Excerpt from the article: When the capital of Virginia shifted from Williamsburg to Richmond in 1780, Williamsburg’s history shifted too, but did not end—three little known accounts of the town offer glimpses of life into the nineteenth century..
This undergraduate honors thesis analyzes the development of a distinct material culture in eighteen...
Cet article s’intéresse à l’« invention » de New York, dans la période antérieure à la Guerre de Séc...
Excerpt: In 1859, the Edinburgh house of Wood and Company published a Sketch of the History of the E...
Excerpt from the article: Slavery in Williamsburg and nearby—what was it like? Depends on who you a...
Excerpt from the article: A site connecting the W&M campus and local Black history should be record...
In this issue of Newport History, both articles focus on the accomplishments of a handful of privile...
Excerpt from the article: The William & Mary was the second university in the U.S. after Brown Univ...
Between 1830 and 1860, Newport became a favored summer haunt for moderately wealthy southerners, Bos...
Richmond has today become one or the most important cities in the South. The foundation was laid fo...
In this article the author marks the main stages of the formation of colonial Virginia society. Its ...
The following letter by William Morris refer to the St. James\u27s Hall Conference and Hyde Park dem...
The study of Colonial Williamsburg, which celebrated its seventy-fifth anniversary in December 2001,...
In the autumn of 1865, a young Scot, John Nichol, a graduate of the University of Glasgow and Oxford...
Thesis (B.A.)--University of Illinois, 1918.Typescript.Includes bibliographical references (leaves [...
This thesis examines why and how two couples in Richmond, Virginia came to purchase and transport fr...
This undergraduate honors thesis analyzes the development of a distinct material culture in eighteen...
Cet article s’intéresse à l’« invention » de New York, dans la période antérieure à la Guerre de Séc...
Excerpt: In 1859, the Edinburgh house of Wood and Company published a Sketch of the History of the E...
Excerpt from the article: Slavery in Williamsburg and nearby—what was it like? Depends on who you a...
Excerpt from the article: A site connecting the W&M campus and local Black history should be record...
In this issue of Newport History, both articles focus on the accomplishments of a handful of privile...
Excerpt from the article: The William & Mary was the second university in the U.S. after Brown Univ...
Between 1830 and 1860, Newport became a favored summer haunt for moderately wealthy southerners, Bos...
Richmond has today become one or the most important cities in the South. The foundation was laid fo...
In this article the author marks the main stages of the formation of colonial Virginia society. Its ...
The following letter by William Morris refer to the St. James\u27s Hall Conference and Hyde Park dem...
The study of Colonial Williamsburg, which celebrated its seventy-fifth anniversary in December 2001,...
In the autumn of 1865, a young Scot, John Nichol, a graduate of the University of Glasgow and Oxford...
Thesis (B.A.)--University of Illinois, 1918.Typescript.Includes bibliographical references (leaves [...
This thesis examines why and how two couples in Richmond, Virginia came to purchase and transport fr...
This undergraduate honors thesis analyzes the development of a distinct material culture in eighteen...
Cet article s’intéresse à l’« invention » de New York, dans la période antérieure à la Guerre de Séc...
Excerpt: In 1859, the Edinburgh house of Wood and Company published a Sketch of the History of the E...