Dorothy Schwieder knows community history. As a historian at Iowa State University, she investigated a number of Iowa locations, especially that state\u27s coal camps. In Growing Up with the Town, Schwieder takes a much more personal look at the community she grew up in, Presho, South Dakota. Her father arrived in Presho in 1909, just four years after the Milwaukee Railroad established the town, and Schwieder tells Presho\u27s story through the activities of her family. She has two motives: first, to preserve at least a part of a small town\u27s experience in its first fifty years, and second, to document the history of a family within that town. In reality, this is a labor of love. Schwieder is proud to have grown up in Presho; she ado...
Chasing Rainbows is the first-person story of Gladys Leffler Gist, a farm woman who was born in Iowa...
How does one describe the nature of this place that is the Great Plains? Diane Quantic and P. Jane H...
Review of: "Calling This Place Home: Women on the Wisconsin Frontier, 1850–1925," by Joan M. Jensen
Dorothy Schwieder knows community history. As a historian at Iowa State University, she investigated...
Review of: Growing Up with the Town: Family and Community on the Great Plains. Schwieder, Dorothy Hu...
Elizabeth Hampsten wrote Settlers\u27 Children: Growing Up on the Great Plains to answer some basic ...
Although the term pioneer in the book title recalls Turner\u27s West where white emigrants were th...
The small but growing collection of literature on children in the nineteenth-century American West h...
Review of: Settler\u27s Children: Growing Up on the Great Plains. Hampsten, Elizabeth
In 1995 Sandra Schackel, then professor of history at Boise State University, was asked to contribut...
The history of this book is as remarkable as the lives of the women it chronicles. While rummaging t...
In Oklahoma\u27s Cheyenne community, Lawrence Hart has led a life framed by service and self-sacrifi...
The Great Plains is a unique, difficult landscape, and those who live here have to learn to adapt to...
Written as a memoir for her grandchildren, Sallie Reynolds Matthews\u27s Interwoven was first printe...
Review of: "Natives of a Dry Place: Stories of Dakota before the Oil Boom," by Richard Edward
Chasing Rainbows is the first-person story of Gladys Leffler Gist, a farm woman who was born in Iowa...
How does one describe the nature of this place that is the Great Plains? Diane Quantic and P. Jane H...
Review of: "Calling This Place Home: Women on the Wisconsin Frontier, 1850–1925," by Joan M. Jensen
Dorothy Schwieder knows community history. As a historian at Iowa State University, she investigated...
Review of: Growing Up with the Town: Family and Community on the Great Plains. Schwieder, Dorothy Hu...
Elizabeth Hampsten wrote Settlers\u27 Children: Growing Up on the Great Plains to answer some basic ...
Although the term pioneer in the book title recalls Turner\u27s West where white emigrants were th...
The small but growing collection of literature on children in the nineteenth-century American West h...
Review of: Settler\u27s Children: Growing Up on the Great Plains. Hampsten, Elizabeth
In 1995 Sandra Schackel, then professor of history at Boise State University, was asked to contribut...
The history of this book is as remarkable as the lives of the women it chronicles. While rummaging t...
In Oklahoma\u27s Cheyenne community, Lawrence Hart has led a life framed by service and self-sacrifi...
The Great Plains is a unique, difficult landscape, and those who live here have to learn to adapt to...
Written as a memoir for her grandchildren, Sallie Reynolds Matthews\u27s Interwoven was first printe...
Review of: "Natives of a Dry Place: Stories of Dakota before the Oil Boom," by Richard Edward
Chasing Rainbows is the first-person story of Gladys Leffler Gist, a farm woman who was born in Iowa...
How does one describe the nature of this place that is the Great Plains? Diane Quantic and P. Jane H...
Review of: "Calling This Place Home: Women on the Wisconsin Frontier, 1850–1925," by Joan M. Jensen