Pick Your Poison

As I was reading the material from the 1920s and thinking about “what’s missing” in Hist and Major Problems it dawned on me that when we teach about technological advances, we typically ignore one gigantic field: medicine. Hist mentions some prior advances, like the introduction of aspirin. But while we pay a lot of attention to the…

Roaring into the 20s

The Roaring 20s This may be the easiest, but worst developed, lecture I have. The argument is simple: “tired of reforming the nation and world, Americans turned inward to affluence, entertainment, and religious and racial fundamentalisms.” Of course, this doesn’t apply to the NAACP; it doesn’t apply to Jane Addams and her followers; it doesn’t…

Belief in progress

The Progressive Era I’m not sure why, but the progressives always seem so boring to me. I know they’re not. Theodore Roosevelt was a ball of energy; Jane Addams was smart and savvy; World War I was horrendous; Upton Sinclair was hilarious; W. E. B. Du Bois was a genius. So why does the era…

“Be clear.” – Strunk and White

Writing Assignments I still remember my first paper as an undergraduate. I don’t recall the question or the topic (it was something in European history), but I remember getting it back from the TA. There was scribbling all over the sides. There were phrases I could not make out. The letters “PV” seemed everywhere. Then…

Bad, Bad America … But Then, Why Come?

Gilded Age Discussion Statue of Liberty in Paris Our discussion of the Gilded Age was fantastic. I put students into groups of 4 to 6 and explained to them that they were a family coming to the United States (or moving within it) during the Gilded Age. Where would you decide to move? Each group…

Discussin’ Reconstruction

While the Civil War gets all the glory of movies, celebrations, and heroics, Reconstruction is rendered a sad story. It’s a tragedy. It’s a travesty. Healing defeated justice. Dreams were deferred. It led to the “nadir” of black history. I hate sad stories, even though I often find myself writing or talking about them as…

Reconstruction Lecture

<http://cdn.calisphere.org/data/13030/jm/hb167n97jm/files/hb167n97jm-FID4.jpg> I just cracked open my “Reconstruction” PowerPoint and shook my head in disgust. The first slide starts with a lie: “Reconstruction: 1865-1877.” First off, even though my opening is from 1865 (the devastation of Charleston, SC) and the first song is “I’m a Good Ole Rebel,” (which is part of Major Problems) but some…

From the Digital Archives

There are so many great digital resources out there, and we wanted to share a new blog that has documents from the National Archives’ Center for Legislative Archives. This comes from Daniel Rice, a graduate of the University of Arkansas and now resident of Chapel Hill. Once we figure out how to put “blogs we…

A Report from the History Games

Week 1 Roundup Bureaucratic tip:“You are #31 on the wait list,” I email back to yet another student hoping to add the class. Sadly, the cap is 50 and it’s staying there. At my institution, students can try to “crash” a course. They need an add code and it gets tricky. One student is a senior…