The University of Oklahoma Press, which has published a series of state historical atlases, has now issued a revision of its Kansas atlas, first published in 1972. The authors, historian Homer Socolofsky and geographer Huber Self, have updated their earlier work on the basis of 1984 state and federal government estimates
Review of: Cities on the Plains: The Evolution of Urban Kansas. Shortridge, James R
Engineer Otis B. Gunn and surveyor, land agent, and lawyer David T. Mitchell each created a map of K...
It is hard to imagine anyone better qualified to produce an Indian affairs atlas that Marquette Univ...
These two highly disparate reference works will amply serve any inquisitor into Kansas history
This new edition, which draws upon the 1980 census, updates an excellent historical atlas that was f...
This book is another in the well-known series of historical atlases published by the University of O...
This volume, the latest in a well-known series published by the University of Oklahoma Press, offers...
Kansas Governors began more than a decade ago when Homer Socolofsky provided the information on Kans...
Review of: "Atlas of the Great Plains," by Stephen J. Lavin, Fred M. Shelley, and J. Clark Archer
The adventure of exploration and discovery, as well as the history of mapping, inevitably comes thro...
Like the first, which has been enjoyed and valued by students of Kansas history for more than three ...
It is unusual to review a book that is a decade old, as Contours of Discovery is, but this is an unu...
Writing a one-volume state history is a formidable task. Deciding what political, economic, and soci...
This is the second edition.The second edition of Kansas Revisited is a collection of twenty-nine ...
Review of: Atlas of Great Lakes Indian History. Tanner, Helen Hornbeck et al., ed.; Pinther, Miklos,...
Review of: Cities on the Plains: The Evolution of Urban Kansas. Shortridge, James R
Engineer Otis B. Gunn and surveyor, land agent, and lawyer David T. Mitchell each created a map of K...
It is hard to imagine anyone better qualified to produce an Indian affairs atlas that Marquette Univ...
These two highly disparate reference works will amply serve any inquisitor into Kansas history
This new edition, which draws upon the 1980 census, updates an excellent historical atlas that was f...
This book is another in the well-known series of historical atlases published by the University of O...
This volume, the latest in a well-known series published by the University of Oklahoma Press, offers...
Kansas Governors began more than a decade ago when Homer Socolofsky provided the information on Kans...
Review of: "Atlas of the Great Plains," by Stephen J. Lavin, Fred M. Shelley, and J. Clark Archer
The adventure of exploration and discovery, as well as the history of mapping, inevitably comes thro...
Like the first, which has been enjoyed and valued by students of Kansas history for more than three ...
It is unusual to review a book that is a decade old, as Contours of Discovery is, but this is an unu...
Writing a one-volume state history is a formidable task. Deciding what political, economic, and soci...
This is the second edition.The second edition of Kansas Revisited is a collection of twenty-nine ...
Review of: Atlas of Great Lakes Indian History. Tanner, Helen Hornbeck et al., ed.; Pinther, Miklos,...
Review of: Cities on the Plains: The Evolution of Urban Kansas. Shortridge, James R
Engineer Otis B. Gunn and surveyor, land agent, and lawyer David T. Mitchell each created a map of K...
It is hard to imagine anyone better qualified to produce an Indian affairs atlas that Marquette Univ...