Links and unlinkable items of interest from the history side:
W. Scott Poole teaches history at the College of Charleston and explains (seriously!) "Why Historians Should Be Vampire Hunters." "These tales of terror illuminate rather than obscure important truths.
Slavery did represent a kind of dark magic in which legal fictions
transmogrified the bodies of human beings into property."
Harvard historian and New Yorker staff writer Jill Lepore's take on Ancestry.com: "Facebook for the dead."
Five excellent commandments for those researching in archives from Philip White at The Historical Society. Most applicable to us genealogists: "Process Your Materials ASAP."
Eric Jay Dolin's Fur, Fortune, and Empire: The Epic History of the Fur Trade in America has a good publisher, has had some good reviews (mostly five stars on Amazon), and has won some prizes. Writing in the June Indiana Magazine of History (recent issues not on line), David J. Silverman of George Washington University says that Dolin tells a good story but misses a lot, because the book's perspective and information are about a century out of date -- among other things, it neglects the Indian side of the story. I hope to read it and make up my own mind, but in the meantime the "Caution" light is up. If Silverman is right, Dolin would be making a mistake similar to the one genealogists make when they trust the "mug books" version of local history.
Saturday, June 23, 2012
Linkfest with historians, vampire hunters, and more
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Labels: Ancestry.com, archives, David J. Silverman, Eric Jay Dolin, Fur Fortune and Empire, fur trade genealogy, Indiana Magazine of History, Jill LePore, Philip White, slavery, vampire hunters, W. Scott Poole
Sunday, September 4, 2011
New NGS Magazine
Some of my favorites from the July-September issue of NGS Magazine:
* Southern Illinois University-Carbondale anthropologist Dawn C. Stricklin on locating scholarly and academic publications.
* John Philip Colletta's context for the life of Carl Ludwig Richter in and out of New York City's 19th-century "Little Germany." If you've heard any of his talks, you'll hear his voice as you read.
* Denys Beaugrand-Champagne on something we rarely think of as a Midwestern genealogical resource: fur trade permits granted in the district of Montreal, 1721-1752, which include mentions of places now in Michigan, Wisconsin, Indiana, and Pennsylvania.
* Claire Prechtel-Kluskens' reconstruction of the lives of the "lightning brothers" -- Civil War soldiers from Licking County, Ohio, whose tent was struck by lightning on 15 February 1863.
There's more . . . as they say in blogger land, read the whole thing.
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Labels: Dawn C. Stricklin, Denys Beaugrand-Champagne, fur trade genealogy, John Philip Colletta, Licking County Ohio, Montreal, NGS Magazine, Richter family, Southern Illinois University Carbondale


















