In September 1885 a petty dispute among Euro-American and Chinese Union Pacific miners in Wyoming exploded into a homicidal spree which left twenty-five confirmed dead Chinese miners, and another twenty-six missing and presumed dead. In the weeks and months which followed, other Chinese miners and laborers were robbed, killed, or hounded out of the United States. Some of the parties responsible for these atrocities were arrested and brought to trial, but juries found no one guilty of these genocidal crimes. Many local, state, territorial, military, and federal government officials made good-faith efforts to protect the Chinese, but their efforts primarily hastened the exodus of the Chinese contract workers from American shores; for protecti...
Review of: The Mill on the Boot: The Story of the St. Paul & Tacoma Lumber Company. Morgan, Murray
Metal detritus of war and an old map, recently discovered in Chicago helped an interdisciplinary tea...
Review of: "Welsh Americans: A History of Assimilation in the Coalfields," by Ronald L. Lewis
Storti\u27s account of the 1885 Rock Springs, Wyoming, riot adds a twist to previous interpretations...
In a factual but impassioned introduction, George P. Horse Capture writes a fitting foreword to this...
Review of: Aspen: The History of a Silver Mining Town, 1879-1893. Rohrbough, Malcolm J
The forced removal of thousands of Indians from eastern Kansas between 1854 and 1871 adversely affec...
Lydon\u27s history of the Chinese in the Monterey Bay region is a monument to the Chinese who immigr...
A strike is a privileged moment for the historian. Floodlights get shone on the working lives of wag...
Review of: St. Louis and Empire: 250 Years of Imperial Quest and Urban Crisis, by Henry W. Berge
Review of: "Columns of Vengeance: Soldiers, Sioux, and the Punitive Expeditions, 1863-1864," by J. ...
In one of the blatant injustices in American history, 120,000 West Coast Japanese Americans were eva...
Review of: "Cold War in a Cold Land: Fighting Communism on the Northern Plains," by David W. Mills
Review of: Days of Gold: The California Gold Rush and the American Nation. Rohrbough, Malcolm J
Review of: Regulating Danger: The Struggle for Mine Safety in the Rocky Mountain Coal Industry. Whit...
Review of: The Mill on the Boot: The Story of the St. Paul & Tacoma Lumber Company. Morgan, Murray
Metal detritus of war and an old map, recently discovered in Chicago helped an interdisciplinary tea...
Review of: "Welsh Americans: A History of Assimilation in the Coalfields," by Ronald L. Lewis
Storti\u27s account of the 1885 Rock Springs, Wyoming, riot adds a twist to previous interpretations...
In a factual but impassioned introduction, George P. Horse Capture writes a fitting foreword to this...
Review of: Aspen: The History of a Silver Mining Town, 1879-1893. Rohrbough, Malcolm J
The forced removal of thousands of Indians from eastern Kansas between 1854 and 1871 adversely affec...
Lydon\u27s history of the Chinese in the Monterey Bay region is a monument to the Chinese who immigr...
A strike is a privileged moment for the historian. Floodlights get shone on the working lives of wag...
Review of: St. Louis and Empire: 250 Years of Imperial Quest and Urban Crisis, by Henry W. Berge
Review of: "Columns of Vengeance: Soldiers, Sioux, and the Punitive Expeditions, 1863-1864," by J. ...
In one of the blatant injustices in American history, 120,000 West Coast Japanese Americans were eva...
Review of: "Cold War in a Cold Land: Fighting Communism on the Northern Plains," by David W. Mills
Review of: Days of Gold: The California Gold Rush and the American Nation. Rohrbough, Malcolm J
Review of: Regulating Danger: The Struggle for Mine Safety in the Rocky Mountain Coal Industry. Whit...
Review of: The Mill on the Boot: The Story of the St. Paul & Tacoma Lumber Company. Morgan, Murray
Metal detritus of war and an old map, recently discovered in Chicago helped an interdisciplinary tea...
Review of: "Welsh Americans: A History of Assimilation in the Coalfields," by Ronald L. Lewis