By Midwest, Pamela Riney-Kehrberg means the states of Illinois, Wisconsin, Minnesota, Iowa, and the eastern half of Nebraska and Kansas, and by child, any dependent son or daughter, generally twenty-one or younger, regardless of physical maturity, who remained subject to his or her parents\u27 authority on the farm and in the home. She explains having chosen 1870 as my starting date to avoid the Civil War, and 1920 as an ending date because of upheavals occurring in the years that followed (the automobile, radio, economic depression)
The contribution of pioneer children (aged 4–16) to the economic survival of Canadian prairie farms ...
Review of: Educating Milwaukee: How One City’s History of Segregation and Struggle Shaped Its School...
Review of: "The Crops Look Good: News from a Midwestern Family Farm," by Sara DeLuca
By Midwest, Pamela Riney-Kehrberg means the states of Illinois, Wisconsin, Minnesota, Iowa, and th...
Review of: "Fostering on the Farm: Child Placement in the Rural Midwest", by Megan Birk
Anyone who loves the Great Plains and the life that took root there in the nineteenth century has ha...
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
Elizabeth Hampsten wrote Settlers\u27 Children: Growing Up on the Great Plains to answer some basic ...
Review of: The Land of Milk and Uncle Honey: Memories from the Farm of My Youth, by Alan Guebert wit...
In Time’s Shadow, Arnold J. Bauer has chronicled his family’s small farm in Goshen Township, Clay Co...
What does agriculture have to do with the humanities? The integration of these seemingly antithetica...
Review of: "A Good Day\u27s Work: an Iowa Farm Family in the Great Depression," by Dwight Hoover; "...
Review of: The Greatest Generation Grows Up: American Childhood in the 1930s, by Kriste Lindenmeye...
Between 1850 and 1869, some 350,000 pioneers crossed the Great Plains, following the Platte River Ro...
The contribution of pioneer children (aged 4–16) to the economic survival of Canadian prairie farms ...
Review of: Educating Milwaukee: How One City’s History of Segregation and Struggle Shaped Its School...
Review of: "The Crops Look Good: News from a Midwestern Family Farm," by Sara DeLuca
By Midwest, Pamela Riney-Kehrberg means the states of Illinois, Wisconsin, Minnesota, Iowa, and th...
Review of: "Fostering on the Farm: Child Placement in the Rural Midwest", by Megan Birk
Anyone who loves the Great Plains and the life that took root there in the nineteenth century has ha...
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
Elizabeth Hampsten wrote Settlers\u27 Children: Growing Up on the Great Plains to answer some basic ...
Review of: The Land of Milk and Uncle Honey: Memories from the Farm of My Youth, by Alan Guebert wit...
In Time’s Shadow, Arnold J. Bauer has chronicled his family’s small farm in Goshen Township, Clay Co...
What does agriculture have to do with the humanities? The integration of these seemingly antithetica...
Review of: "A Good Day\u27s Work: an Iowa Farm Family in the Great Depression," by Dwight Hoover; "...
Review of: The Greatest Generation Grows Up: American Childhood in the 1930s, by Kriste Lindenmeye...
Between 1850 and 1869, some 350,000 pioneers crossed the Great Plains, following the Platte River Ro...
The contribution of pioneer children (aged 4–16) to the economic survival of Canadian prairie farms ...
Review of: Educating Milwaukee: How One City’s History of Segregation and Struggle Shaped Its School...
Review of: "The Crops Look Good: News from a Midwestern Family Farm," by Sara DeLuca