Browse by Articles
- Rescuing Cast Offs: The Do-It-Yourself Box Furniture of Social Worker Louise Brigham
- The Resignation of John Russwurm: Individual Lives in Early American Newspapers
- Resisting Repression: W. E. B. Du Bois and the Age of Global Surveillance
- Resolving a Stolen Past: The General Allotment Act, Individual Indian Money Accounts, and the U.S. Congressional Serial Set
- Reverend Peter Thomas Stanford Pushes Back: The Politics of Antislavery in the Early Twentieth-Century Press
- A Reverend Revealed: The Real Identity of One of the Most Influential (and Simplistic) Thinkers of the 19th Century
- Rivers Run Through It: The U.S. Congressional Serial Set and Its Maps
- The Robinson Interregnum: The Black Press Responds to the Signing of Jackie Robinson, October 23, 1945-March 1, 1946
- The Role of Women in Early American Presidential Campaigns: Using Newspapers to Explore the Informal Politics of the Jacksonian Era
- Runaway! Recapturing Information about Working Women's Dress through Runaway Advertisement Analysis, 1750-90
- "I am scholar—hear me roar! Primary materials rule." Students Test the Scholar in the Digital Archive
- Searching for the Forgotten Movie Mogul: William Fox, Founder of Twentieth Century Fox
- Serial Set, Breakfast of Champions: Setting the Table for Librarians
- The Silence of the Suffragettes: Women's Right to Vote in Congressional Publications
- Slinging Mud and Talking Trash: The Gutter Age of American Journalism
- Slow Reading the News: Gandhi’s Philosophical Experiments with His South African Newspaper
- Speaking Out in Thunder Tones: Black Chosenness and “Our Government” in the Earliest African American Newspapers
- Start Locally, Think Globally: An Approach to Teaching History
- Student Scholars: Using Early American Imprints to Introduce Students to the Era and to the Field
- “Suitable To The Season”: Using Historical Newspapers to Help Reproduce 18th-Century Clothing