I had no plans of writing a blog post this week. I said my piece on ghost tours last year. This Halloween, it was the next generation’s turn to share their opinions on the matter. Jules and Jen both did a spectacular job on the subject, and I commend them even though our perspectives differ. But when I learned that my stance had come under fire from another blog, I eagerly leapt from the comfort of my editing armchair and returned to the front lines to compose this piece [excerpt]
This article is in favor of the argument that what happened at Wounded Knee in 1890 was not, as many...
Haunted History and Public Memory Paranormal investigation shows like Ghost Hunters are nearly a dim...
To answer the call of Schlunke and Healy for a ‘utopic politics that might bind species in new ways ...
I had no plans of writing a blog post this week. I said my piece on ghost tours last year. This Hall...
The story I am about to tell is entirely true. Several weeks ago, as I departed Musselman Library af...
Gettysburg is the site of the largest battle and death toll during the entire American Civil War. Gh...
This blogging endeavour is dangerous. Blogging, I believe, should be a personal medium, where you we...
My time as a writer for the Gettysburg Compiler is at an end—as is my time at Gettysburg College its...
Unlike a few critics from the Civil War blogging community of this past Monday\u27s History Channel ...
It has been one year since the birth of this blog. Not one year since our first post. If you run bac...
Back at the beginning of the summer, I was asked by the College to write a piece on the history of t...
Ghosts are everywhere. Ghost is a concept for which there is no referent, no evidence, anywhere, any...
Earlier this spring, I sat in Gettysburg at the Future of the Civil War conference and listened to...
The fireflies have started to appear around Gettysburg. We have a new sliding glass door in the kitc...
The normally quiet town of Gettysburg was once more disrupted by battle when two groups of protester...
This article is in favor of the argument that what happened at Wounded Knee in 1890 was not, as many...
Haunted History and Public Memory Paranormal investigation shows like Ghost Hunters are nearly a dim...
To answer the call of Schlunke and Healy for a ‘utopic politics that might bind species in new ways ...
I had no plans of writing a blog post this week. I said my piece on ghost tours last year. This Hall...
The story I am about to tell is entirely true. Several weeks ago, as I departed Musselman Library af...
Gettysburg is the site of the largest battle and death toll during the entire American Civil War. Gh...
This blogging endeavour is dangerous. Blogging, I believe, should be a personal medium, where you we...
My time as a writer for the Gettysburg Compiler is at an end—as is my time at Gettysburg College its...
Unlike a few critics from the Civil War blogging community of this past Monday\u27s History Channel ...
It has been one year since the birth of this blog. Not one year since our first post. If you run bac...
Back at the beginning of the summer, I was asked by the College to write a piece on the history of t...
Ghosts are everywhere. Ghost is a concept for which there is no referent, no evidence, anywhere, any...
Earlier this spring, I sat in Gettysburg at the Future of the Civil War conference and listened to...
The fireflies have started to appear around Gettysburg. We have a new sliding glass door in the kitc...
The normally quiet town of Gettysburg was once more disrupted by battle when two groups of protester...
This article is in favor of the argument that what happened at Wounded Knee in 1890 was not, as many...
Haunted History and Public Memory Paranormal investigation shows like Ghost Hunters are nearly a dim...
To answer the call of Schlunke and Healy for a ‘utopic politics that might bind species in new ways ...