONCOURSE ROOM

Joint Session with Society for Italian Historical Studies

SOCIAL AND ECONOMIC PROBLEMS IN ITALIAN HISTORY Chairman: Charles F. Delzell} Vanderbilt University

Seventeenth Century: The Venetian Patriciate James C. Davis} Unive1'sity of Pennsyh'ania

Eighteenth Century: The Tuscan Nobility Robert Burr Litchfield} Dartmouth College

Nineteenth Century: Strategic Factors in the Economic Development of United Italy Shepard B. Clough} Columbia University

Comment David Herlihy, Bryn Mawr College

IV 9:30 A.AI. CONSTITUTION ROOM

IRISH-AMERICANS AND NINETEENTH-CENTURY PROTEST Chairman: J ol1n Hall Stewart, T17 estern Reserve University

Irish Radicals and J effersonianism Edward C. Carter II} Philadelphia Athenaeum

Irish-Americans and Irish Thomas N. Br07v1t, Portsmouth Priory

Comment Robert D. Cross, Columbia University Lawrence J. McCaffrey, University of Illinois

/ SATURDAY, DECEMBER 28

V 9:30 A.M. SUBURBAN ROOM

DIPLOMACY IN THE EARLY NATIONAL PERIOD Chairman: Bradford Perkins, University of Michigan

The Defiant Secretary of State: Timothy Pickering versus John Adams Alexander DeConde, University of California, SantaBarbara

United States Naval Officers in American Foreign Policy, 1815-1828 I W. Patrick Strauss, Michigan State University

Comment I Stephen G. Kurtz, Wabash College Norman K. Risjord, DePauw University

VI 9:30 A.M. PENNSYLVANIA ROOM, WEST

VARIETIES OF FEUDALISM Chairman: Edgar Johnson, Bmndeis University

Champagne John Benton, University of Pennsylvania

Toulouse and Southern France, A.D. 850-I050 Archibald R. Lewis, University of Texas

England and N orrnandy I1 C. W. Hollister, University of California, Santa Barbara I 43 t \ ,I SATURDAY, DECEMBER 28

VII 9:30 A.M. PENNSYLVANIA ROOM, EAST

STUDIES IN NON-WESTERN INTELLECTUAL HISTORY Chairman: Benjamin Schwartz, Harvard University

vVestern and Traditional Elements in Modern Indian Thought: The Case of Rammohun Roy Stephen N. Hay, University of Chicago

Lenin and Mao as Marxist Thinkers: A Comparative Study in Intel­ lectual History Donald M. Lowe, University of California, Riverside

Lu Hsiin and Chaadaev: A Comparative Study in Westernization Donald W. Treadgold, University of Washington

VIII 9:30 A.M. EAST BALLROOM

Joint Session with The American Society of Church History

VATICAN COUNCILS Chairman: Raymond W. Albright, Episcopal Theological School

Vatican Council I and the Crisis of Emiliana P. N oether, Regis College

Vatican Council II Albert C. Outler, Southern Methodist University

Comment S. William Halperin, University of Chicago James P. Nichols, Princeton Theological Seminary

44 SATURDAY, DECEMBER 28

IX 9:30 A.M. TIERED BALCONY (GRAND BALLROOM)

Joint Session with The Agricultural History Society and The American Association for State and Local History

SOCIAL CHANGE IN RURAL AMERICA Chairman: Vernon Carstensen, University of TVisconsin

Rural-Urban Conflict and the Kansas Cattle Towns Robert Dykstra, State University of Iowa

Social Factors in the Economic Development of Lewis County, New York Richard Bliss, Bennett Junior College

Comment Clayton S. Ellsworth, College of Wooster Paul H. J ohnstolle, United States Department of Agriculture

LUNCHEON CONFERENCES

I

I2:30 P.M. PENNSYLVANIA R001~I, vVEST

AMERICAN SOCIETY OF CHURCH HISTORY Chairman: Albert C. Outler, Southern Methodist University Conciliarism in Anglicanism Raymond W. Albright, Episcopal Theological School

45 SATURDAY, DECEMBER 28

IT I2:30 P.M. EAST BALLROOM

PHI ALPHA THETA Chairman: Donald E. Worcester, University of Florida The American \Vest-Child of Federal Subsidy Joe B. Frantz, University of Texas

m I2:30 P.M. CONNIE MACK ROO]'v!

THE LABOR HISTORIANS Chairm~n: John O. P. Hall, Charlotte College Labor History and the Labor Movement of Today Philip Taft, Brown UnivC1'sity

IV I2:30 P.M. UNIVERSITY 11iJUSEUM, UNIVERSITY OF PENNSYLVANIA

CONFERENCE ON LATIN AMERICAN HISTORY Chairman: Charles Gibson, State University of Iowa The Hispanist in the American Historical Association J olm Tate Lanning, Duke University SATURDAY, DECEMBER 28

AFTERNOON SESSIONS

I 2:30 P.Af. WEST BALLROOM

"SHAME OF THE CITIES" REVISITED Chairman: Constance MeL. Green, Washington, D.C. Pittsburgh Samuel P. Hays, University of Pittsburgh Philadelphia Arthur Dudden, Bryn Mawr College New York Arthur N[ann, Smith College

Comment Robert C. Weaver, Federal Housing a11d Home Finance Agency

II 2:30 P.M. EAST BALLROOM J oint Session with The American Military Institute JAPAN AND AMERICA: CONCEPTS OF NATIONAL DEFENSE Chairman: James W. Morley, Columbia University 1\:1:ilitary Views on National Defense in Prewar Japan James B. C,'owley, Yale University Changing Concepts of National Defense in the United States Stetson Conn, Department of the Army

Comment lvlarius B. Jansen, Princeton University William Fox) Colwmbia University 47 SATURDAY, DECEMBER 28

ill 2:30 P.M. PENNSYLVANIA ROOM, WEST

FRENCH SOCIETY OF THE LOUIS PHILIPPE ERA Chainnan: Frederick B. Artz, Oberlin College

The Crowd in the French Revolution of 1830 David H. Pinkney, University of Missouri

The Church and Social Change, 1815-1850 Ra}'11wnd Grew, Princeton University

Comment Elizabeth L. Eisenstel:n, American University

IV 2:30 P.M. TIERED BALCONY (GRAND BALLROOM)

GERMANY: FROM EMPIRE TO REPUBLIC Chairman: Hans W. Gatzke, fohns Hopkins University

The Lost Decade, 1904-1914 f aTtn L. Snell, Tulane University

Naumann and Rathenau: Their Way to the Republic Henry Cord Meyer,

Comment Klaus Epstein, Brown University

I ,I SATURDAY, DECEMBER 28

V 2:30 P.M. PENNSYLVANIA ROOM, EAST

Joint Session with The American Society for Reformation Research

COUNCILS AND REFORMATION Chairman: William J. BOllwsma., University of California, Berkeley

Almain and Major: Conciliar Theory on the Eve of the Reformation Francis Oakley, The Tridentine Doctrine of Justification in the Light of Later Medieval Theology Heiko A. Oberman, Harvard Un'iversity

Comment Brian Tierney, J aroslav Pelikan, Yale University

VI 2:30 P.M. HALL OF FLAGS

THE BRITISH LABOUR PARTY: THE CONFLICT BETWEEN SOCIALIST IDEALS AND PRACTICAL POLITICS Chairman: Smnuel McCulloch, San Francisco State College

Before 1918 Philip P. Poirier, Ohio State University Between the Wars Richard W. Lyman, Stanford University

Comment Henry R. Winkler, Rutgers University 49 SATURDAY, DECEMBER 28

VII 2:30 P.M. CONSTITUTION ROOM

THE UNITED STATES AND CENTRAL EUROPE, I goO-I 920 Chairman: Arthur J. May, University of Rochester

United States Presidents in the Eyes of Austro-Hungarian Diplomats, 190I- I 9I 3 Margaret Stet'ne, TVayne State University

The Wilsonian Concept of Central Europe George Barany, University of Denver

Comment Victor S. Mmnatey, Florida State University Joseph P. O'Grady, LaSalle College

VIII 2:30 P.M. CONGRESS HALL (Independence Square, 6th and Chestnut)

HISTORICAL SITES AS HISTORICAL DOCUMENTS Chairman : John A. Krout, Columbia University

The Historian and Historical Preservation John D. R. Platt, Independence National Historical Park

Mt. Vernon and the Origins of the Historical Preservation Movement in America Charles B. Hosmer, Principia College

Comment Richard P.1'v[cCormick, Rtttgers University Anthony N. B. Garvan, University of Pennsylvania 50 SATURDAY, DECEMBER 28

IX 2:30 P.M. UNIVERSITY MUSEUM, UNIVERSITY OF PENNSYLVANIA

Joint Session with The Conference on Latin American History

THE CRISIS OF COLONIALISM IN LATIN AMERICA, 1763-1810 Chairman: Hugh M. Hamill, Jr., University of Connecticut I Bourbon Loyalty and the Guatemalan Aristocracy Troy S. Floyd, University of New Mexico The Nuevo Reino de Granada between Rebellion and Revolution, 1728-1808 Robert L. Gilmore, .ohio University

Comment Moises Gonzalez Navarro, El Colegio de Mexico Robert J. Shafer, S'yracuse University

X 2:30 P.M. SUBURBAN ROOM

TEXTBOOKS AND TELEVISION: HISTORY AND ITS WIDER AUDIENCE

Chairman: Ray Ginger, Brandeis Uninversity The Tyranny of the Textbook Marshall W. Fishwick, Wemyss Foundation The Uses of Educational Television I John B. Frantz, Pennsylvania State University \ Comment Richard P. Cecil, Long Beach, New York Richard D. Heffner, New York City 1 t I 51 / 1 I SATURDAY, DECEMBER 28

DINNERS

I 7:00 P.M. PENNSYLVANIA ROOM, EAST

ANNUAL DINNER OF THE MISSISSIPPI VALLEY HISTORI­ CAL ASSOCIATION Chairman: Iohn Caughey, University of California, Los Angeles

The Founding of a Liberal Press Tradition in the Lower Ohio Valley Thomas D. Clark, University of Kelitucky

II 7:00 P.M. CONSTITUTION ROOli

ANNUAL DINNER OF THE MEDIAEVAL ACADEMY OF AMERICA Chairman: Bertie Wilkinson, University of Toronto

Academic Taverns in Medieval Paris Astrik L. Gabriel, University of Notre Dame

f SUNDAY, DECEMBER 29

MORNING SESSIONS

I 9:30 A.M. WEST BALLROOM

HISTORY AND THEORY Chairman: Crane Brinton, Harvard University The Rise and Fall of the Example Theory of History George H. Nadel, vVarburg Institute, London Ixion's ·Wheel : Varieties of Cyclical Theory Frank E. Manuel, Brandeis University

General Discussion

IT 9:30 A. M. EAST BALLROOiVl

REFORM AND THE PROGRESSIVE ERA Chairman: George E. 1'vlowry, University of California, Los An­ geles Progressivism and the Pattern of Reform C;harles FOl'cey, Rutgers University A Neglected Aspect of the Progressive :Movement: George W. Norris and the Public Control of Hydroelectric Power, 1913-I9I7 Richard Lowitt, Connecticut College

Comment

~Villiam Lelfchtenburg, Columbia University f. Joseph Hltthlllacher, Georgetown University

S3 SUNDAY, DECEMBER 29

ill 9:3@ A.M. PENNSYLVANIA ROOM, WEST

LEFT AND RIGHT IN FRANCE IN THE THIRTIES Chairman: Gordon Wright, Stanford University The Blum "New Deal": An Appraisal Joel Colton, Duke University The Front Populaire: Views from the Right Samuel M. Osgood, Drexel Institute of Technology

Comment John C. Cairns, University of Toronto

IV 9:30 A.M. SUBURBAN ROOM

VARIETIES OF POPULISM Chairman: Harvey r-Vish, ~Vestern Reserve University The Populist Ticket of 18g6 Robert F. Durden, Duke University The Attractions of Populism Walter T. K. Nugent, Indiana University

Comment James A. Barnes, Temple University JosePh F. Steelman, East Carolina College

f 54 SUNDAY, DECEMBER 29

V 9:30 A.1ll. HALL OF FLAGS

HISTORY AND HISTORIANS IN THE SECOND HALF OF THE SIXTEENTH CENTURY Chairman: Curt F. Biihler, iVIorgan Librar}'

Italy William I. Bouwsma, University of California, Berkeley England F. Smith Fussner,

Portugal and Spain Elisabeth F. Hirsch, Trenton State College

VI 9:30 A.lvI. CONSTITUTION ROOM

ADMINISTRATION AND POLITICS IN TUDOR ENGLAND Chairman: W. K. Jordan, Harvard University

The Problems and Significance of Administrative History in the Tudor Period G. R. Elton, Cambridge University and University of Pittsburgh

Sir vValter Mildmay and Tudor Government Stanford E. Lehmberg, University of Texas

Comment Perez Zagorin, McGill University

55 SUNDAY, DECEMBER 29

VII 9:30 A.M. PENNSYLVANIA ROOM, EAST

Joint Session with The Canadian Historical Association Sponsored by the Joint AHA-CHA Committee

FRENCH CANADIAN NATIONALISM Chairman: Charles P. Stacey, University of Toronto In the Nineteenth Century Laurier La Pierre, Loyola College, Montreal In the Twentieth Century lv[ ason Wade, University of Rochester

Comment Blair Neatby, University of British Columbia

VIII 9:30 A.M. TIERED BALCONY (GRAND BALLROOM)

POLITICS AND ECONOMICAL DEVELOPMENT IN NINE­ TEENTH-CENTURY AMERICA Chairman: Paul Gates, Cornell University

The \Vhigs and Economic Development Nathan Miller, University of Wisconst~n-1VIilwaukee The Tariff and National Policy Walter Poulshock, Wayne State University

Comment Julitls Rubin, Columbia University Robert P. Sharkey, George vVaslzington University SUNDAY, DECEMBER 29

IX 9:30 A.M. CONCOURSE ROOM

Joint Session with The Society for the History of Technology

TECHNOLOGY IN THE ANCIENT NEAR EAST Chainnan: Richard H. Shryock, American Philosophical Society A Survey of Invention in the Ancient Near East William F. Albright, Johns Hopkins University

Textiles in Ancient Palestine Louisa Bellinger, The Textile Museum, Washington, D. C. Technical Methods of Detecting Fraud in Ancient Egyptian Works of Art John D . Cooney, Museum

LUNCHEON CONFERENCES

I I2:30 P.M. PENNSYLVANIA ROOM, WEST

MODERN EUROPEAN SECTION OF THE AMERICAN HIS­ TORICAL ASSOCIATION Chairman: Gordon A. Craig, Stanford Uni'versity The Establishment of Professional History in the Nineteenth Century Felix Gilbert, Institute for Advanced Stud}" Princeton

II I2:30 P.M. EAST BALLROOM

AMERICAN STUDIES ASSOCIATION Chairman: Ralph Gabriel, American University Why So Much Pessimism? Roy F. Nichols, University of Pennsylvania 57 "~,:~~:··:'r -,

SUNDAY, DECEMBER 29

ill

-I2:30 P.M. NORTH BALCONY (GRAND BALLROOM)

CONFERENCE ON SLAVIC AND EAST EUROPEAN HISTORY Chairman: Francis Dvornik, Dumbarton Oaks

Some Reflections on the Particular Features of Russian Historical Development Marc Szeftel, University of Washington

IV

I2:30 P.M. CONNIE MACK ROOM

S0CIETY OF AMERICAN ARCHIVISTS Chairman: Everett O. Alldredge, National Archives' and Records Service, General Services Administration

Archival Sources in the Years Ahead Arthur Bestor, Uniz1ersity of Washington

V I2:30 P.M. HALL OF FLAGS

CONFERENCE ON ASIAN HISTORY Chairman: Robert Van Niel, Rltssell Sage Coflege

Modern Indonesia under the Historian's Looking Glass Harry 1. Benda, Yale University

I 5~ ...

SUNDAY, DECEMBER 29

AFTERNOON SESSIONS

I 2:30 P.M. WEST BALLROOM J oint Session with The Mississippi Valley Historical Association

THE TASKS OF RESEARCHJN AMERICAN HISTORY

PANEL DISCUSSION Chairman: John Higham, University of Michigan Thomas C. Cochran, University of Pennsylvania David Potter, Stanford University _ C. Vann Woodward, Yale University

IT 2:30 P.M. EAST BALLROOM PSYCHOLOGY ANDHISTORY . Chairman: William L. Langer, Harvard University A Psychological Approach to Intellectual History Richard L. Schoenwald, Massachusetts Institute of Technology Psychology and Political History Donald B. Meyer, University of California, Los Angeles Comment Helen Merrell Lynd, Sarah Lawrence College

ill 2:30 P.M. TIERED BALCONY (GRAND BALLROOM) POLITICAL THEORY AND THE ORIGINS OF THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION Chairman: Richard B. }.;Jorris, Columbia University Haman and Ahasuerus: On the Conspiratorial Origins of the American Revolution , Harvard University Comment Merrill Jensen, University of Wisconsin Clinton Rossiter, Cornell University f ~. 59 I SUNDAY, DECEMBER 29

IV 2:30 P.M. PENNSYLVANIA ROOM, WEST BYZANTIUM Chairman: Kenneth M. Setton, University of Pennsylvania The Byzantine Emperor and the Church Milton Anastos, Harvard University and Dumbarton Oaks

Comment Deno Geanakoplos, University of Illinois Peter Topping, University of Cincinnati

V 2:30 P.M. SUBURBAN ROOM AND REALITY: LIBERALISM IN LATIN AMERICA, 1850-1880 , Chairman: Ricardo Donoso, Sociedad Chilena de Historia y Geo­ gratia and Harvard University Mexico: The Structure and Orientation of Liberalism Charles A. Hale, Amherst College Argentina: Innovators and Imitators James R. Scobie, University of California, Berkeley Brazil: Liberalism and the Onset of Modernization Richard Graham, Cornell University Corpment Joseph R. Barager, University of Pennsylvania

VI 2:30 P.1vl. HALL OF FLAGS

LOST CAUSES Chairman: Franklin Le Van Ballmer, Yale University The Lost Liberties of Aragon Ralph Giesey, University of Minnesotfl The Loss of the "True Freedom" in Holland, 1650-1713 Rosalie Colie, State University of Iowa Comment Caroline Robbins, Bryn Mawr College 60 SUNDAY, DECEMBER 29

vn 2:30. P.A1. CONSTITUTION ROOM

CONSTITUTIONAL MOVEMENTS IN ASIA Chairman: vVoodbridge Bingham, University of California, Berke­ ley

China, 1900-191 I Robert H. G. Lee, Columbia University

Iran, 1905-19II Nikki R. Keddie, University of California, Los Angeles

India, Communal Representation and Constitutional Developments B. G. Gokhale, TVake Forest College

Comment Hyman Kublill, Brooklyn College

vm 2:30. P.M. PENNSYLVANIA ROOM, EAST

TWO APPROACHES TO RUSSIAN ECONOMIC DEVELOP­ MENT, I80I-1861 Chairman: Cyril E. Black, Princeton University

Admiral Mordvinov William L. Blackwell, New York University

Count Kankrin Walter M. Pintner, Cornell University

Comment Sidney l1,1011as, University of Rochester 61 SUNDAY, DECEMBER 29

IX . 2:30 P.M. CONCOURSE ROOM

FAR EASTERN DIPLOMACY Chainnan: Maurice Matloff, Department of the Army The Korean Policies of Li Hung-chang, 1871-1885 K. C. Litl, University of California, Davis China, the Steel Company, and the , 1909-1922 William R. Braisted, University of Texas Soldiers Become Diplomats: The Military Role in the Korean Truce Negotiations Walter Hennes, Department of the Army

Comment Theodore Ropp, Duke University

ASSOCIATION MEETINGS 4:30 P.M. EAST BALLROOM

BUSINESS MEETING OF THE AMERICAN HISTORICAL AS­ SOCIATION Presiding: Crane Brinton, Harvard University Report of the Executive Secretary and Managing Editor W. Stull Holt, American Historical Association· Report of the Treasurer Elmer Louis Kayser, George Washington University DeciSIons of the Council Other Business

8:30 P.M. GRAND BALLROOM GENERAL MEETING OF THE AMERICAN HISTORICAL ASSO­ CIATION Presiding: William L. Langer, Harvard University Presidential Address: "Many Mansions" Crane Brinton, Harvard University I MONDAY, DECEMBER 30

MORNING SESSIONS

I 9:30 A.M. WEST BALLROOM

HEMISPHERIC IMAGES OF THE UNITED STATES Chairman: Frederick H. Soward, University of British Columbia The United States and Canadian Nationalism Gerald M. Craig, University of Toronto The United States and Cuban Nationalism Jose de Onis, University of Colorado

Comment Howard F. Cline, Richard W. Hale, Jr., Archivist, Commonwealth of Massachusetts

II 9:30 A.M. EAST BALLROOM

LAW AND SOCIETY IN NINETEENTH-CENTURY AMERICA Chairman: George L. Haskins, University of Pennsylvania The Impact of the Revolution on Criminal Law in the Old South O. Lawrence Burnette, Jr., Birmingham-Southern College The Development of Pre-Federal Bankruptcy Law Peter J. Coleman, State Historical Society of Wisconsin The Civil War and Midwestern Law: Illinois Harold M. Hyman, University of Illinois

Comment Earl F. Mltrphy, Temple University I 63 / MONDAY, DECEMBER 30

m 9:30 A.M. SUBURBAN ROOM RUSSIAN CULTURAL RELA TrONS WITH NEIGHBORING SO­ CIETIES Chairman: Nicholas Riasal1ovsky, University of California, Berke­ ley Russia and the West Walther Kirchner> University of Delaware Russia and the Mongols Arash Bormanshinov, Princeton University Russia and the Moslem World Serge A. Zenkovsky> Stetson University Comment Richa,rd Pierce, Queen>s University, Ontario

IV 9:30 A.M. PENl'{SYLVANIA ROOM> WEST LAND REFORM AND POLITICS Chairman: Angel Palertn, Pan American Union In Algeria McKim Steele> Middlebury College In Spain Edward E. Malefakis, Northwestern University In Latin America T. Lynn Smith, University of Florida

V 9:30 A.M. HALL OF FLAGS NEW LIGHT ON THE MEDICI IN FLORENCE Chairman: Felix Gilbert, Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton The Rise of the Medici C. C. Bayley, McGill University The Medici at the Height of Their Power Nicolai Rubinstein, University of London The Fall of the Medici in 1494 Donald Weinstein, Rutgers University 64 MONDAY, DECEMBER 30

VI 9:30 A.M. CONSTITUTION ROOM - CURRENCY POLICY AND INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS Chairman: Karl Bopp, President, Federal Reserve Bank of Phila­ delphia United States Examples: Cleveland, 1893-1897, and FDR, 1933-1937 Jeannette P. Nichols, University of Pennsylvania Japanese Examples: Matsukata, 1897, and Hamaguchi, 1930 Arthur E. Tiedemann, City College of New York

Comment

Irwin Unger, Uni~lersity of California, Davis Hugh Patrick, Yale University

vn 9:30 A.M. PENNSYLVANIA ROOM, EAST

Joint Session with The Conference Group for Central European History

CENTRAL EUROPE AND THE ENLIGHTENMENT Chairman: Oron J. Hale,

The Philosophes an~ Joseph II : Theory and Practice of Enlightenment William E. Wright, University of Minnesota Prussian Judicial Reform and the Enlightenment Herman W eill, University of Rhode Island Enlightened Influences on Austro-Prussian Military Practice, 1760- 1790 William O. Shanahan,. University of

Comment Walter M. Simon, Cornell University !

I ,,:- ,- • _:' ----':"o·,7i,~~ to

MONDAY, DECEMBER 30.

VIII 9:30 A.M. CONCOURSE ROOM

ORGANIZATIONS AND AGITATION IN ENGLAND, I780-I850 Chairman: William Aydelotte, State University of Iowa Organization and Agitation during the French Revolution and the Napoleonic Period Eugene Black, Brandeis University Techniques and Tactics of Agitation: John Cartwright and the Radi­ cals, I808-18I9 Naomi Churgin, Hunter College

Comment

A. R. Schoyen, Syracuse Univer~ity

IX 9:30 A.M. TIERED BALCONY (GRAND BALLROOM)

EUROPEAN RESPONSES TO AMERICAN DIPLOMACY IN THE 1920'S AND I930's Chairman: Bernadotte E. Schmitt, Alexandria, Virginia Italy John Berutti, Sierra College Germany Keith Eubank, North Texas State University France John MeV. Haight, Jr., Lehigh University , Comment Rene Albrecht-Carrie, Barnard College

LPNCHEON CONFERENCE I2:30P.M. WEST BALLROOM AMERICAN HISTORICAL ASSOCIA'fION Presiding: Crane Brinton, Harvard University History in the United States: Doubts and Affirmations Boyd C. Shafer, Macalester College f 66 I MONDAY, DECEMBER 30

AFTERNOON SESSIONS

I 2:30 P.M. WEST BALLROOM

J oint Session with The History of Education Society

FROM VOLUNTARISM TO LAW IN , 1800-1850 Chairman: Lawrence A. Cremin, Teachers College, Columbia Uni:­ versity

Religious Conflict in the Development of the N ew York City Public School System: John W. Pratt, State University of New York, Stony Brook Private and Public Sponsorship of Educational Reform in Horace Mann's Massachusetts Jonathan Messerli, University of Washington

Comment Timothy Smith, University of Minnesota Rush Welter, Bennington College

II 2:30 P.M. EAST BALLROOM CRISIS DIPLOMACY IN SOUTHEAST ASIA Chairman: Trevor N. D1tpuy, Historical Evaluation and Research Organization, Washington, D. C. The Development of America's Indochina Policy, 1940-19150 Bernard B. Fall, Howard University SEATO: Evolution of an American Commitment Richard Butwell, University of Illinois

Comment Kenneth Landon, Department of State Charles O. H ouston, Jr., I

/ MONDAY, DECEMBER 30

III 2:30 P.M. SUBURBAN ROOM

Joint Session with The Conference on Slavic and East European History

BORDERLANDS OF EASTERN EUROPE: AREAS OF ETHNIC CONFLICT Chairman: Peter Brock, Columbia University The Croatian Military Frontier and the Rise of Yugoslav Nationalism Gunther E. Rothenberg, University of New Mexico The Carpatho-Ukraine: A People in Search of Their Identity Ivan L. Rttdnytsky, LaSalle College

The Role of Danzig in Polish-German Relations, I933-I939 Anna Ai. Ciendala, University of Toronto

Comment Michael B. Petrovich, University of vVisconsin

IV 2:30 P.M. PENNSYLVANIA ROOM, WEST

PATTERNS OF AMERICAN COLONIAL TRADE, I 660-1 760 Chairman: Victor L. J olmsoll, Muhlenberg College New Initiatives and an Old Connection: Colonial Enterprise versus Restoration Empire, I66o-r685 Sister Joan de Lourdes, St. Joseph's College for Women, BrooklYIl Fish and Flour for Gold: Southern Europe and the Colonial Balance of Payments James G. L},dotl, Duquesne University Servants or Masters? Comments on the Relationship between British and American Merchants in Colonial Philadelphia Arthur L. Jensen, Westminster College 68 ,, .

MONDAY, DECEMBER 30

V 2:30 P.M. HALL OF FLAGS

Joint Session with The Conference -on British Studies

ENGLAND IN THE LATER MIDDLE AGES: THE OXFORD HIS­ TORY OF ENGLAND Chairman: Wmiam Haller, Folger Library

The Fourteenth Century, I307-I399, bjl May McKisack Bertie Wilkinson, University of Toronto The Fifteenth Century, I399-I485, by E. F. Jacob Paul Murray Kendall, Ohio University

Comment Bryce D. Lyon, University of California, Berkeley

VI 2:30 P.M. CONSTITUTION ROOM

Joint Session with The American Jewish Historical Society

AMERICAN JEWISH BIOGRAPHY Chainnan: Edwin Wolf n Library Company of Philadelphia The Role of Biography in American Jewish History Morton Rosenstock, Bronx Community College Problems of Research and Viriting Maxwell Whiteman, Dropsie College

Comments Abraham G. Duker, Yeshiva University Malcoltn H. Stern, American Jewish Archives f

/ MONDAY, DECEMBER 30

VII 2:30 P.M. TIERED BALCONY (GRAND BALLROOM)

EUROPEAN INDUSTRIALISTS AND SOCIAL CHANGE Chairman: Franklin D. Scott, Northwestern University

French Industrialists, 1820-1848 Peter N. Stearns, University of Chicago

German Industrialists, 11$g0-1918 Gerald D. Feldman, University of California, Berkeley

Comment Val R. Lorwin,

VIII 2:30 P.M. PENNSYLVANIA ROOM, EAST

ANCIENTS AND MODERNS Chairman: Chester G. Starr, University of Illinois

Ancient Historians and Modern Historical Interpretation George J. Szemler, Loyola University, Chicago

Classical Thinkers and Modern "Checks and Balances" E. P. Panagopoulos, San Jose State College

Remarks on Problems and Opportunities in the Field of Ancient History Chester G. Starr, University of Illinois MONDAY, DECEMBER 30

IX .2:30 P.M. CONCOURSE ROOM

NINETEENTH-CENTURY AFRICA Chairman: Philip D. Curtin, University of Wisconsin

The Abolition of Slavery in Portuguese Africa James E. Duffy, Brandeis University

Liberated Africans and the Making of Nigeria Jean H. Kopytoff, Swarthmore College

Conflicting Views of the Masina Revolution William A. Brown, University of Wisconsin

!

I SCHEDULE OF SESSIONS Saturday, December 28

Room 9:30 A.M. 12:30 P.M. 2:30 P.M. 7:00 P.M. Luncheon Dinners

West Ballroom South in the Shame of the 1920's Cities

Hall of Flags Liberal Cathol- British Labour licism Party

Concourse Italian Room Problems

Constitution Irish-Ameri- United States Mediaeval Room cans Protest and Central Academy Europe

Suburban Room Early Ameri- Textbooks, can Diplomacy Television

Pennsylvania Varieties of Society of FrE:nch Society Room West Feudalism Church Louis Philippe Historians

Pennsylvania Non-Western Councils and Mississippi Room East Intellectual Reformation Valley Associ- History ation

East Ballroom Vatican Phi Alpha Japan and CO,!lncils Theta America

Tiered Balcony Rural Social Germany- Grand Ballroom Changes Empire to Republic

Connie Mack Labor His- Room torians

Museum, Uni- Latin Ameri- Crisis, Latin versity of Penn- can Conference America sylvania

Congress Hall Historical Sites 6th and Chestnut

Penn Center Room Con- course (lower REGISTRATION floor) ------Sheraton BOOK EXHIBITS Exhibit Hall

72 SCHEDULE OF SESSIONS Sunday, December 29

Room 9:30 A.M. 12:30 P.M. 2:30 P.M. General Lunclieons Sessions

West Ballroom History and Research in Theory American History

East Ballroom Reform and American Psychology Business Progressives Studies Associ- and History Meeting at ion 4:30 P.M.

Pennsylvania French Left, Modern Euro- Byzantium Room West Right pean Section

Suburban Room Varieties of Liberalism, Populism Latin American

Hall of Flags History and Conference on Lost Causes Historians Asian History

Constitution Tudor Politics Asian Consti- Room tutional Move-

ments I Pennsylvania French Cana- Russian Eco- Room East dian Nation- nomic De- alism velopment

Tiered Balcony American Poli- Origins, Ameri- Grand Ballroom tics, Economics can Revolution

Concourse Ancient Tech- Far Eastern Room nology Diplomacy

North Balcony, Slavic and East Grand Ballroom European Con- ference

Connie Mack Society of American Archivists

Grand Ballroom Presidential Address 8 :30 - P.M.

Penn Center Room Con- REGISTRATION course (lower floor)

Sheraton BOOK EXHIBITS Exhibit Hall I 73 ,/ SCHEDULE OF SESSIONS Monday, December 30

Room 9:30 A.M. 12:30 P.M. 2:30 P.M. Luncheons

West Ballroom Hemispheric American His- American United States torical Associ- Education Images U.S. ation

East Ballroom American Law Diplomacy in . and Society Southeast Asia Suburban Room Russian Eastern

Cultural Europe, Ethnic / Relations Conflict

Pennsylvallla Land Reform Amencan Room West and Politics Colonial Trade

Hall of Flags Medici in Oxford History Florence of England

Constitution Currency and American Room International Jewish Relations, Biography , Pennsylvania Central Euro- Ancients and Room East pean En- Moderns lightenment

Concourse Or~anizations Nineteenth- Room an Agitation Century Africa in England

Tiered Balcony Europe and European In- Grand Ballroom American dustrialists Diplomacy and Change

Penn Center Room Con- course (lower REGISTRATION floor)

Sheraton Exhibit Hall BOOK EXHIBITS

74 ,

- J Index of Participants

Albrecht-Carrie, Rene, 66 Eisenstein, Elizabeth L., 48 Albright, Raymond W., 44, 45 Ellsworth, Gayton S., 45 Albright, William F., 57 Elton, G. R., 55 Alldredge~rEverett 0.,58 Epstein, Klaus, 48 Anastos, Milton, 60 Eubank, Keith, 66 Artz, Frederick B., 48 Aydelotte, William, 66 Fall, Bernard B., 67 Feldman, Gerald D., 70 Bailyn, Bernard, 59 Fishwick, Marshall W., 51 Barager, Joseph R., 60 Floyd, Troy S., 51 Barany, George, 50 Forcey, Charles, 53 Barnes, James A., 54 Fox, William, 47 Baumer, Franklin Le Van, 60 Frantz, Joe B., 46 Bayley, C. c., 64 Frantz, John B., 51 Bellinger, Louisa, 57 Fussner, F. Smith, 55 Benda, Harry J., 58 Benton, John, 43 Gabriel, Astrik L., 52 Berutti, John, 66 Gabriel, Ralph, 57 Bestor, Arthur, 58 Garvan, Anthony N. B., 50 Bingham, Woodbridge, 6r Gates, Paul, 56 Black, Cyril E., 61 Gatzke, Hans W., 48 Black, Eugene, 66 Geanakoplos, Deno, 60 Blackwell, William L., 61 Gibson, Charles, 46 Bliss, Richard, 45 Giesey, Ralph, 60 Blumberg, Arnold, 41 Gilbert, Felix, 57. 64 Bopp, Karl, 65 Gilmore, Robert L.. 51 Bormanshinov, Arash, 64 Gimpl, Sister M. Caroline Ann, 41 Bouwsma, William J., 49, 55 Ginger, Ray, 51 . Braisted, William R., 62 Gokhale, B. G., 61 Brinton, Crane, 53, 62, 66 GonzaJez Navarro, Moises, 51 Brock, Peter, 68 . Graham, Richard 60 Brown, Thomas N., 42 Gray, Walter D., 41 Brown, William A., 71 Green, Constance MeL., 47 Buhler, Curt F., 55 Grew, Raymond, 48 Burnette, O. Lawrence, Jr., 63 Butwell, Richard, 67 Haight, John MeV., Jr., 66 Hale, Charles A., 60 Cairns, John c., 54 Hale, Oron J., 65 Carstensen, Vernon, 45 Hale, Richard W., 63 Carter, Edward c., II, 42 Hall, John O. P., 46 Case, Lynn M., 41 Haller, WilJiam, 69 Caughey, John, 52 Halperin, S. William744 Cecil, Richard P., 51 Hamill, Hugh M., Jr., 51 Churgin, Naomi, 66 Haskins, George L., 63 Cienciala, Anna M., 68 Hay, StephenN., 44 Clark, Thomas D., 52 Hays, Samuel P., 47 - Gine, Howard F., 63 Heffner, Richard D., 51 ,Clough, Shepard B., 42 Herlihy, David, 42 Cochran, Thomas c., 59 Hermes, Walter, 62 Coleman, Peter, 63 Higham, John, 59 Colie, Rosalie, 60 Hirsch, Elisabeth F., 55 Colton, Joel, 54 Hollister, C. W., 43 Conn, Stetson, 47 Holt, W. Stull, 62 Cooney, John D., 57 Hosmer, Charles B., 50 Craig, Gerald M., 63 Houston, Charles 0., Jr., 67 Craig, Gordon A., 57 Huthmacher, J. Joseph, 53 Cremin, Lawrence A., 67 Hyman, Harold M., 63 Cross, Robert D., 42 Crowley, James B., 47 Jansen, Marius B., 47 Curtin, Philip D., 71 Jensen, Arthur L., 68 Jensen, Merrill, 59 Davis, James c., 42 Joan de Lourdes, Sister, 68 DeConde, Alexander, 43 Johnson, Edgar, 43 Delzell, Charles F., 42 Johnson, Victor L., 68 Donoso, Ricardo, 60 Johnstone, Paul H., 45 Dudden, Arthur, 47 Jordan, W. K., 55 Duffy, James E., 71 Duker, Abraham G., 69 Kayser, Elmer Louis, 62 Dupuy, Trevor N., 67 Keddie, Nikki R., 61 Durden, Robert F., 54 Kendall, Paul Murray, 69 Dvornik, Francis, 58 Kirchner, Walther, 64 Dykstra, Robert, 45 Kopytoff, Jean H., 71 I 75

/ Krout, John A., 50 Riasanovsky, Nicholas, 64 Kublin, Hyman, 61 Risjord, Norman K., 43 Kurtz, Stephen G., 43 Robbins, Caroline, 60 Ropp, Theodore, 62 Landon, Kenneth, 67 Rosenstock, Morton, 69 Langer, Willianr L., 59,62 Rossiter, Ointon, 59 Lanning, John Tate, 46 Rothenberg, Gunther E., 68 La Pierre, Laurier, 56 Rubin. Julius, 56 Lee, Robert H. G., 61 Rubinstein, Nicolai, 64 Lehmberg, Stanford E., 55 Rudnytsky. Ivan L., 68 Leuchtenburg, Willianr, 53 Lewis, Archibald R., 43 Schmitt, Bernadotte E., 66 . Litchfield, Robert Burr, 42 Schoenwald, Richard L., 59 Liu, K. C., 62 Schoyen, A. R., 66 Lorwin, Val R., 70 Schwartz, Benjanrin, 44 Lowe, Donald M., 44 Scobie, James R., 60 Lowitt, Richard, 53 Scott, Anne, 41 Lydon, Janres G., 68 Scott, Franklin D., 70 Lyman, Richard W., 49 Setton, Kenneth M., 60 Lynd, Helen Merrell, 59 Shafer. Boyd C., 66 Lyon, Bryce D., 69 Shafer, Robert J., 51 Shanalran, Willianr 0., 65 McCaffrey, Lawrence J., 42 Sharkey. Robert P., 56 McCornlick, Richard P., 50 Shryock, Richard H., 57 McCulloch, Sanruel, 49 Simon, Walter M., 65 Malefakis, Edward E., 64 Smith. T. Lynn, 64 Manratey, Victor S., 50 Smith, Timothy, 67 Mann, Arthur, 47 Snell, John L., 48 Manuel, Frank E., 53 Soward, Frederick H., 63 Mathews, Joseph J., 41 Stacey, Charles P., 56 Matloff, Maurice, 62 Starr, Chester G., 70 May, Arthur J., 50 Stearns, Peter N., 70 Messerli, Jonathan, 67 Steele, McKim, 64 Meyer, Donald B., 59 Steelman, Joseph F., 54 Meyer, Henry ,Cord, 48 Stern, Malcolm H., 69 Miller, Nathan, 56 Sterne, Margaret, 50 Monas, Sidney, 61 Stewart, John Hall, 42 Morley, Janres W., 47 Strauss, W. Patrick, 43 Morris, Richard B., 59 Szeftel, Marc, 58 Mowry, George E., 53 Szemler, George J., 70 Murphy, Earl F., 63 • Taft, Philip, 46 Nadel, George H., 53 Taylor, William R., 41 Neatby, Blair, 56 Tiedemann, Arthur E., 65 Nichols, Janres, 44 Tierney, Brian, 49 Nichols, Jeannett P., 65 Tindall, George B., 41 Nichols, Roy F., 57 Topping, Peter, 60 Noether, Emiliana P., 44 Treadgold, Donald W., 44 Nugent, Walter T. K., 54 Unger, Invin, 65 Oakley, Francis, 49 Oberman, Heiko A., 49 Van Niel, Robert, 58 O'Grady, Joseph P., 50 Onis, Jose de, 63 Wade, Mason, 56 Osgood, Sanruel M., 54 Weaver, Robert C., 47 Outler, Albert c., 44, 45 Weill, Herman, 65 Weinstein, Donald, 64 Palerm, Angel, 64 Welter, Rush, 67 Panagopoulos, E. P., 70 . Whiteman, Maxwell, 69 Patrick, Hugh, 65 Wilkinson, Bertie, 52, 69 Pelikan, Jaroslav, 49 Winkler, Henry R., 49 Perkins, Bradford, 43 Wish, Harvey, 54 Petrovich, Michael B., 68 Wolf, Edwin, II, 69 Pierce, llichard, 64 Woodward, C. Vann, 59 Pinkney, David H., 48 Worcester, Donald E., 46 Pintner, Walter M., 61 Wright, Gordon, 54 Platt, John D. R., 50 Poirier, Philip P., 49 Wright, William E., 65 Potter, David, 59 Poulshock, Walter, 56 Zagorin, Perez, 5S Pratt, John W., 67 Zenkovsky, Serge A., 64 I

\ Groups Meeting within, or Jointly ~ith, The American Historical Association

Agricultural History Society American Association for State and Local History American Catholic Historical Association American Jewish Historical Society American Military Institute

American Society for Reformation Research American Society of Church History American Studies Association Canadian Historical Association Conference Group for Central European History Conference on Asian History Conference on British Studies Conference on Latin American History Conference on Slavic and East European History History of Education Society Mississippi Valley Historical Association Modern European History Section Phi Alpha Theta

Society for the History of Technology Society for Italian Historical Studies Society of American Ar-chivists Southern Historical Association The Labor Historians I 77 Exhibitors " ..

Exhibitor Representatives

American Association for State and Local Clement M. Silvestro < t History H. H. Schnabel, Jr. • ,_r" Appleton-Century-Crofts - Jack K. Burton Robert K. Spencer Atheneum Publishers Marc Friedlaender Bantam Books Alexander M. Butman Ward Mohrfeld Barnes & Noble, Inc. John D. Wieboldt Bell Telephone System Michel Beilis Blaisdell Publishing Company James T. Edmondson Thomas C. Haugen The Bruce Publishing Company John F. Schweiker Cambridge University Press Estelle Whelan Sally Dougan Columbia University Press Julien D. McKee William Bernhardt Conference Book Service C. C. Cameron Evelyn Spreier Cornell University Press Roger Howley Thomas Y. Crowell Company John T. Hawes Current History, Inc. Daniel Redmond Denoyer-Geppert Company Harold Bogart Dodd, Mead & Company, Inc. Bernarr Hunt The Dorsey Press Frank G. Griffin William E. O. Barnes Doubleday & Company James Backas G. K. Hall & Company Elizabeth C. Buckley C. S. Hammond and Company A. L. Pattee Harcourt, Brace & World, Inc. William B. Goodman James H. Burke Harper & Row Publishers Edwin Barber Christopher Jennison D. C. Heath & Company Elwyn B. Quick Holt, Rinehart and Winston, Inc. Ken Culver Houghton Mifflin Company Matthew Hodgson Institute of Early American History and Lester J, Cappon Culture Susan Foard James M. Smith • Little, Brown and Company Donald R. Hammonds Alfred L. Browne III McGraw-Hili Book Company John H. Jensen David R. Lippincott The Macmillan Company William A. Henry Joseph Riccaboni / Leonard Myers National Park Service, United States De­ Frank Barnes partment of Interior J , "

Exhibitors Representatives W. 'v. Norton & Company Donald S. Lamm H. Stafford Bryant Byron S. Hollinshead Stuart Cooke Frank Crenshaw Philosophical Library Rose Morse Frederick A. Praeger, Inc. Frederick A. Praeger Sheila Coffey Arnold Dolin Lynn Fennerty Prentice-Hall, Inc. Edgar Thomas Walter Meagher Alden Ziel Jack Neifert Princeton University Press Quadrangle Books, Inc. Melvin J. Brisk Ivan R. Dee Rand McNally and Company C. M. Jennelle John Applegath Random House-Alfred A. Knopf Clifford M. Crist Henry Regnery Company Jameson G. Campaigne, Jr. Alfred Regnery The Ronald Press Company St Martin's Press Edward F. Earley Gerard F. McCauley Scott, Foresman and Co. Edward Daunais John Kehr, Jr. Charles Scribner's Sons Charles E. Pettee Richard C. Webb The Shoe String Press, Inc. Lewis M. Wiggan Silver Burdett Company Thomas W. Hundermark Peter Smith, Publisher Peter Smith Society Press, State Historical Society of Peter J. Coleman Wisconsin Twayne Publishers Joel E. Saltzman University of Chicago Press Roger 'V. Shugg Richard T. Congdon University of Michigan Press Helen L. MacDonald Thomas E. Parker Michel Adelman University of Notre Dame Press Emily M. Schossberger Charles "V. McCoIlester University of Pennsylvania Kristin Hoopes University Press of Viriinia Victor Reynolds D. Van Nostrand Company, Inc. E. Donald Gustafson David G. Sparks The Westminster Press Stanley W. Heath David Horn Horace L Coward I $ 79 ST MARTIN'S PRESS is pleased to announce forthcoming publication of two important texts in the History of Western Civilization

Roger L. Williams' survey discussion moving from 1640 to the end of World War II will be published in February. His carefully organized exposition of cultural events and trends amplifies his expert treatment of political, social, and military history. Professor Williams is Chairman of the Department of History at Antioch College.

J. Kelley Sowards' comprehensive treatment of history from the earliest times to 1640 will be available in March. His smoothly HOwing narrative of ancient and medieval history is illustrated throughout by a wealth of aptly chosen detail. Professor Sowards is a member of the History Department at the University of Wichita.

Both texts will be amply and appropriately illustrated with halftones and with maps especially prepared by Theodore R. Miller.

Instructor's manuals explaining the intent and focus of each volume will be available, and St Martin's simultaneously will publish a Stu­ dent Workbook to accompany Professor Williams' volume, prepared by Charles H. Paul of the University of California at Berkeley, and a work­ book to accompany Professor Sowards' volume, prepared by Arthur Ferrill of the University of illinois.

These texts will prove notable additions to St Martin's list of books in history, including many titles in the Papermac series. We suggest that you call at our booth or write for a complete list or examination copies.

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