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Ahmad, Diana L. – Great Plains Quarterly, 2012
The diaries, letters, and guidebooks written by the emigrants who crossed North America on the overland trails during the mid-nineteenth century reveal a new awareness of the animals that journeyed with them. Often written as advice to those who might follow them, the travelers worried about their animals in ways beyond what theologians and…
Descriptors: Animals, Migrants, United States History
Quinn, Todd; Benedict, Karl; Dickey, Jeff – Great Plains Quarterly, 2012
In 1877 a small group of Swiss immigrants from the Graubunden canton formed a cooperative with another Swiss group in Stillwater, Minnesota, to begin a colony in eastern South Dakota. These settlers founded the Badus Swiss colony on the open prairie in Lake County, Dakota Territory (later South Dakota), based on cooperative rules written in…
Descriptors: United States History, Immigrants, Land Settlement, Cooperatives
Lee, R. Alton – Great Plains Quarterly, 2012
The most important third-party movement in American history emerged out of the social and economic chaos brewing in the Great Plains in the last two decades of the nineteenth century. The maelstrom, labeled Populism, contained a powerful, indeed a truly revolutionary message--that man was his brother's keeper. This concept proved to have…
Descriptors: United States History, Politics, Political Attitudes, Social Action
Steinke, Christopher – Great Plains Quarterly, 2012
In 1742 two sons of the explorer Pierre Gaultier de Varennes de La Verendrye met an indigenous nation they called the Gens de l'Arc somewhere along the middle Missouri River near present-day Pierre, South Dakota. Louis-Joseph and Francois were searching for the mythical Sea of the West, and the former asked the chief of the Gens de l'Arc if he…
Descriptors: American Indians, American Indian History, United States History, Violence
Heider, Carmen – Great Plains Quarterly, 2012
In 1914 Nebraska men once again voted against the amendment that would have granted full suffrage to Nebraska women. This article focuses on the three years immediately after that defeat. It explores the remaining seventeen issues of the "Suffrage Messenger" and asks the following question: how did the suffrage newspaper portray and…
Descriptors: Females, Rural Farm Residents, Voting, Civil Rights
Lovin, Hugh T. – Great Plains Quarterly, 2012
Many forces occupied America's sociopolitical terrain to the left of New Dealers who dominated U.S. President Franklin Roosevelt's administration of the 1930s. Some fastened themselves temporarily to the New Dealers' coattails. Ideologically motivated, others touted their special panaceas for ending the Great Depression that had begun in 1929, and…
Descriptors: United States History, State History, Politics, Presidents
Kipp, Dustin – Great Plains Quarterly, 2011
The experiences of the men, women, and children who labored in the beet fields of the North Platte Valley changed significantly as the sugar beet industry went through a period of rapid expansion prior to 1920 and then reached a relatively stable plateau. During the period of expansion, laborers were attracted by promises of reasonable wages, good…
Descriptors: Agricultural Laborers, United States History, Work Experience, Employment Opportunities
Cooper, C. M. – Great Plains Quarterly, 2011
In the spring of 1934, New York attorney Samuel Moanfeldt set out on a trip that would take him through most of the states west of the Mississippi in search of the origins of the popular American folk song "Home on the Range." The reason for his trip was a $500,000 lawsuit filed by William and Mary Goodwin of Tempe, Arizona, who claimed that they…
Descriptors: Singing, Music, Folk Culture, United States History
Kammer, Sean M. – Great Plains Quarterly, 2011
After months of intense debate, Congress finally passed the Kansas-Nebraska Act on May 30, 1854, largely along sectional lines. Over the next several years Kansas Territory became "Bleeding Kansas" as violence erupted between pro-slavery and free-state factions. While scholars continue to debate the true causes of the fighting in Kansas,…
Descriptors: United States History, Slavery, Federal Legislation, Self Determination
Schmidt, Kimberly D. – Great Plains Quarterly, 2011
Swiss emigres and Mennonite missionaries Marie and Rodolphe Petter were welcomed into Cheyenne Chief Red Moon's band in Oklahoma. Away from the interference of other whites, they decided to live like their new neighbors and pitched a tipi before building a more substantial structure. There they continued their studies of the Cheyenne language and…
Descriptors: United States History, Religious Cultural Groups, Immigrants, Handicrafts
Abrams, Jeanne – Great Plains Quarterly, 2010
From the first decades of the twentieth century, hundreds of thousands of health seekers, on the advice of their physicians, family members, or popular advertisements, took to the road to "chase the cure" for tuberculosis, the most dreaded disease of the era. Indeed, tuberculosis, also commonly known as consumption or "the White…
Descriptors: Communicable Diseases, Physical Health, Travel, Transportation
Kawashima, Yasuhide – Great Plains Quarterly, 2010
This article is divided into three parts. The first examines specific fencing policies in Kansas, Nebraska, and other Plains states, highlighting the transformation from the "fence-out" to "fence-in" (herd laws) policies. The second part discusses the coming of the railroads to the Great Plains and the farmers and the ranchers…
Descriptors: Transportation, Laws, Agricultural Occupations, State Courts
Garver, Bruce – Great Plains Quarterly, 2011
The advent and vast extent of immigration to the Great Plains states during the years 1865 to 1914 is perhaps best understood in light of the new international context that emerged during the 1860s in the aftermath of six large wars whose consequences included the enlargement of civil liberties, an acceleration of economic growth and technological…
Descriptors: United States History, Immigration, Literacy, Compulsory Education
Landscapes of Removal and Resistance: Edwin James's Nineteenth-Century Cross-Cultural Collaborations
Lyndgaard, Kyhl – Great Plains Quarterly, 2010
The life of Edwin James (1797-1861) is bookended by the Lewis and Clark expedition (1803-6) and the Civil War (1861-65). James's work engaged key national concerns of western exploration, natural history, Native American relocation, and slavery. His principled stands for preservation of lands and animals in the Trans-Mississippi West and his…
Descriptors: Ecology, American Indians, Relocation, Slavery
Cohen, Robin – Great Plains Quarterly, 2009
In one of the most frequently noted incidents in Willa Cather's "My Antonia", Russian immigrant Pavel reveals on his deathbed that, when driving his friend's wedding party sledge, he saved his own life and companion Peter's by throwing the bride and groom to the attacking wolves. Antonia and Jim are fascinated by this story, and readers…
Descriptors: Immigrants, Novels, Gender Issues, United States History