Browse by Articles
- "A Dastardly Outrage": Kate Brown and the Washington-Alexandria Railroad Case
- Defying Destiny: How Nineteenth-Century Newspapers Survived a Disruptive Technology
- The Development of the American Advertising Card
- Digging Up Crime Stories from America's Past: Tips and Technique from a Librarian-Scholar
- The Digital Detective: Tracking Criminals When the Trail Runs Cold
- Digital News You Can Use: Observations on Digitizing Historic Newspapers
- Directing Student Research in Original Sources: A Radical Republicans Experiment
- Dirty Searching and Roundabout Paths: Using Afro-Americana Imprints, 1535-1922, in a Master's Level Seminar
- Dismantling the Minstrel: A Pedagogical Approach
- Diversifying the Graduate School Pipeline with Under-Represented Scholars: An Innovative Program of the African American Literatures and Cultures Institute
- A "Doubtful and Dangerous Practice": The 1721 Boston Inoculation Controversy, and Uncovering African Medical Knowledge in Early American Newspapers
- Early American Newspapers and the Adverts 250 Project: Integrating Primary Sources into the Undergraduate History Classroom
- Early Radio Broadcasting: Solving Mysteries with America's Historical Newspapers
- Envisaging Freedom on the Eve of Emancipation: The British Caribbean, 1833-1834
- Ephemeral Loyalties? Consumption, Commerce and Jeffersonian Politics, 1806-1815
- Every Shade and Shadow: Seeing John Singer Sargent, Master Portrait Painter, under the Spotlight of American Newspapers
- Excavating Antebellum Black Politics via America’s Historical Newspapers
- Exploring the 'Boston Foster' Map Mystery: Using Current Writings to Discover the American Past
- Exploring the Explorers: Government-Sponsored Expeditions in the 19th Century
- “A Family Newspaper”: Pearl Rivers and the Rebirth of the New Orleans Daily Picayune