This page features brief excerpts of stories published by the mainstream
media and, less frequently, blogs, alternative media, and even obviously
biased sources. The excerpts are taken directly from the websites cited in
each source note. Quotation marks are not used.
Source: Mother Jones
7/22/2020
by Tim Murphy
The Texas Rangers were vicious enforcers of white power. J.T. Canales was the only Mexican American in the legislature. He lost the fight, but the reckoning he sought is finally underway. Historians Monica Muñoz Martinez and Doug Swanson explain.
Source: Nursing Clio
7/22/2020
Recently, Florida State University law professor Mary Ziegler sat down with Nursing Clio to talk about her new book, Abortion and the Law in America: Roe v. Wade to the Present. The book illustrates how the question of “abortion rights” is only one piece of the puzzle – rather both antiabortion and pro-choice advocates have spent decades in a tug-of-war over policy, funding issues, and larger questions about public health.
Source: USA Today
7/21/2020
Christopher McKnight Nichols, who teaches history at Oregon State University and splits time between the school’s base in Corvallis and Portland, said the long trail of discrimination in Oregon informed the protests in a liberal city long known for its activism.
Source: Washington Post
7/21/2020
“The problem with Sanger was she was so single minded that she was willing to align herself with anybody,” Margaret Sanger Papers Project founder Esther Katz said. “These are problematic positions. She did speak to the Klan. But I think obliterating her...doesn’t allow us to discuss this in any way or debate it.”
Source: Democracy Now!
7/16/2020
Public health historian John Barry is the author of “The Great Influenza: The Story of the Deadliest Pandemic in History.”
Source: The New York Times
7/18/2020
Representative John Lewis was among the 13 original Freedom Riders, who encountered violence and resistance as they rode buses across the South, challenging the nation’s segregation laws.
Source: Washington Post
7/20/2020
“Kanye West is in desperate need of a crash course in American History,” said historian Erica Armstrong Dunbar.
Source: ABC News
7/18/2020
Experts interviewed by ABC News say erasing the past isn't the answer to calls for justice, police reform and an end to structural racism.
Source: Mother Jones
7/15/2020
A new book by Harvard historian Alexander Keyssar examines the racist history of how Americans pick presidents.
Source: Southern Illinoisan
7/15/2020
“First, they need to admit it: Yes, we did this,” said Loewen.
Source: Memphis Commercial Appeal
7/19/2020
Historian Tim Huebner, who was involved in the placement of the marker, believes it was broken intentionally.
Source: Rice Thresher
7/19/2020
Armed with a voice and passion both larger than life, Moore began a community’s crusade to demand historical recognition from city officials, and pioneered a new chapter in Texas history. Rice University Professor Caleb McDaniel says "it's worth stressing what he brought to Rice" by partering with the university to develop an archive of his efforts to memorialize the convict-lease system.
Source: Tampa Bay Times
7/20/2020
Glenn LaFantasie and Kevin M. Levin comment on Civil War Reenactments as a 40 year-old Florida event is cancelled in 2020.
Source: H-SHEAR
7/18/2020
by Douglas R. Egerton
The President of the Society for the History of the Early American Republic responds to the controversy provoked by Daniel Feller's remarks in the organization's virtual plenary session, which included repeated quotations of racial slurs from primary sources, a defense of Andrew Jackson, and harsh words for unnamed historians writing for the broader public.
Source: New York Times
7/15/2020
“Americans like to portray that they worked hard and would have starved had they not gardened,” said Allan M. Winkler, a distinguished professor emeritus of history at Miami University of Ohio. “Victory gardens were a symbol of abundance and doing it yourself, but that was more symbolism than reality.”
Source: TIME
7/14/2020
As teachers face a new sense of urgency when it comes to teaching topics related to current events, the Philadelphia-based NCC hopes to arm middle- and high-school teachers with the knowledge needed to ground their discussions in a deeper understanding of the history of topics ranging from slavery and Reconstruction to federalism and women’s suffrage.
Source: Public Seminar
7/15/2020
The Past Present podcast discusses the recent restrictions on student visas.
Source: TIME
7/14/2020
Adrienne Keene — a citizen of the Cherokee Nation and faculty member at Brown University’s American Studies and Ethnic Studies department, who is also the author of the Native Appropriations blog and a co-host of the All My Relations podcast — spoke to TIME about the history of Native American mascots and imagery.
Source: New Yorker
7/11/2020
A charge of rape north of Atlanta in 1912 led not only to a lynching but to a violent and total purge of African Americans from Forsyth County that lasted generations. Patrick Phillips's Blood at the Root examines the purge and its legacy.
Source: Arkansas Democrat & Gazette
7/12/2020
Arkansas historians Kenneth Barnes and Carl H. Moneyhon discuss the political influence of Confederate sympathizers and white supremacy over the content of history books in the state.