As I mentioned last week, I left Fort Snelling after our tour as part of the National Association for Interpretation annual conference unfulfilled. The potential for high-drama and deeply meaningful connections was palpable on that landscape. The audience, a crowd of interpreters, were begging for meanings. One African American woman in the group, after the site administrator mentioned in passing Dred and Harriet Scott being held at the site, asked about the nature of the labor used to build the fort. I was sitting in the row behind her. I could not see her face. But from the inflection in her voice, I could tell exactly what the unstated question behind her spoken one was: Were slaves used to build Fort Snelling? [excerpt
abstract: This thesis examines the evolution of the interpretation of the battle of Gettysburg, as w...
Unlike a few critics from the Civil War blogging community of this past Monday\u27s History Channel ...
Unlike a few critics from the Civil War blogging community of this past Monday\u27s History Channel ...
textBuilt in 1819 by the U.S. government, Fort Snelling sits at the confluence of the Minnesota and ...
textBuilt in 1819 by the U.S. government, Fort Snelling sits at the confluence of the Minnesota and ...
Earlier this spring, I sat in Gettysburg at the Future of the Civil War conference and listened to...
Jacob dragged me somewhere again. I really should learn to say, no, because no matter where I get ...
Every year over a million visitors flood Adams County, Pennsylvania to tour the famous, or rather in...
My last post recounted some of my favorite takeaways from my Civil War road trip this summer. But th...
A couple weeks ago, I put up a post about a flag flying at Manassas during the Sesquicentennial comm...
A few months ago I took a quick jaunt to Carlisle to see the Pennsylvania Civil War Sesquicentennial...
A few months ago I took a quick jaunt to Carlisle to see the Pennsylvania Civil War Sesquicentennial...
African-Americans have always been a part of Gettysburg’s community fabric. Slaves belonging to Samu...
This past Saturday, I attended the very first Abolitionists Day here in Gettysburg. I wasn’t sure wh...
This post is part of a series featuring behind-the-scenes dispatches from our Pohanka Interns workin...
abstract: This thesis examines the evolution of the interpretation of the battle of Gettysburg, as w...
Unlike a few critics from the Civil War blogging community of this past Monday\u27s History Channel ...
Unlike a few critics from the Civil War blogging community of this past Monday\u27s History Channel ...
textBuilt in 1819 by the U.S. government, Fort Snelling sits at the confluence of the Minnesota and ...
textBuilt in 1819 by the U.S. government, Fort Snelling sits at the confluence of the Minnesota and ...
Earlier this spring, I sat in Gettysburg at the Future of the Civil War conference and listened to...
Jacob dragged me somewhere again. I really should learn to say, no, because no matter where I get ...
Every year over a million visitors flood Adams County, Pennsylvania to tour the famous, or rather in...
My last post recounted some of my favorite takeaways from my Civil War road trip this summer. But th...
A couple weeks ago, I put up a post about a flag flying at Manassas during the Sesquicentennial comm...
A few months ago I took a quick jaunt to Carlisle to see the Pennsylvania Civil War Sesquicentennial...
A few months ago I took a quick jaunt to Carlisle to see the Pennsylvania Civil War Sesquicentennial...
African-Americans have always been a part of Gettysburg’s community fabric. Slaves belonging to Samu...
This past Saturday, I attended the very first Abolitionists Day here in Gettysburg. I wasn’t sure wh...
This post is part of a series featuring behind-the-scenes dispatches from our Pohanka Interns workin...
abstract: This thesis examines the evolution of the interpretation of the battle of Gettysburg, as w...
Unlike a few critics from the Civil War blogging community of this past Monday\u27s History Channel ...
Unlike a few critics from the Civil War blogging community of this past Monday\u27s History Channel ...