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Southern Historical Association Southern History in Periodicals, 1998: A Selected Bibliography Source: The Journal of Southern History, Vol. 65, No. 2 (May, 1999), pp. 317-366 Published by: Southern Historical Association Stable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/2587366 . Accessed: 12/02/2014 09:58 Your use of the JSTOR archive indicates your acceptance of the Terms & Conditions of Use, available at . http://www.jstor.org/page/info/about/policies/terms.jsp . JSTOR is a not-for-profit service that helps scholars, researchers, and students discover, use, and build upon a wide range of content in a trusted digital archive. We use information technology and tools to increase productivity and facilitate new forms of scholarship. For more information about JSTOR, please contact [email protected]. . Southern Historical Association is collaborating with JSTOR to digitize, preserve and extend access to The Journal of Southern History. http://www.jstor.org This content downloaded from 130.39.62.90 on Wed, 12 Feb 2014 09:58:04 AM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions

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Page 1: Southern Historical Association - WordPress.com · Southern Historical Association Southern History in Periodicals, 1998: A Selected Bibliography Source: The Journal of Southern History,

Southern Historical Association

Southern History in Periodicals, 1998: A Selected BibliographySource: The Journal of Southern History, Vol. 65, No. 2 (May, 1999), pp. 317-366Published by: Southern Historical AssociationStable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/2587366 .

Accessed: 12/02/2014 09:58

Your use of the JSTOR archive indicates your acceptance of the Terms & Conditions of Use, available at .http://www.jstor.org/page/info/about/policies/terms.jsp

.JSTOR is a not-for-profit service that helps scholars, researchers, and students discover, use, and build upon a wide range ofcontent in a trusted digital archive. We use information technology and tools to increase productivity and facilitate new formsof scholarship. For more information about JSTOR, please contact [email protected].

.

Southern Historical Association is collaborating with JSTOR to digitize, preserve and extend access to TheJournal of Southern History.

http://www.jstor.org

This content downloaded from 130.39.62.90 on Wed, 12 Feb 2014 09:58:04 AMAll use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions

Page 2: Southern Historical Association - WordPress.com · Southern Historical Association Southern History in Periodicals, 1998: A Selected Bibliography Source: The Journal of Southern History,

Southern History in Periodicals, 1998: A Selected Bibliography

THIS CLASSIFIED BIBLIOGRAPHY INCLUDES MOST SCHOLARLY ARTICLES IN

the field of southern history published in periodicals in 1998 except for descriptive or genealogical writings of primary interest to a restricted group of readers. Since some journals were not published on schedule in 1997, articles from them were not included in the May 1998 issue of the Journal. The present listing includes these late journals with a bracketed notation that the article was published in 1997, or earlier, if appropriate. Entries under each heading are arranged alphabetically by author.

GENERAL AND UNCLASSIFIED

EDWARD L. AYERS. When the North is the South: Life in the Netherlands. Sou. Cult., 4, Winter, 45-49.

STEPHEN W. BERRY. When Mail Was Armor: Envelopes of the Great Rebel- lion, 1861-1865. Sou. Cult., 4, Fall, 63-83.

CASEY BLANTON and ALISON DEVINE NORDSTROM, eds. Special Feature: (Re)Presenting the South: New Studies in Photography (Intro. + six articles w/photos). Sou. Quar., 36, Summer, 6-80.

PAUL K. CONKIN. Hot, Humid, and Sad. Jour. Sou. Hist., 64, Feb., 3-22. JAMES M. DAVIDSON. The Old Dallas Burial Ground: A Forgotten Cemetery.

Southwestern Hist. Quar., 102, Oct., 162-84. CARMEN DIANA DEERE. Here Come the Yankees! The Rise and Decline of

United States Colonies in Cuba, 1898-1930. Hispanic Am. Hist. Rev., 78, Nov., 729-65.

LOUIS FERLEGER and RICHARD H. STECKEL. Faulkner's South: Is There Truth in Fiction? Jour. Miss. Hist., 60, Summer, 105-21.

KAY BAKER GASTON. George Dickel Tennessee Sour Mash Whiskey: The Story Behind the Label. Tenn. Hist. Quar., 57, Fall, 150-67.

PAUL STEPHEN HUDSON. "The End of the World-and After": The Cosmic History Millenarianism of Thornwell Jacobs [1877-1954]. Ga. Hist. Quar., 82, Fall, 594-607.

ANNE GOODWYN JONES. Sushi South: Teaching Southern Culture in Japan. Sou. Cult., 4, Winter, 20-30.

PAMELA G. JORDAN. Edward W. Sweeney, '89er: "A Legend in his Time" [prom. citizen in Okla. City area]. Chron. Okla., 76, Fall, 318-35.

JOHN T. KNEEBONE, J. JEFFERSON LOONEY, BRENT TARTER, and SANDRA GIOIA TREADWAY. Editors' Choice: Forty History-Makers from the Dictionary of Virginia Biography. Va. Cavalcade, 47, Autumn, 148-59.

THE JOURNAL OF SOUTHERN HISTORY Volume LXV, No. 2, May 1999

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318 THE JOURNAL OF SOUTHERN HISTORY

EDITH KURZWEIL, ed. Special issue on Education and Integration: Europe and America (intro., four symposia, postscript). Partisan Rev., 65, Summer, 354-510.

JEFF D. LEACH. Site Formation Processes and the Origin of Artifacts in Plow- Zone Proveniences: A Case Study from the Rio Grande Valley, Texas. North Am. Archaeologist, 19, no. 4, pp. 343-61.

MARK P. LEONE and SILAS D. HURRY. Seeing: The Power of Town Planning in the Chesapeake. Hist. Archaeology, 32, no. 4, pp. 34-62.

MICHAEL MAIoNE and JAMES 0. HALL. Why Seward? The Attack on the Night of April 14, 1865. Lincoln Herald, 100, Spring, 29-34.

PETER NICOLAISEN. Faulkner and Southern History: A View from Germany. Sou. Cult., 4, Winter, 31-44.

MICHAEL O'BRIEN. The Apprehension of the South in Modern Culture. Sou. Cult., 4, Winter, 3-18.

SUSAN E. O'DONOVAN with the assistance of LEE W. FORMWALT, ed. The Journal of Nelson Tift Part IX: March 1850-November 1851. Jour. of Southwest Ga. Hist., 12, Fall [1997], 65-77.

LINDA PETERSON. From Commerce to History: Robert Runyon' s Postcards of the Lower Rio Grande Valley and Brownsville, 1910-1926. Southwestern Hist. Quar., 102, Oct., 210-21.

MARK M. SMITH. Culture, Commerce, and Calendar Reform [1752] in Colo- nial America. William and Mary Quar., 3d ser., 55, Oct., 557-84.

EDWARD STEERS JR. Nancy Hanks. West Virginian? A Review of the Current Status of Research into the Birthplace of Nancy Hanks Lincoln. Lincoln Herald, 100, Summer, 61-81.

BRIAN W. THOMAS. Power and Community: The Archaeology of Slavery at the Hermitage Plantation. Am. Antiquity, 63, Oct., 531-51.

BRIAN WARD. Elvis, Martin, and Mentors: The Making of Southern History in Britain. Sou. Cult., 4, Winter, 50-71.

PHILIP WESTWOOD. Beyond the Western Horizon: Richard Hakluyt and the Colonization of Virginia. Va. Cavalcade, 47, Summer, 126-39.

CHARLES REAGAN WILSON. American Regionalism in a Postmodern World. Amerikastudien, 42, no. 2 [1997], 145-58.

C. VANN WOODWARD. Haiku [anecdote about teaching southern history in Tokyo]. Sou. Cult., 4, Winter, 19.

A. KARL YERGEY. The Frontier in Doubt: The Maryland-Pennsylvania Border Dispute, 168 1-1767. Mid-Am., 80, Winter, 55-76.

AFRICAN AMERICAN

J. TRENT ALEXANDER. The Great Migration in Comparative Perspective: In- terpreting the Urban Origins of Southern Black Migrants to Depression-Era Pittsburgh. Soc. Sci. Hist., 22, Fall, 349-70.

LEE J. ALSTON and KYLE D. KAUFFMAN. Up, Down, and Off the Agricultural Ladder: New Evidence and Implications of Agricultural Mobility for Blacks in the Postbellum South. Agric. Hist., 72, Spring, 263-79.

DOUGLAS ANDERSON. The Textual Reproductions of Frederick Douglass. Clio, 27, Fall, 57-87.

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SOUTHERN HISTORY IN PERIODICALS 319

ERIC ARNESEN. Up from Exclusion: Black and White Workers, Race, and the State of Labor History. Reviews Am. Hist., 26, March, 146-74.

BRENT J. AuCOIN. Thomas Goode Jones [1844-1914] and African American Civil Rights in the New South. Historian, 60, Winter, 257-71.

ALWYN BARR. Black Urban Churches on the Southern Frontier, 1865-1900. Jour. Negro Hist., 82, Fall [1997], 368-83.

GAIL K BEIL. James Leonard Farmer [1886-1961]: Texas' First African American Ph.D. East Texas Hist. Jour., 36, no. 1, pp. 18-25.

JAYNE R. BEILKE. The Changing Emphasis of the Rosenwald Fellowship Program, 1928-1948. Jour. Negro Educ., 66, Winter [1997], 3-15.

M. LANGLEY BIEGERT. Legacy of Resistance: Uncovering the History of Col- lective Action by Black Agricultural Workers in Central East Arkansas from the 1860s to the 1930s. Jour. Soc. Hist., 32, Fall, 73-99.

SHAUNA BIGHAM and ROBERT E. MAY. The Time O' All Times? Masters, Slaves, and Christmas in the Old South. Jour. Early Rep., 18, Summer, 263-88.

ROBIN BLYN. Memory Under Reconstruction: Beloved and the Fugitive Past. Ariz. Quar., 54, Winter, 111-40.

EILEEN BORIS. "You Wouldn't Want One of 'Em Dancing With Your Wife": Racialized Bodies on the Job in World War II. Am. Quar., 50, March, 77-108.

MICHAEL BOTSON. No Gold Watch for Jim Crow's Retirement: The Abolition of Segregated Unionism at Houston's Hughes Tool Company. Southwest- ern Hist. Quar., 101, April, 496-521.

HERB BOYD. Radicalism and Resistance: The Evolution of Black Radical Thought. Black Scholar, 28, Spring, 43-53.

CLIFF BROWN. Racial Conflict and Split Labor Markets: The AFL Campaign to Organize Steel Workers, 1918-1919. Soc. Sci. Hist., 22, Fall, 319-47.

KATHLEEN M. BROWN. Beyond the Great Debates: Gender and Race in Early America. Reviews Am. Hist., 26, March, 96-123.

TITUS BROWN. A New England Missionary and African-American Education in Macon: Raymond G. Von Tobel at the Ballard Normal School, 1908- 1935. Ga. Hist. Quar., 82, Summer, 283-304.

MICHAEL H. BURCHETT. Promise and Prejudice: Wise County, Virginia, and the Great Migration, 1910-1920. Jour. Negro Hist., 82, Summer [1997], 312-27.

ROBERT A. BURNHAM. Interracial Cooperation in the Age of Jim Crow: The Booker T. Washington Community Center of Macon, Georgia. Atlanta Hist., 42, Winter, 19-35.

ORVILLE VERNON BURTON. African American Status and Identity in a Post- bellum Community: An Analysis of the Manuscript Census Returns [Edge- field District, S.C.], Agric. Hist., 72, Spring, 213-40.

VICTORIA E. BYNUM. "White Negroes" in Segregated Mississippi: Miscege- nation, Racial Identity, and the Law. Jour. Sou. Hist., 64, May, 247-76.

CLAYBORNE CARSON. Stokely Carmichael/Kwame Ture: Courageous Warrior in an On-Going Struggle. Black Scholar, 27, FalllWinter [1997], 44-45.

DAVID L. CHAPPELL. Religious Ideas of the Segregationists. Jour. Am. Stud., 32, Aug., 237-62.

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320 THE JOURNAL OF SOUTHERN HISTORY

CHARLIE COBB. Revolution: From Stokely Carmichael (1941-1998) to Kwame Ture, Black Scholar, 27, Fall/Winter [1997], 32-38.

PETER A. COCLANIS. Introduction [to special issue]: African Americans in Southern Agriculture, 1877-1945. Agric. Hist., 72, Spring, 135-39.

and J. C. MARLOW. Inland Rice Production in the South Atlantic States: A Picture in Black and White. Agric. Hist., 72, Spring, 197-212.

DEREK C. COHEN. The Culture of Slavery: Caliban and Ariel. Dalhousie Rev., 76, Summer [1996], 153-75.

PATRICIA HILL COLLINS. The Tie That Binds: Race, Gender, and U.S. Vio- lence. Ethnic and Racial Stud., 21, Sept., 917-38.

SAMUEL R. CONNOR. Cleburne and the Unthinkable [Confederate General's proposal to arm the slaves]. Civil War Times Ill., 36, February, 45-47.

THOMAS CRIPPS. A Certain Style: Benjamin Quarles and the Scholarship of the Center. Md. Hist. Mag., 93, Fall, 288-99.

BARRY A. CROUCH. A Political Education: George T. Ruby [African- American Texas state senator] and the Texas Freedmen's Bureau. Houston Rev., 18, no. 2 [1996], 144-56.

ROGER A. DAVIDSON JR. "They Have Never Been Known To Falter": The First United States Colored Infantry in Virginia and North Carolina. Civil War Rgmts., 6, no. 1, pp. 1-26.

Lu ANN DE CUNZO. A Future after Freedom, Hist. Archaeology, 32, no. 1, pp. 42-54.

AARON DEGRoFT. Eloquent Vessels/Poetics of Power: The Heroic Stoneware of "Dave the Potter" [19th cent. S.C.]. Winterthur Port., 33, Winter, 249- 60.

ALAN DRAPER. The Mississippi Movement: A Review Essay [of John Dittmer, Local People and Charles M. Payne, I've Got the Light of Freedom], Jour. Miss. Hist., 60, Winter, 355-66.

GARY T. EDWARDS. "Negroes ... and All Other Animals": Slaves and Masters in Antebellum Madison County. Tenn. Hist. Quar., 57, Spring/Summer, 24-35.

LAURA F. EDWARDS. The Problem of Dependency: African Americans, Labor Relations, and the Law in the Nineteenth-Century South, Agric. Hist., 72, Spring, 313-40.

DOUGLAS R. EGERTON. Black Independence Struggles and the Tale of Two Revolutions: A Review Essay [of 7 books]. Jour. Sou. Hist., 64, Feb., 95-116.

PAUL K. EISS. A Share in the Land: Freedpeople and the Government of Labour in Southern Louisiana, 1862-65. Slavery and Abolition, 19, April, 46-89.

BASHIR M. EL-BESHTI. The Semiotics of Salvation: Malcolm X and the Au- tobiographical Self. Jour. Negro Hist., 82, Fall [1997], 359-67.

GEORGE B. ELLENBERG. African Americans, Mules, and the Southern Mind- scape, 1850-1950. Agric. Hist., 72, Spring, 381-98.

BRUCE FEHN. African-American Women and the Struggle for Equality in the Meatpacking Industry, 1940-1960. Jour. Women's Hist., 10, Spring, 45- 69.

ABBY L. FERBER. Constructing Whiteness: The Intersections of Race and

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SOUTHERN HISTORY IN PERIODICALS 321

Gender in US White Supremacist Discourse. Ethnic and Racial Stud., 21, Jan., 48-63.

DEAN T. FERGUSON. "Living by Means Unknown to Their Neighbors": The Informal Economy of Louisville's Blacks, 1865-1880. Filson Club Hist. Quar., 72, Oct., 357-78.

KAREN J. FERGUSON. Caught in "No Man's Land": The Negro Cooperative Demonstration Service and the Ideology of Booker T. Washington, 1900- 1918. Agric. Hist., 72, Winter, 33-54.

Louis FERLEGER. The Problem of "Labor" in the Post-Reconstruction Loui- siana Sugar Industry. Agric. Hist., 72, Spring, 140-58.

MICHAEL W. FITZGERALD. Republican Factionalism and Black Empowerment: The Spencer-Warner Controversy and Alabama Reconstruction, 1868- 1880. Jour. Sou. Hist., 64, Aug., 473-94.

LEE W. FORMWALT. Moving in "That Strange Land of Shadows": African- American Mobility and Persistence in Post-Civil War Southwest Georgia. Ga. Hist. Quar., 82, Fall, 507-32.

ROLAND L. FREEMAN. Mule Train: A Thirty-Year Perspective on the Southern Christian Leadership Conference's Poor People's Campaign of 1968 [intro. and photo essay]. Sou. Cult., 4, Spring, 91-118.

PETER FRYER. The "Discovery" and Appropriation of African Music and Dance. Race and Class, 39, January-March, 1-20.

ROBERT GODDARD. Agricultural Worker as Archetype in West Indian and African American Literature. Agric. Hist., 72, Spring, 509-20.

C. WALKER GOLLAR. Catholic Slaves and Slaveholders in Kentucky. Catholic Hist. Rev., 84, Jan., 42-62.

ANITA SHAFER GOODSTEIN. A Rare Alliance: African American and White Women in the Tennessee Elections of 1919 and 1920. Jour. Sou. Hist., 64, May, 219-46.

JOANNE GRANT. Stokely Carmichael. Black Scholar, 27, Fall/Winter [1997], 39-40.

VALERIE GRIM. African American Landlords in the Rural South, 1870-1950, Agric. Hist., 72, Spring, 399-416.

JEFFREY HADLER. Remus Orthography: The History of the Representation of the African-American Voice. Jour. Folklore Research, 35, May-Aug., 99- 126.

PHILLIP HAMILTON. Revolutionary Principles and Family Loyalties: Slavery's Transformation in the St. George Tucker Household of Early National Virginia, William and Mary Quar., 3d ser., 55, Oct., 531-56.

KIMBERLY S. HANGER. "Desiring Total Tranquility" and Not Getting It: Con- flict Involving Free Black Women in Spanish New Orleans. Americas, 54, April, 541-56.

DAWN HANNAH. Copula Absence in Samand' English: Implications for Re- search on the Linguistic History of African-American Vernacular English [study of ex-Am. slaves' speech patterns in Dominican Republic]. Am. Speech, 72, Winter [1997], 339-72.

PEGGY G. HARRIS. Beyond the Marginality Thesis: The Acquisition and Loss of Land by African Americans in Georgia, 1880-1930. Agric. Hist., 72, Spring, 241-62.

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322 THE JOURNAL OF SOUTHERN HISTORY

J. JOHN HARRIS III, CHARLES J. Russo, and FRANK BROWN. The Curious Case of Missouri v. Jenkins [1995]: The End of the Road for Court-ordered Desegregation? Jour. Negro Educ., 66, Winter [1997], 43-55.

CHRISTOPHER K. HAYS. The African American Struggle for Equality and Jus- tice in Cairo, Illinois, 1865-1900. III. Hist. Jour., 90, Winter [1997], 265- 84.

TODD A. HERRING. Kidnapped and Sold in Natchez: The Ordeal of Aaron Cooper, a Free Black Man. Jour. Miss. Hist., 60, Winter, 341-53.

ELIZABETH JANE WALL HINDS. The Spirit of Trade: Olaudah Equiano's Con- version, Legalism, and the Merchant's Life. African Am. Rev., 32, Winter, 635-47.

PATRICK J. HUBER. "Caught Up in the Violent Whirlwind of Lynching": The 1885 Quadruple Lynching in Chatham County, North Carolina. N.C. Hist. Rev., 75, April, 134-60.

CLENORA HUDSON-WEEMS. Resurrecting Emmett Till: The Catalyst of the Modem Civil Rights Movement. Jour. Black Stud., 29, Nov., 179-88.

CHARLES F. IRONS. And All These Things Shall Be Added unto You: The First African Baptist Church, Richmond, 1841-1865. Va. Cavalcade, 47, Win- ter, 26-35.

JAMES R. IRWIN and ANTHONY PATRICK O'BRIEN. Where Have All the Share- croppers Gone? Black Occupations in Postbellum Mississippi. Agric. Hist., 72, Spring, 280-97.

CHARLES A. ISRAEL. From Biracial to Segregated Churches: Black and White Protestants in Houston, Texas, 1840-1870, Southwestern Hist. Quar., 101, April, 428-58.

KENNETH R. JANKEN. From Colonial Liberation to Cold War Liberalism: Walter White, the NAACP, and Foreign Affairs, 1941-1955. Ethnic and Racial Stud., 21, Nov., 1074-95.

MARY CARROLL JOHANSEN. "Intelligence, Though Overlooked": Education for Black Women in the Upper South, 1800-1840. Md. Hist. Mag., 93, Winter, 443-65.

MARILYNN S. JOHNSON. Gender, Race, and Rumours: Re-examining the 1943 Race Riots [in Beaumont, Tx., Detroit, and Harlem]. Gender and Hist., 10, Aug., 252-77.

WILLIAM COURTLAND JOHNSON. "A Delusive Clothing": Christian Conversion in the Antebellum Slave Community. Jour. Negro Hist., 82, Summer [1997], 295-311.

Lu ANN JONES. In Search of Jennie Booth Moton, Field Agent, AAA. Agric. Hist., 72, Spring, 446-58.

DENNIS R. JUDD. The Role of Governmental Policies in Promoting Residential Segregation in the St. Louis Metropolitan Area [post-1981]. Jour. Negro Educ., 66, Summer [1997], 214-40.

MAULANA KARENGA. Kwame Ture [Stokely Carmichael] in the Scales of History: "A Legacy of Lessons." Black Scholar, 27, Fall/Winter [1997], 46-50.

WILLIAM HENRY KELLAR. Alive with a Vengeance: Houston's Black Teachers and their Fight for Equal Pay [New Deal era]. Houston Rev., 18, no. 2 [1996], 89-103.

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SOUTHERN HISTORY IN PERIODICALS 323

BRIAN KELLY. Policing the "Negro Eden": Racial Paternalism in the Alabama Coalfields, 1908-1921, Part One. Ala. Rev., 51, July, 163-83.

. Policing the "Negro Eden": Racial Paternalism in the Alabama Coalfields, 1908-1921, Part Two. Ala. Rev., 51, Oct., 243-65.

LAWRENCE EDWARD KIGHT. "The State is on Trial": Governor Edmund F. Noel and the Defense of Mississippi's Legal Institutions Against Mob Violence [early 1900s]. Jour. Miss. Hist., 60, Fall, 191-222.

DESMOND KING. A Strong or Weak State? Race and the US Federal Govern- ment in the 1920s. Ethnic and Racial Stud., 21, January, 21-47.

ANDREA MERYL KIRSHENBAUM. "The Vampire That Hovers Over North Caro- lina": Gender, White Supremacy, and the Wilmington Race Riot of 1898. Sou. Cult., 4, Fall, 6-30.

J. MORGAN KOUSSER, LARRY J. GRIFFIN, E. M. BECK, and STEWART E. TOLNAY. Revisiting A Festival of Violence [forum on 1995 quantitative history of sou. lynching], Hist. Methods, 31, Fall, 171-80.

EDITH KURZWEIL, ed. Special issue on Education and Integration: Europe and America. Partisan Rev. 65, Summer, 354-510.

Louis M. KYRIAKOUDES. Southern Black Rural-Urban Migration in the Era of the Great Migration: Nashville and Middle Tennessee, 1890-1930. Agric. Hist., 72, Spring, 341-51.

JANE LANDERS. Black Community and Culture in the Southeastern Border- lands. Jour. Early Rep., 18, Spring, 117-34.

. Female Conflict and Its Resolution in Eighteenth-Century St. Au- gustine. Americas, 54, April, 557-74.

THEODORE C. LANDSMARK. Comments on African American Contributions to American Material Life. Winterthur Port., 33, Winter, 261-82.

PAUL A. LEVENGOOD. In the Absence of Scarcity: The Civil War Prosperity of Houston, Texas. Southwestern Hist. Quar., 101, April, 400-426.

ALEX LICHTENSTEIN. The Cold War and The "Negro Question" [rev. essay of three books]. Radical Hist. Rev., 72, Fall, 185-93.

. Was the Emancipated Slave a Proletarian? Reviews Am. Hist., 26, March, 124-45.

ANNA LILLIOS, ed. Special issue on Zora Neale Hurston Sou. Quar., 36, Spring, 6-102.

PETER LING. Martin Luther King's Half-Forgotten Dream. Hist. Today, 48, April, 17-22.

WILLIAM A. LINK. The Jordan Hatcher Case: Politics and "A Spirit of Insub- ordination" in Antebellum Virginia. Jour. Sou. Hist., 64, Nov., 615-48.

BRUCE LOWERY. Integration at Alabama's Historically Black Colleges and Universities. Sou. Hist., 19, Spring, 35-59.

SUSAN MANNING. Black Voices, White Bodies: The Performance of Race and Gender in How Long Brethren. Am. Quar., 50, March, 24-46.

MANNING MARABLE. The Black Radical Congress: Revitalizing the Black Freedom Movement [hist. essay that turns into new civil rights manifesto]. Black Scholar, 28, Spring, 54-70.

JANICE M. MCCLELLAND. A Structural Analysis of Desegregation: Clinton High School, 1954-1958. Tenn. Hist. Quar., 56, Winter, 294-309.

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324 THE JOURNAL OF SOUTHERN HISTORY

CHRISTOPHER C. MEYERS. "The Wretch Vickery" and the Brooks County Civil War Slave Conspiracy. Jour. Southwest Ga. Hist., 12, Fall [1997], 27-38.

PATRICK B. MILLER. The Anatomy of Scientific Racism: Racialist Responses to Black Athletic Achievement. Jour. Sport Hist., 25, Spring, 119-51.

TIMOTHY J. MINCHIN. "Color Means Something": Black Pioneers, White Re- sistance, and Interracial Unionism in the Southern Textile Industry, 1957- 1980. Labor Hist., 39, May, 109-33.

PATRICIA A. MOORE and W. KENT MOORE. Desegregation of the Lowndes County School System: "Easier Than Most People Think." Jour. Southwest Ga. Hist., 12, Fall [1997], 39-64.

CHRISTOPHER MORRIS. The Articulation of Two Worlds: The Master-Slave Relationship Reconsidered. Jour. Am. Hist., 85, Dec., 982-1007.

D. CHONGO MUNDENDE. The Undesirable Oklahomans: Black Immigration to Western Canada. Chron. Okla., 76, Fall, 282-97.

WINSTON NAPIER. Affirming Critical Conceptualism: Harlem Renaissance Aesthetics and the Formation of Alain Locke's Social Philosophy. Mass. Rev., 39, Spring, 93-112.

KENDRA E. NORDIN. "A Tinderbox of Poverty": The 1966 Summerhill Riot. Atlanta Hist., 42, Fall, 34-40.

ERNEST OBADELE-STARKS. Black Struggle, White Resistance and Upper Texas Gulf Coast Railroads, 1900-1945. Houston Rev., 18, no. 2 [1996], 104-13.

IAN D. OCHILTREE. "A Just and Self-Respecting System"? Black Indepen- dence, Sharecropping, and Paternalistic Relations in the American South and South Africa. Agric. Hist., 72, Spring, 352-80.

LAWRENCE J. OLIVER. Writing from the Right during the "Red Decade": Thomas Dixon's Attack on W. E. B. DuBois and James Weldon Johnson in The Flaming Sword. Am. Lit., 70, pp. 131-52.

MARTHA L. OLNEY. When Your Word Is Not Enough: Race, Collateral, and Household Credit [WWI-era]. Jour. Econ. Hist., 58, June, 408-31.

DAVID H. ONKST. "First a Negro ... Incidentally a Veteran": Black World War Two Veterans and the G. I. Bill of Rights in the Deep South, 1944-48. Jour. Soc. Hist., 31, Spring, 517-44.

PETER S. ONUF. "To Declare Them a Free and Independent People": Race, Slavery, and National Identity in Jefferson's Thought. Jour. Early Rep., 18, Spring, 1-46.

MARY PATILLO-MCCOY. Church Culture as a Strategy of Action in the Black Community. Am. Sociol. Rev., 63, Dec., 767-84.

MARTHA H. PATTERSON. "kin o' rough jestice fer a parson": Pauline Hopkins's Winona [1902] and the Politics of Reconstructing History. African Am. Rev., 32, Fall, 445-60.

GARTH E. PAULEY. John Lewis's "Serious Revolution": Rhetoric, Resistance, and Revision at the March on Washington [1963]. Quar. Jour. Speech, 84, Aug., 320-40.

JONATHAN PROWN. The Furniture of Thomas Day (19th-cent. African Ameri- can craftsman), Winterthur Port., 33, Winter, 215-29.

JOSEPH P. REIDY. Mules and Machines and Men: Field Labor on Louisiana Sugar Plantations, 1887-1915. Agric. Hist., 72, Spring, 183-96.

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SOUTHERN HISTORY IN PERIODICALS 325

TIMOTHY F. REILLY. The Conscience of a Colonizationist: Parson [Theodore] Clapp and the Slavery Dilemma. La. Hist., 39, Fall, 411-41.

JOE M. RICHARDSON. Edgar B. Stem [1886-1959]: A White New Orleans Philanthropist Helps Build a Black University [Dillard]. Jour. Negro Hist., 82, Summer [1997], 328-42.

. Allen Normal School: Training "Leaders of Righteousness," 1885- 1933. Jour. Southwest Ga. Hist., 12, Fall [1997], 1-26.

JOHN C. RODRIGUE. "The Great Law of Demand and Supply": The Contest over Wages in Louisiana's Sugar Region, 1870-1880. Agric. Hist., 72, Spring, 159-82.

CHERYL RODRIGUEZ. Activist Stories: Culture and Community in Black Wom- en's Narratives of Grassroots Community Work. Frontiers, 19, no. 2, pp. 94-112.

MARY GAMBRELL ROLINSON. Community and Leadership in the First Twenty Years of the Atlanta NAACP, 1917-1937. Atlanta Hist., 42, Fall, 5-21.

KATHERINE FRIEDMAN ROZEI. At the Intersection of Business and Race Rela- tions in Atlanta: The Georgia Council for International Visitors [est. 1986]. Atlanta Hist., 42, Winter, 36-48.

JOHN SAILLANT. The American Enlightenment in Africa: Jefferson's Coloni- zationism and Black Virginians' Migration to Liberia, 1776-1840. 18th. Cent. Stud., 31, Spring, 261-82.

TODD L. SAVITT. Training the "Consecrated, Skillful, Christian Physician": Documents Illustrating Student Life at Leonard Medical School, 1882- 1918 [black medical college affiliated with Shaw Univ., Raleigh, N.C.]. N.C. Hist. Rev., 75, July, 250-76.

PATRICIA A. SCHECHTER. "All the Intensity of My Nature": Ida B. Wells, Anger, and Politics. Radical Hist. Rev., no. 70, Winter, 48-77.

CHRISTOPHER SCHMIDT-NOWARA. National Economy and Atlantic Slavery: Protectionism and Resistance to Abolitionism in Spain and the Antilles, 1854-1874. Hispanic Am. Hist. Rev., 78, Nov., 603-29.

MARK R. SCHULTZ. The Dream Realized? African American Land Ownership in Central Georgia Between Reconstruction and World War Two. Agric. Hist., 72, Spring, 298-312.

LOREN SCHWENINGER. Doctor Jack: A Slave Physician on the Tennessee Fron- tier. Tenn. Hist. Quar., 57, Spring/Summer, 36-41.

ROBERT L. SELF and SUSAN R. STEIN. The Collaboration of Thomas Jefferson and John Hemings: Furniture Attributed to the Monticello Joinery. Win- terthur Port., 33, Winter, 231-48.

AMILCAR SHABAZZ. One for the Crows and One for the Crackers: The Strange Career of Public Higher Education in Houston, Texas [deseg. at University of Houston and Texas Southern University]. Houston Rev., 18, no. 2 [1996], 124-43.

BRUCE SINCLAIR. Teaching About Technology and African American History. Mag. of Hist., 12, Winter, 14-17.

DEAN SINCLAIR. Equal in All Places: The Civil Rights Struggle in Baton Rouge, 1953-1963. La. Hist., 39, Summer, 347-66.

C. CALVIN SMITH. Serving the Poorest of the Poor: Black Medical

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326 THE JOURNAL OF SOUTHERN HISTORY

Practitioners in the Arkansas Delta, 1880-1960. Ark. Hist. Quar., 57, Au- tumn, 287-308.

DAVID A. SMITH. From the Mississippi to the Mediterranean: The 1891 New Orleans Lynching and its Effects on United States Diplomacy and the American Navy [lynching of 11 Italians led to tensions bet. U.S. and Italy causing U.S. to strengthen navy]. Sou. Historian, 19, Spring, 60-85.

JOHN DAVID SMITH. "The Work It Did Not Do Because It Could Not": Georgia and the "New" Freedmen's Bureau Historiography [review essay]. Ga. Hist. Quar., 82, Summer, 331-49.

PETER STANIFELD. "An Octoroon in the Kindling": American Vernacular and Blackface Minstrelsy in 1930s Hollywood. Jour. Am. Stud., 31, December [1997], 407-38.

ANNE STAVNEY. "Mothers of Tomorrow": The New Negro Renaissance and the Politics of Maternal Representation. African Am. Rev., 32, Winter, 533-61.

MASON STOKES. Somone's in the Garden with Eve: Race, Religion, and the American Fall [late-19th-cent. theological-racism and defn. of whiteness]. Am. Quar., 50, Dec., 718-37.

BILL STRICKLAND. How Malcolm and Stokely and the Movement Redefined America. Black Scholar, 27, Fall/Winter [1997], 41-43.

C. W. SULLIVAN III. "Jumping the Broom": Possible Welsh Origins of an African-American [Wedding] Custom. Sou. Folklore, 55, no. 1, pp. 15-23.

Symposium on Tera Hunter: To 'Joy My Freedom [5 comments plus re- sponse]. Labor Hist., 39, May, 169-87.

MELBOURNE TAPPER. An "Anthropathology" of the "American Negro": An- thropology, Genetics, and the New Racial Science, 1940-1952. Social Hist. of Medicine, 10, August [1997], 263-89.

ESTHER TERRY, MICHAEL THELWELL, BILL STRICKLAND, JUDY RICHARDSON, and STOKELY CARMICHAEL/KWAME TuRE, From Stokely Carmichael to Kwame Ture: "Tribute to a Life of Struggle" [speeches from April 14, 1997, at University of Massachusetts, Amherst honoring Carmichael/ Kwame Ture; part of a special issue on Carmichael]. Black Scholar, 27, Fall/Winter [1997], 2-31.

BRIAN W. THOMAS. Power and Community: The Archaeology of Slavery at the Hermitage Plantation. Am. Antiquity, 63, Oct., 531-51.

JOHN THORNTON. The African Experience of the "20. and Odd Negroes" Arriving in Virginia in 1619. William and Mary Quar., 3d ser., 55, July, 421-34.

TIMOTHY B. TYSON. Robert F. Williams, "Black Power," and the Roots of the African American Freedom Struggle. Jour. Am. Hist., 85, Sept., 540-70.

GILLES VANDAL. Property Offenses, Social Tension and Racial Antagonism in Post-Civil War Rural Louisiana. Jour. Soc. Hist., 31, Fall [1997], 127-53.

JOHN MICHAEL VLACH. Studying African American Artifacts: Some Back- ground for the Winterthur Conference, "Race and Ethnicity in American Material Life." Winterthur Port., 33, Winter, 211-14.

JENNY BOURNE WAHL. Legal Constraints on Slave Masters: The Problem of Social Cost. Am. Jour. Legal Hist., 41, Jan. [1997], 1-24.

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SOUTHERN HISTORY IN PERIODICALS 327

MELISSA WALKER. African Americans and TVA Reservoir Property Removal: Race in a New Deal Program. Agric. Hist., 72, Spring, 417-28.

LORENA S. WALSH. Slavery at Carter's Grove in the Early Eighteenth Century. Va. Cavalcade, 47, Summer, 110-25.

DANEEN WALDROP. "While I Am Writing": Webster's 1825 Spelling Book, the Ell, and Frederick Douglass's Positioning of Language. African Am. Rev., 32, Winter, 649-60.

SARAH T. WARREN and ROBERT E. ZABAWA. The Origins of the Tuskegee National Forest: Nineteenth- and Twentieth-Century Resettlement and Land Development Programs in the Black Belt Region of Alabama. Agric. Hist., 72, Spring, 487-508.

WILLIAM LAW WATKINS. Harvey Gantt Enters Clemson: One Lawyer' s Memories. Carologue, 14, Autumn, 8-15.

JUDITH WELLMAN. This Side of the Border: Fugitives from Slavery in Three Central New York Communities. N. Y. Hist., 79, Oct., 359-92.

JEANNIE M. WHAYNE. Black Farmers and the Agricultural Cooperative Ex- tension Service: The Alabama Experience, 1945-1965. Agric. Hist., 72, Summer, 523-5 1.

THOMAS E. WILL. The American School of Ethnology: Science and Scripture in the Proslavery Argument. Sou. Hist., 19, Spring, 14-34.

KIRT H. WILSON. The Contested Space of Prudence in the 1874-1875 Civil Rights Debate [U.S. Congress]. Quar. Jour. Speech, 84, May, 131-49.

ROBERT F. WORTH. The Legacy of a Lynching [Coatesville, Pa., 1911]. Am. Scholar, 67, Spring, 65-77.

AMY LAMBECK YOUNG, PHILIP J. CARR, and JOSEPH E. GRANGER. How His- torical Archaeology Works: A Case Study of Slave Houses at Locust Grove. Reg. Ky. Hist. Soc., 96, Spring, 167-94.

ELLIOTT YOUNG. Red Men, Princess Pochahontas, and George Washington: Harmonizing Race Relations in Laredo at the Turn of the Century. Western Hist. Quar., 29, Spring, 48-85.

ROBERT E. ZABAWA and SARAH T. WARREN. From Company to Community: Agricultural Community Development in Macon County, Alabama, 1881 to the New Deal. Agric. Hist., 72, Spring, 459-86.

GARY ZELLER. Occupying the Middle Ground: African Creeks in the First Indian Home Guard, 1862-1865 [Af. Am. (former slaves and free blacks of Creek and Seminole nations) soldiers in the U.S. Army during the Civ. War]. Chron. Okla., 76, Spring, 48-71.

. H. C. Ray and Racial Politics in the African American Extension Service Program in Arkansas, 1915-1929. Agric. Hist., 72, Spring, 429-45.

AGRICULTURAL

LEE J. ALSTON and KYLE D. KAUFFMAN. Up, Down, and Off the Agricultural Ladder: New Evidence and Implications of Agricultural Mobility for Blacks in the Postbellum South. Agric. Hist., 72, Spring, 263-79.

M. LANGLEY BIEGERT. Legacy of Resistance: Uncovering the History of Col- lective Action by Black Agricultural Workers in Central East Arkansas from the 1860s to the 1930s. Jour. Soc. Hist., 32, Fall, 73-99.

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328 THE JOURNAL OF SOUTHERN HISTORY

BROOKS BLEVINS. Cattle Raising in Antebellum Alabama. Ala. Rev., 51, Oct., 266-91.

ORVILLE VERNON BURTON. African American Status and Identity in a Post- bellum Community: An Analysis of the Manuscript Census Returns. Agric. Hist., 72, Spring, 213-40.

KEVIN J. CAHILL. Fertilizing the Weeds: The Rural Rehabilitation Program in West Virginia [1930s]. Jour. Appal. Stud., 4, Fall, 285-97.

PETER A. COCLANIS. Introduction [to special issue]: African Americans in Southern Agriculture, 1877-1945. Agric. Hist., 72, Spring, 135-39.

and J. C. MARLOW. Inland Rice Production in the South Atlantic States: A Picture in Black and White. Agric. Hist., 72, Spring, 197-212.

DWAYNE Cox. Luther N. Duncan, the Extension Service, and the Farm Bu- reau, 1921-1932. Ala. Rev., 51, July, 184-97.

LAURA F. EDWARDS. The Problem of Dependency: African Americans, Labor Relations, and the Law in the Nineteenth-Century South. Agric. Hist., 72, Spring, 313-40.

PAUL K. EISS. A Share in the Land: Freedpeople and the Government of Labour in Southern Louisiana, 1862-65. Slavery and Abolition, 19, April, 46-89.

GEORGE B. ELLENBERG. African Americans, Mules, and the Southern Mind- scape, 1850-1950. Agric. Hist., 72, Spring, 381-98.

KAREN J. FERGUSON. Caught in "No Man's Land": The Negro Cooperative Demonstration Service and the Ideology of Booker T. Washington, 1900- 1918. Agric. Hist., 72, Winter, 33-54.

LOUIS FERLEGER. The Problem of "Labor" in the Post-Reconstruction Loui- siana Sugar Industry. Agric. Hist., 72, Spring, 140-58.

MARTIN A. GARRETT JR. Evidence on the Use of Oxen in the Postbellum South. Soc. Sci. Hist., 22, Summer, 225-49.

ROBERT GODDARD. Agricultural Worker as Archetype in West Indian and African American Literature. Agric. Hist., 72, Spring, 509-20.

VALERIE GRIM. African American Landlords in the Rural South, 1870-1950. Agric. Hist., 72, Spring, 399-416.

PEGGY G. HARGIS. Beyond the Marginality Thesis: The Acquisition and Loss of Land by African Americans in Georgia, 1880-1930. Agric. Hist., 72, Spring, 241-62.

DALE L. HUTCHINSON, CLARK SPENCER LARSEN, MARGARET J. SCHOENINGER, and LYNETTE NORR. Regional Variation in the Pattern of Maize Adoption and Use in Florida and Georgia. Am. Antiquity, 63, July, 397-416.

JAMES R. IRWIN and ANTHONY PATRICK O'BRIEN. Where Have All the Share- croppers Gone? Black Occupations in Postbellum Mississippi. Agric. Hist., 72, Spring, 280-97.

LU ANN JONES. In Search of Jennie Booth Moton, Field Agent, AAA. Agric. Hist., 72, Spring, 446-58.

LEO KELLEY. "I Should Have Been a Mule": Cotton Pickin' Blues in South- western Oklahoma. Chron. Okla., 76, Summer, 160-71.

LOUIS M. KYRIAKOUDES. Southern Black Rural-Urban Migration in the Era of the Great Migration: Nashville and Middle Tennessee, 1890-1930. Agric. Hist., 72, Spring, 341-51.

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SOUTHERN HISTORY IN PERIODICALS 329

KATHLEEN S. LOWNEY and JOEL BEST. Floral Entrepreneurs: Kudzu as Agri- cultural Solution and Ecological Problem [study of diff. receptions of Kudzu in the South]. Sociological Spectrum, 18, January-March, 93-114.

JAMES L. MCCORKLE JR. Southern Truck Growers' Associations: Organization for Profit. Agric. Hist., 72, Winter, 77-99.

JOHN MORGAN. Dark-Fired Tobacco: The Origin, Migration, and Survival of a Colonial Agrarian Tradition. Sou. Folklore, 54, no. 3, pp. 145-84.

JOHN E. MURRAY and METIN M. COSGEL. Market, Religion, and Culture in Shaker Swine Production, 1788-1880. Agric. Hist., 72, Summer, 552-73.

IAN D. OCHILTREE. "A Just and Self-Respecting System"? Black Indepen- dence, Sharecropping, and Paternalistic Relations in the American South and South Africa. Agric. Hist., 72, Spring, 352-80.

JOSEPH P. REIDY. Mules and Machines and Men: Field Labor on Louisiana Sugar Plantations, 1887-1915. Agric. Hist., 72, Spring, 183-96.

JOHN C. RODRIGUE. "The Great Law of Demand and Supply": The Contest over Wages in Louisiana's Sugar Region, 1870-1880. Agric. Hist., 72, Spring, 159-82.

MARK R. SCHULTZ. The Dream Realized? African American Land Ownership in Central Georgia Between Reconstruction and World War Two. Agric. Hist., 72, Spring, 298-312.

MELISSA WALKER. African Americans and TVA Reservoir Property Removal: Race in a New Deal Program. Agric. Hist., 72, Spring, 417-28.

SARAH T. WARREN and ROBERT E. ZABAWA. The Origins of the Tuskegee National Forest: Nineteenth- and Twentieth-Century Resettlement and Land Development Programs in the Black Belt Region of Alabama. Agric. Hist., 72, Spring, 487-508.

JEANNIE M. WHAYNE. Black Farmers and the Agricultural Cooperative Ex- tension Service: The Alabama Experience, 1945-1965. Agric. Hist., 72, Summer, 523-51.

ROBERT E. ZABAWA and SARAH T. WARREN. From Company to Community: Agricultural Community Development in Macon County, Alabama, 1881 to the New Deal. Agric. Hist., 72, Spring, 459-86.

GARY ZELLAR. H. C. Ray and Racial Politics in the African American Exten- sion Service Program in Arkansas, 1915-1929. Agric. Hist., 72, Spring, 429-45.

AMERICAN INDIANS

JAMES LAMAR APPLETON and ROBERT DAVID WARD. Albert James Pickett and the Case of the Secret Articles: Historians and the Treaty of New York of 1790 [secret treaty w/Creek Nation]. Ala. Rev., 51, Jan., 3-36.

STEPHEN ARON. The Legacy of Daniel Boone: Three Generations of Boones and the History of Indian-White Relations. Reg. Ky. Hist. Soc., 95, Summer [1997], 219-36.

SUSAN K. BARNARD and GRACE M. SCHWARTZMAN. Tecumseh and the Creek Indian War of 1813-1814 in North Georgia. Ga. Hist. Quar., 82, Fall, 489-506.

CHRISTOPHER A. BERGMAN, DONALD A. MILLER, JOHN F. DOERSHUK, KEN

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330 THE JOURNAL OF SOUTHERN HISTORY

DUERKSEN, and TERESA W. TUNE. Early Woodland Occupation of the Northern Bluegrass: The West Runway Site (15BE391), Boone County, Kentucky. North Am. Archaeologist, 19, no. 1, pp. 13-33.

Louis COLEMAN. "We are making history": The Execution of William Going [account of the last execution under Choctaw law in 1899]. Chron. Okla., 76, Spring, 38-47.

TOM L. FRANZMANN. "Peculiarly situated between rebellion and loyalty": Civilized Tribes, Savagery, and the American Civil War. Chron. Okla., 76, Summer, 140-59.

DALE L. HUTCHINSON, CLARK SPENCER LARSEN, MARGARET J. SCHOENINGER, and LYNETTE NORR. Regional Variation in the Pattern of Maize Adoption and Use in Florida and Georgia. Am. Antiquity, 63, July, 397-416.

JASON BAIRD JACKSON. Architecture and Hospitality: Ceremonial Ground Camps and Foodways of the Yuchi Indians. Chron. Okla., 76, Summer, 172-89.

DAVID LA VERE. Between Kinship and Capitalism: French and Spanish Ri- valry in the Colonial Louisiana-Texas Indian Trade. Jour. Sou. Hist., 64, May, 197-218.

RACHEL LENNON. Federal Records for Southeastern Indian Research, 1774- 1931. Nat. Genealogical Soc. Quar., 86, Dec. 247-70.

DONALD L. PARMAN. "Wholly Occupied with my Special Work": Reverend William Graham's Stay at Fort Coffee and New Hope, 1845-1847. Chron. Okla., 76, Fall, 262-81.

ALISA V. PETROVICH. Perception and Reality: [Jean Baptiste] Colbert's Native American Policy [Colbert was Louis XIV's controller-general of Finances (1661-82) and secretary of state for the Marine (1669-83)]. La. Hist., 39, Winter, 73-83.

BOB REA. The Washita Trail: The Seventh U.S. Cavalry's Route of March to and from the Battle of the Washita [1868]. Chron. Okla., 76, Fall, 244-61.

HELEN C. ROUNTREE. Powhatan Indian Women: The People Captain John Smith Barely Saw. Ethnohistory, 45, Winter, 1-29.

MICHAEL TOWER. Fred Tecumseh Waite [1853-1895]: The Outlaw Statesman [former outlaw, became atty. gen. of Chickasaw nation]. Chron. Okla., 76, Summer, 190-217.

GAIL WHALEN and MICHAEL E. PRICE. The Elusive Women of Irene: The WPA Excavation of a Savannah Indian Mound. Ga. Hist. Quar., 82, Fall, 608-26.

GARY ZELLAR. Occupying the Middle Ground: African Creeks in the First Indian Home Guard, 1862-1865 [Af. Am. (former slaves and free blacks of Creek and Seminole nations) soldiers in the U.S. Army during the Civil War]. Chron. Okla., 76, Spring, 48-71.

BIBLIOGRAPHY AND HISTORIOGRAPHY

Across Four Centuries: The Dictionary of Virginia Biography. Va. Cavalcade, 47, Autumn, 160-65.

ROBERT G. ANTHONY, comp. North Carolina Bibliography, 1996-1997. N.C. Hist. Rev., 75, April, 184-204.

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JAMES LAMAR APPLETON and ROBERT DAVID WARD. Albert James Pickett and the Case of the Secret Articles: Historians and the Treaty of New York of 1790 [secret treaty with Creek Nation]. Ala. Rev., 51, Jan., 3-36.

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EDWARD L. AYERS. Colonial Williamsburg's "Choosing Revolution" Story- line. Pub. Historian, 20, Summer, 77-92.

Jo. B. BROWN, comp. Annual Bibliography, 1997. Jour. Appal. Stud., 4, Spring, 115-52.

KATHLEEN M. BROWN. Beyond the Great Debates: Gender and Race in Early America. Reviews Am. Hist., 26, March, 96-123.

W. FITZHUGH BRUNDAGE. Commemoration and Conflict: Forgetting and Re- membering the Civil War [rev. essay of 2 books]. Ga. Hist. Quar., 82, Fall, 559-74.

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CARY CARSON. Colonial Williamsburg and the Practice of Interpretive Plan- ning in American History Museums. Pub. Historian, 20, Summer, 11-51.

THOMAS CRIPPS. A Certain Style: Benjamin Quarles and the Scholarship of the Center. Md. Hist. Mag., 93, Fall, 288-99.

JONATHAN S. CULLICK. The Making of a Historian: Robert Penn Warren's Biography of John Brown. Miss. Quar., 51, Winter, 33-54.

ALAN DRAPER. The Mississippi Movement: A Review Essay [of John Dittmer, Local People and Charles M. Payne, I've Got the Light of Freedom]. Jour. Miss. Hist., 60, Winter, 355-66.

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FRED J. HAY and MARY REICHEL. From Activist to Academic: An Evolution- ary Model for the Bibliography of Appalachian Studies. Jour. Appal. Stud., 3, Fall [1997], 211-29.

GELEE CORLEY HENDRIX. Going Beyond the Database-Interpretation, Am- plification, and Development of Evidence: South Carolina's COM Index and Several James Kelleys. Nat. Genealogical Soc. Quar., 86, June 116- 33.

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REGINALD KEARNEY. Benjamin Quarles, American Historian. Civil War Hist., 44, Sept., 217-20.

DONNA E. KELLY, comp. Selected Bibliography of Completed Theses and Dissertations Related to North Carolina Subjects. N.C. Hist. Rev., 75, Jan., 86-94.

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332 THE JOURNAL OF SOUTHERN HISTORY

J. MORGAN KOUSSER, LARRY J. GRIFFIN, E. M. BECK, and STEWART E. TOLNAY. Revisiting A Festival of Violence [forum on 1995 quantitative history of southern lynching]. Hist. Methods, 31, Fall, 171-80.

ALEX LICHTENSTEIN. Was the Emancipated Slave a Proletarian? Reviews Am. Hist., 26, March, 124-45.

TIM MATTHEWSON. Thomas Jefferson: An Interpretive Conundrum [rev. essay of 2 books]. Wis. Mag. Hist., 82, Autumn, 52-56.

PAULA MOEHLE and GLORIAN SIPMAN, comps. Annual Bibliography: Georgia History in 1997, Ga. Hist. Quar., 82, Summer, 398-409.

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BOB RAZER, comp. Arkansas History, 1997: A Selected Bibliography. Ark. Hist. Quar., 57, Winter, 439-52.

SHLOMO SLONIN. Motives at Philadelphia, 1787: Gordon Wood's Neo- Beardian Thesis Reexamined [plus comment by Wood and rejoinder by Slonim]. Law and Hist. Rev., 16, Fall, 527-66.

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BARBARA ELLEN SMITH. Walk-Ons in the Third Act: The Role of Women in Appalachian Historiography. Jour. Appal. Stud., 4, Spring, 5-28.

JAMES PATTERSON SMITH. Reconstructing the Gulf South's Colonial Past: Progress in Recovering the History of the British West Florida Colony, 1763-1783. Jour. Miss. Hist., 60, Spring, 20-49.

JOHN DAVID SMITH. "The Work It Did Not Do Because It Could Not": Georgia and the "New" Freedmen's Bureau Historiography [review essay]. Ga. Hist. Quar., 82, Summer, 331-49.

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ECONOMICS

ERIC ARNESEN. Up from Exclusion: Black and White Workers, Race, and the State of Labor History. Reviews Am. Hist., 26, March, 146-74.

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HOWARD BODENHORN. Private Banking in Antebellum Virginia: Thomas Branch and Sons of Petersburg. Bus. Hist. Rev., 71, Winter [1997], 513-42.

D. CLAYTON BROWN. Modernizing Rural Life: South Carolina's Push for Public Rural Electrification. S.C. Hist. Mag., 99, Jan., 66-85.

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RICHARD LYMAN BUSHMAN. Markets and Composite Farms in Early America. William and Mary Quar., 3d ser., 55, July, 351-74.

H. B. CAVALCANTI. God and Labor in the South: Southern Baptists and the Right to Unionize, 1930-1950. Jour. Church and State, 40, Summer, 639- 60.

SAMUEL R. COOK. The Great Depression, Subsistence, and Views of Poverty in Wyoming County, West Virginia. Jour. Appal. Stud., 4, Fall, 271-83.

JAMES R. FAIR. Hopefield, Arkansas: Important River-Rail Terminal. Ark. Hist. Quar., 57, Summer, 191-204.

DEAN T. FERGUSON. "Living by Means Unknown to Their Neighbors": The Informal Economy of Louisville's Blacks, 1865-1880. Filson Club Hist. Quar., 72, Oct., 357-78.

LINDA G. FRYER. Documents Relating to the Formation of the Carolina Com- pany in Scotland, 1682. S.C. Hist. Mag., 99, April, 110-34.

JONATHAN K. GERLAND. [The] Yellow Bluff Tramway of Jasper County, Texas, 1877-1881 [early logging railroad]. Tx. Gulf Hist. and Bio. Rec., 34, 1998, pp. 66-74.

[comp. and ed.]. Spindletop Letters of Anthony F. Lucas to Patillo Higgins, 1899. Tx. Gulf Hist. and Bio. Rec., 34, 1998, pp. 77-91.

JAMES A. HENRETTA. The "Market" in the Early Republic. Jour. Early Rep., 18, Summer, 289-304.

SAMUEL C. HYDE JR. Mechanisms of Planter Power in Eastern Louisiana's Piney Woods, 1810-1860. La. Hist., 39, Winter, 19-44.

COREY T. LESSEIG. "Out of the Mud": The Good Roads Crusade and Social Change in Twentieth-Century Mississippi. Jour. Miss. Hist., 60, Spring, 50-72.

PAUL A. LEVENGOOD. In the Absence of Scarcity: The Civil War Prosperity of Houston, Texas. Southwestern Hist. Quar., 101, April, 400-426.

WILLIAM LEVERNIER and JOHN B. WHITE. The Determinants of Poverty in Georgia's Plantation Belt: Explaining the Differences in Measured Poverty Rates. Am. Jour. Econ. and Sociol., 57, January, 47-70.

ALEX LICHTENSTEIN. Was the Emancipated Slave a Proletarian? Reviews Am. Hist., 26, March, 124-45.

ROBERT D. LUKENS. The New South on Display: The Appalachian Expositions of 1910 and 1911. Jour. East. Tenn. Hist., 69, [1997], 1-28.

SAM A. MUSTAFA. The Role of the Hanseatic Cities in Early U.S.-German Relations. Md. Hist. Mag., 93, Fall, 264-87.

KERRY A. ODELL and DAVID F. WEIMAN. Metropolitan Development, Re- gional Financial Centers, and the Founding of the Fed in the Lower South [19th and early 20th cent.]. Jour. Econ. Hist., 58, March, 103-25.

MARTHA L. OLNEY. When Your Word Is Not Enough: Race, Collateral, and Household Credit [WWI-era]. Jour. Econ. Hist., 58, June, 408-31.

WILLIAM S. OSBORN. A History of the Cane Belt Branch of the Gulf, Colorado & Santa Fe Railroad. Southwestern Hist. Quar., 101, Jan., 302-19.

ROBERT F. PACE. "It Was Bedlam Let Loose": The Louisiana Sugar Country and the Civil War. La. Hist., 39, Fall, 389-409.

CHARLES E. PARRISH and LELAND R. JOHNSON. J. Stoddard Johnston Versus

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the Army Engineers on Canalization of the Kentucky River [1880s-90s]. Filson Club Hist. Quar., 72, Jan., 3-23.

RANDALL L. PATTON. E. T. Barwick and the Rise of Northwest Georgia's Carpet Industry[1950s-70s]. Atlanta Hist., 42, Winter, 5-18.

AARON D. PURCELL. Bourbon to Bullets: Louisville's Distilling Industry dur- ing World War II, 1941-45. Reg. Ky. Hist. Soc., 96, Winter, 61-87.

TERRY LEE Rioux. A Biographical Sketch of George Washington Carroll [1855-1935]. Tx. Gulf Hist. and Bio. Rec., 34, pp. 2-19.

KATHERINE FRIEDMAN RoZEI. At the Intersection of Business and Race Rela- tions in Atlanta: The Georgia Council for International Visitors [est. 1986]. Atlanta Hist., 42, Winter, 36-48.

S. D. SMITH. The Market for Manufactures in the Thirteen Continental Colo- nies, 1698-1776. Econ. Hist. Rev., 51, Nov., 676-708.

Jo ANN STILES. A Venture Into Oil: The Cartwright Oil and Development Company. Tx. Gulf Hist. and Bio. Rec., 34, pp. 57-65.

DAVID G. SURDAM. King Cotton: Monarch or Pretender? The State of the Market for Raw Cotton on the Eve of the American Civil War. Econ. Hist. Rev., 51, February, 113-32.

GILLES VANDAL. Property Offenses, Social Tension and Racial Antagonism in Post-Civil War Rural Louisiana. Jour. Soc. Hist., 31, Fall [1997], 127-53.

ALAN D. WATSON. Sailing under Steam: The Advent of Steam Navigation in North Carolina to the Civil War. N.C. Hist. Rev., 75, Jan., 29-68.

DEBORAH R. WEINER. Middlemen of the Coalfields: The Role of Jews in the Economy of Southern West Virginia Coal Towns, 1890-1950. Jour. Appal. Stud., 4, Spring, 29-56.

MICHAEL WOODS. The Culture of Credit in Colonial Charleston. S.C. Hist. Mag., 99, Oct., 358-80.

LABOR

JAMES PAUL BAILEY. "Standing Out for Their Rights": Industrial Strikes in Oklahoma in the 1930s. Chron. Okla., 76, Fall, 298-317.

M. LANGLEY BIEGERT. Legacy of Resistance: Uncovering the History of Col- lective Action by Black Agricultural Workers in Central East Arkansas from the 1860s to the 1930s. Jour. Soc. Hist., 32, Fall, 73-99.

MICHAEL BOTSON. No Gold Watch for Jim Crow's Retirement: The Abolition of Segregated Unionism at Houston's Hughes Tool Company. Southwest- ern Hist. Quar., 101, April, 496-521.

CLIFF BROWN. Racial Conflict and Split Labor Markets: The AFL Campaign to Organize Steel Workers, 1918-1919. Soc. Sci. Hist., 22, Fall, 319-47.

SCOTT DEWEY. Working for the Environment: Organized Labor and the Ori- gins of Environmentalism in the United States, 1948-1970. Envi. Hist., 3, Jan., 45-63.

PAUL K. EISS. A Share in the Land: Freedpeople and the Government of Labour in Southern Louisiana, 1862-65. Slavery and Abolition, 19, April, 46-89.

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SOUTHERN HISTORY IN PERIODICALS 335

BRUCE FEHN. African-American Women and the Struggle for Equality in the Meatpacking Industry, 1940-1960. Jour. Women's Hist., 10, Spring, 45- 69.

GLENN FELDMAN. Race, Class, and New Directions in Southern Labor History. Ala. Rev., 51, April, 96-106.

JAMES N. GREGORY. Southernizing the American Working Class: Post-war Episodes of Regional and Class Transformation [article, 3 commentaries, response]. Labor Hist., 39, May, 135-54.

MARTIN HALPERN. Arkansas and the Defeat of Labor Law Reform in 1978 and 1994. Ark. Hist. Quar., 57, Summer, 99-133.

BRIAN KELLY. Policing the "Negro Eden": Racial Paternalism in the Alabama Coalfields, 1908-1921, Part One. Ala. Rev., 51, July, 163-83.

. Policing the "Negro Eden": Racial Paternalism in the Alabama Coalfields, 1908-1921, Part Two. Ala. Rev., 51, Oct., 243-65.

ALEX LICHTENSTEIN. Sloss Furnaces and the Rise of the Birmingham District [rev. essay]. Ala. Rev., 51, April, 107-13.

TIMOTHY J. MINCHIN. "Color Means Something": Black Pioneers, White Re- sistance, and Interracial Unionism in the Southern Textile Industry, 1957- 1980. Labor Hist., 39, May, 109-33.

ERNEST OBADELE-STARKS. Black Struggle, White Resistance and Upper Texas Gulf Coast Railroads, 1900-1945. Houston Rev., 18, no. 2 [1996], 104-13.

RANDALL L. PATTON. Textile Organizing in a Sunbelt South Community: Northwest Georgia's Carpet Industry in the Early 1960s. Labor Hist., 39, Aug., 291-309.

ELIZABETH ANNE PAYNE and LOUISE BOYLE, photographer. The Lady Was a Sharecropper: Myrtle Lawrence and the Southern Tenant Farmers' Union. Sou. Cult., 4, Summer, 5-27.

MARGARET C. RUNG. Paternalism and Pink Collars: Gender and Federal Em- ployee Relations, 1941-50. Bus. Hist. Rev., 71, Autumn [1997], 381-416.

JOHN A. SALMOND. "The Burlington Dynamite Plot": The 1934 Textile Strike and Its Aftermath in Burlington, North Carolina. N.C. Hist. Rev., 75, Oct., 398-434.

THOMAS T. SPENCER. Printer and Politician: The Political Career of George L. Berry, 1907-1948. Tenn. Hist. Quar., 57 [56], Fall [1997], 213-29.

LANDON R. Y. STORRS. Gender and the Development of the Regulatory State: The Controversy over Restricting Women's Night Work in the Depression- Era South. Jour. Policy Hist., 10, no. 2, pp. 179-206.

Symposium on Tera Hunter: To 'Joy My Freedom [5 comments plus re- sponse]. Labor Hist., 39, May, 169-87.

ROBERT W. WHALEN. Recollecting the Cotton Mill Wars: Proletarian Litera- ture of the 1929-1931 Southern Textile Strikes. N.C. Hist. Rev., 75, Oct., 370-97.

LEGAL AND CONSTITUTIONAL

STUART BANNER. The Political Function of the Commons: Changing Concep- tions of Property and Sovereignty in Missouri, 1750-1850. Am. Jour. Legal Hist., 41, Jan. [1997], 61-93.

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FRED BLUE. The Salmon P. Chase Papers: A Review Essay. Civil War Hist., 44, Dec., 285-88.

LANCE A. COOPER. "A Slobbering Lame Thing"? The Semicolon Case Re- considered [Ex Parte Rodriguez, 1873], Southwestern Hist. Quar., 101, Jan., 320-39.

CHARLES R. CUTTER. The Administration of Law in Colonial New Mexico. Jour. Early Rep., 18, Spring, 99-115.

LAURA F. EDWARDS. The Problem of Dependency: African Americans, Labor Relations, and the Law in the Nineteenth-Century South. Agric. Hist., 72, Spring, 313-40.

EDWIN S. GAUSTAD. Thomas Jefferson, Religious Freedom, and the Supreme Court. Church Hist., 67, Dec., 682-94.

JAMES D. HARDY JR. and ROBERT B. ROBINSON. Freedom and Domicile Ju- risprudence in Louisiana: Lunsford v. Coquillon [case involving slave who lived in free state]. La. Hist., 39, Summer, 293-317.

DON HIGGINBOTHAM. The Federalized Militia Debate: A Neglected Aspect of Second Amendment Scholarship. William and Mary Quar., 3d ser., 55, Jan., 39-58.

RICHARD R. JOHN., ed. Hiland Hall's "Report on Incendiary Publications": A Forgotten Nineteenth Century Defense of the Constitutional Guarantee of the Freedom of the Press. Am. Jour. Legal Hist., 41, Jan. [1997], 94-125.

LAWRENCE EDWARD KIGHT. "The State is on Trial": Governor Edmund F. Noel and the Defense of Mississippi's Legal Institutions Against Mob Violence [early 1900s]. Jour. Miss. Hist., 60, Fall, 191-222.

ANDREW LENNER. Separate Spheres: Republican Constitutionalism in the Fed- eralist Era. Am. Jour. Legal Hist., 41, April [1997], 250-81.

STEPHEN E. MAIZLISH. Salmon P. Chase: The Roots of Ambition and the Origins of Reform. Jour. Early Rep., 18, Spring, 47-70.

FORREST McDONALD. Original Unintentions: The Franchise and the Consti- tution, Mod. Age, 40, Fall, 344-51.

CLAUDE F. OUBRE and KEITH P. FONTENOT. Liber Vel Non: Selected Freedom Cases in Antebellum St. Landry Parish [slave status]. La. Hist., 39, Sum- mer, 319-345.

LEX RENDA. Slavery, Law, Liquor, and Politics: The Case of Wynehamer v. The People [1855 N.Y. case]. Mid-Am., 80, Winter, 35-53.

MICHAEL A. Ross. Justice Miller's Reconstruction: The Slaughter-House Cases, Health Codes, and Civil Rights in New Orleans, 1861-1873. Jour. Sou. Hist., 64, Nov. 649-76.

DAVID A. SMITH. From the Mississippi to the Mediterranean: The 1891 New Orleans Lynching and its Effects on United States Diplomacy and the American Navy [lynching of 11 Italians led to tensions bet. U.S. and Italy, causing U.S. to strengthen navy]. Sou. Historian, 19, Spring, 60-85.

ERIC TSCHESCHLOK. Mistaken Identity: Spencer Roane and the "Amphictyon" Letters of 1819 [Roane was not "Amphictyon"]. Va. Mag. Hist. and Biog., 106, Spring, 201-11.

JENNY BOURNE WAHL. Legal Constraints on Slave Masters: The Problem of Social Cost. Am. Jour. Legal Hist., 41, Jan. [1997], 1-24.

JOHN WERTHEIMER, BRIAN LUSKEY, et al., "Escape of the Match-Strikers":

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SOUTHERN HISTORY IN PERIODICALS 337

Disorderly North Carolina Women, the Legal System, and the Samarcand Arson Case of 1931. N.C. Hist. Rev., 75, Oct., 435-60.

KIRT H. WILSON. The Contested Space of Prudence in the 1874-1875 Civil Rights Debate [U.S. Congress]. Quar. Jour. Speech, 84, May, 131-49.

MILITARY AND NAVAL

STANLEY J. ADAMIAK. American Naval Logistics during the Mexican War, 1846-1848. Mil. Hist. of the West, 28, Spring, 1-18.

JUNE ADAMSON. The SED [Special Engineer Detachment] in Oak Ridge, 1943-1946: Using a Secret Newsletter by a Secret Army Detachment to Learn More about a Secret City in Tennessee. Tenn. Hist. Quar., 56, Fall [1997], 196-211.

ANN FIELD ALEXANDER. No Officers, No Fight! The Sixth Virginia Volunteers in the Spanish-American War. Va. Cavalcade, 47, Autumn, 178-91.

TED ALEXANDER. Destruction, Disease, and Death: The Battle of Antietam and the Sharpsburg Civilians. Civil War Rgmts., 6, no. 2, pp. 143-73.

BRYON C. ANDREASEN. Proscribed Preachers, New Churches: Civil Wars in the Illinois Protestant Churches During the Civil War. Civil War Hist., 44, Sept., 194-211.

ROD ANDREW JR. Soldiers, Christians, and Patriots: The Lost Cause and Southern Military Schools, 1865-1915. Jour. Sou. Hist., 64, Nov., 677- 710.

Antietam: The Maryland Campaign of 1862: Essays on Union and Confed- erate Leadership [introduction and 5 articles]. Civil War Rgmts., 5 [1997], no. 3.

JUDITH A. BAILEY and ROBERT I. COTTOM, eds. After Chancellorsville: Letters from the Heart [bet. Priv. Walter G. Dunn and his cousin, Mary Emma Randolph, book excerpt]. Md. Hist. Mag., 93, Fall, 353-65.

SUSAN K. BARNARD and GRACE M. SCHWARTZMAN. Tecumseh and the Creek Indian War of 1813-1814 in North Georgia. Ga. Hist. Quar., 82, Fall, 489-506.

STEPHEN W. BERRY. When Mail Was Armor: Envelopes of the Great Rebel- lion, 1861-1865. Sou. Cult., 4, Fall, 63-83.

The Black and the Gray: An Interview with Tony Horwitz [overview of black Confederates debate]. Sou. Cult., 4, Spring, 5-15.

JOHN F. BRADBURY JR. "Buckwheat Cake Philanthropy": Refugees and the Union Army in the Ozarks. Ark. Hist. Quar., 57, Autumn, 233-54.

RICHARD S. BROWNLEE. The Battle of Pilot Knob, Iron County, Missouri, September 27, 1864. Mo. Hist. Rev., 92, April, 271-96.

W. FITZHUGH BRUNDAGE. Commemoration and Conflict: Forgetting and Re- membering the Civil War [rev. essay of 2 books]. Ga. Hist. Quar., 82, Fall, 559-74.

JIMMY L. BRYAN JR., ed. "Whip Them Like the Mischief': The Civil War Letters of Frank and Mintie Price. East Texas Hist. Jour., 36, no. 2, pp. 68-84.

JAMES CALLAGHAN. Red on Green: "Meagher of the Sword" and the Irish Brigade at Fredericksburg. Civil War Times Ill., 37, Dec., 55-62, 99-100.

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PETER S. CARMICHAEL. Who's to Blame? [for South's defeat at Gettysburg]. Civil War Times III., 37, Aug., 54-62.

GARNA L. CHRISTIAN. George [Sessions] Perry's War [WW II]. Southwestern Hist. Quar., 102, Oct., 186-209.

Civil War: The Early Battles [intro. plus 4 articles], Civil War Rgmts., 5, no. 4 [1997].

MERLE T. COLE. Defending Baltimore During the "Splendid Little War." Md. Hist. Mag., 93, Summer, 158-81.

SAM CONNOR. [Gen. Patrick R.] Cleburne and the Unthinkable [proposal to arm slaves]. Civil War Times Ill., 36, February, 45-47.

JOHN M. COSKI and DANIEL F. JASMAN JR., eds. Treasures from the Archives: Select Holdings from the Museum of the Confederacy [3 sets of documents and a research guide to regimental resources], Civil War Rgmts., 5, no. 1 [1996].

DAVID F. CROSBY. The Wrong Side of the River [skirmish bet. pro-Union German Texan militiamen and Confed. partisan rangers in 1862 along the Rio Grande], Civil War Times Ill., 36, February, 48-54.

JOHN KELLY DAMICO. Confederate Soldiers Take Matters into Their Own Hands: The End of the Civil War in North Louisiana. La. Hist., 39, Spring, 189-205.

JAMES I. DANTIC. The Kentucky Volunteer Foot Soldier in the Mexican War: A Social History of Company B, Second Regiment, Kentucky Infantry Volunteers. Reg. Ky. Hist. Quar., 95, Summer [1997], 237-83.

ROGER A. DAVIDSON JR. "They Have Never Been Known To Falter": The First United States Colored Infantry in Virginia and North Carolina. Civil War Rgmts., 6, no. 1, pp. 1-26.

ROBERT S. DAVIS JR., [comp.]. "Every Crossroads and Farm": Confederate General Henry DeLamar Clayton's Civil War Maps of Northwestern Geor- gia [photo essay of maps with intro.]. Ga. Hist. Quar., 82, Spring, 151-67.

JAMES M. DENHAM and KEITH L. HUNEYCUTT, [eds.]. With Scott in Mexico: Letters of Captain James W. Anderson in the Mexican War, 1846-1847 [documents with intro.]. Mil. Hist. of the West, 28, Spring, 19-48.

CHARLES A. EARP. Death of a Soldier [letters by Issac W. Lashley pub. posthumously in 1864]. Md. Hist. Mag., 93, Fall, 348-52.

HARRY G. ENOCH. One Man's Experience in a One Hundred Day Regiment: Barzilla R. Shaw and the 143d Ohio Volunteer Infantry. Ohio Hist., 107, Summer-Autumn, 185-201.

UZAL ENT. Rebels in Pennsylvania! [Lee's pre-Gettysburg objectives in Pa.]. Civil War Times Ill., 37, Aug., 46-52, 64-66.

DAMON EUBANK. A Time for Heroes, A Time for Honor: Kentucky Soldiers in the Mexican War. Filson Club Hist. Quar., 72, April, 174-92.

CHRIS E. FONVIELLE JR. "Making the Obstinate Stand": The Battle of Town Creek and the Fall of Wilmington [N.C.]. Civil War Rgmts., 6, no. 1, pp. 27-55.

TOM L. FRANZMANN. "Peculiarly situated between rebellion and loyalty": Civilized Tribes, Savagery, and the American Civil War. Chron. Okla., 76, Summer, 140-59.

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SOUTHERN HISTORY IN PERIODICALS 339

HERSCHEL GOWER. General Dahlgren Leads His Family Home. Jour. Miss. Hist., 60, Summer, 122-45.

MARK GRIMSLEY. In Not So Dubious Battle: The Motivations of American Civil War Soldiers [review essay of two recent books]. Jour. Mil. Hist., 62, January, 175-88.

THERESA M. GUZMAN-STOKES. A Flag and a Family: Richard Gill Forrester, 1847-1906 [first Union flag raised over Richmond, 1865]. Va. Cavalcade, 47, Spring, 52-63.

NOEL G. HARRISON. Atop an Anvil: The Civilians' War in Fairfax and Alex- andria Counties, April 1861-April 1862. Va. Mag. Hist. and Biog., 106, Spring, 133-64.

CHRIS J. HARTLEY. "Like An Avalanche": George Stoneman's 1865 Cavalry Raid. Civil War Rgmts., 6, no. 1, pp. 74-92.

ANDERS HENRIKSSON, trans. and ed. The Narrative of Friedrich Meyer: A German Freiwilliger (Volunteer) in the Army of the Potomac. Civil War Rgmts., 6, no. 2, pp. 1-22.

DON HIGGINBOTHAM. The Federalized Militia Debate: A Neglected Aspect of Second Amendment Scholarship. William and Mary Quar., 3d ser., 55, Jan., 39-58.

GILBERTO HINOJOSA. Texas-Mexico Border: A Turbulent History. Texas Jour., 20, Fall/Winter [1997], 10-15.

G. WARD HUBBS. What They Fought for ... in Greensboro, Alabama. Sou. Hist., 19, Spring, 5-13.

TERRY A. JOHNSTON JR. From Fox's Gap to the Sherrick Farm: The 79th New York Highlanders in the Maryland Campaign. Civil War Rgmts., 6, no. 2, pp. 58-88.

JAMES B. JONES JR. The Third Battle of Franklin, September 27, 1923. Tenn. Hist. Quar., 57 [56], Fall [1997], 170-81.

WILLIAM T. KERRIGAN. Race, Expansion, and Slavery in Eagle Pass, Texas, 1852. Southwestern Hist. Quar., 101, Jan., 274-301.

GEORGE B. KIRSCH. Bats, Balls, and Bullets: Baseball and the Civil War. Civil War Times Ill., 37, May, 30-37.

RHONDA M. KOHL. On Grant's Front Line: The Fifth Illinois Cavalry in Mississippi. Ill. Hist. Jour., 91, Spring, 41-56.

ANGELA LEE. Fighting with 'Kilcavalry' [1864 battle in Waynesborough, Ga.]. Civil War Times Ill., 37, June, 62-75.

LLOYD LEWIS. Propaganda and the Kansas-Missouri War. Mo. Hist. Rev., 92, Jan., 135-48.

FRANCIS MAcDONNELL. The Confederate Spin on Winfield Scott and George Thomas. Civil War Hist., 44, Dec., 255-66.

DANA M. MANGHAM. The Civil War Letters of Willoughby Hill Mangham- Private, "Quitman Greys," Company I, Eleventh Georgia Regiment Vol- unteer Infantry, Part Two: Yorktown to Prison, 1862-1864. Atlanta Hist., 41, Winter, 31-46.

BILL MCCARTHY. One Month in the Summer of '63: Pittsburgh Prepares for the Civil War. Pittsburgh Hist., 81, Fall, 118-33.

JENNIFER DAVIS McDAID. With Lame Legs and No Money: Virginia's Dis- abled Confederate Veterans. Va. Cavalcade, 47, Winter, 14-25.

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MICHAEL A. McDONNELL. Popular Mobilization and Political Culture in Revolutionary Virginia: The Failure of the Minutemen and the Revolution from Below. Jour. Am. Hist., 85, Dec., 946-81.

STANLEY S. McGoWEN. The Spanish Retreat from the Mississippi Valley, 1763-1795: Historical Fact or Misinterpretation? Jour. West, 37, July, 83-89.

GARY R. MORMINO. Tampa's Splendid Little War: Local History and the Cuban War of Independence [1898]. Mag. of Hist., 12, Spring, 37-42.

LoIs LAWSON MORRIS. An Adolescent Confederate at War: John L. Lawson of the 42nd Georgia. Ga. Hist. Quar., 82, Summer, 369-81.

MARK E. NEELY JR. "Unbeknownst" to Lincoln: A Note on Radical Pacifi- cation in Missouri during the Civil War. Civil War Hist., 44, Sept., 212-16.

PETER NEUSHUL. Andrew Jackson Higgins and the Mass Production of World War II Landing Craft [New Orleans shipbuilder]. La. Hist., 39, Spring, 133-66.

DAVID A. NORRIS. "For the Benefit of Our Gallant Volunteers": North Caro- lina's State Medical Department and Civilian Volunteer Efforts, 1861- 1862. N.C. Hist. Rev., 75, July, 297-326.

. Battle in the Buff [Boone's Mill, N.C.; rebels fight nude in 1863]. Civil War Times Ill., 37, Dec., 72-74, 101-7.

ROBERT F. PACE. "It Was Bedlam Let Loose": The Louisiana Sugar Country and the Civil War. La. Hist., 39, Fall, 389-409.

PETER J. PARISH. The Will to Fight and the Will to Write: Some Recent Books on the American Civil War [review essay on 8 books]. Jour. Am. Stud., 32, Aug., 295-305.

JEFFREY L. PATRICK and ROBERT WILLEY, eds. "We have surely done a big work": The Diary of a Hoosier Soldier on Sherman's "March to the Sea." Ind. Mag. Hist., 94, Sept., 214-39.

NANCY SIMONS PETERSON. Guarded Pasts: The Lives and Offspring of Colonel George and Clara (Baldwin) Bomford [Col. Bomford was Chief of Ord- nance, U.S. Army; d. 1848]. Nat. Genealogical Soc. Quar., 86, Dec., 283-305.

FRANCELLE PRUITT. "We've Got to Fight or Die:" Early Texas Reaction to the Confederate Draft, 1862. East Texas Hist. Jour., 36, no. 1, pp. 3-17.

JAMES S. PULA. Battle in the Swamp: William Cogwell's Brigade at the Battle of Averasboro [N.C.]. Civil War Rgmts., 6, no. 1, pp. 56-73.

BOB REA. The Washita Trail: The Seventh U.S. Cavalry's Route of March to and from the Battle of the Washita [1868]. Chron. Okla., 76, Fall, 244-61.

WILLIAM L. RICHTER. "Oh God, Let Us Have Revenge": Ben Griffith and His Family during the Civil War and Reconstruction [violent and disgruntled Confed. veteran]. Ark. Hist. Quar., 57, Autumn, 255-86.

PEGGY ROBBINS. By Land and By Sea [biography of Confed. navy officer John Taylor Wood (1830-1904)]. Civil War Times Ill., 37, March, 42-45, 53- 59.

STEVEN LOUIS ROCA. Presence and Precedents: The USS Red Rover during the American Civil War, 1861-1865. Civil War Hist., 44, June, 91-110.

ROLDOLFO ROCHA. The Sting of Power and Rebellion [Texas/U.S and Mex. boundary dispute]. Texas Jour., 20, Fall/Winter [1997], 22-27.

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DAVID J. RUTLEDGE, ed. Elizabeth Jamison's [1814-1888] Tale of the War. S.C. Hist. Mag., 99, Oct., 312-39.

DANIEL J. SALEMSON, ed. "to spend some time as a missionary among the colored people": The Civil War Writings of an Indiana Quaker in the South. Southern Friend, 20, Spring, 5-75.

THEODORE P. SAVAS, ed. Charleston: Battles and Seacoast Operations in South Carolina [introduction and 5 articles]. Civil War Rgmts., 5, no. 2 [1996].

SCOTT M. SHERLOCK. The Lost Order and the Press [Lee's order re. deploy- ment of troops in Md.]. Civil War Rgmts., 6, no. 2, pp. 174-76.

DONALD G. SHOMETTE. The Guns of St. Mary's [recovery of 17th-cent. guns transported on Ark and Dove]. Md. Hist. Mag., 93, Winter, 476-96.

WALLACE SHUGG. The Cigar Boat: Ross Winan's Maritime Wonder [1858]. Md. Hist. Mag., 93, Winter, 428-42

DAVID A. SMITH. From the Mississippi to the Mediterranean: The 1891 New Orleans Lynching and its Effects on United States Diplomacy and the American Navy [lynching of 11 Italians led to tensions bet. U.S. and Italy causing U.S. to strengthen navy]. Sou. Historian, 19, Spring, 60-85.

GERALD J. SMITH. "One of The Most Daring of Men": The Life of Confederate General William Tatum Wofford [1823-84]. Jour. Conf Hist., 16, xiv, 241.

MARK A. SNELL. Baptism of Fire: The 118th ("Corn Exchange") Pennsylvania Infantry at the Battle of Shepherdstown. Civil War Rgmts., 6, no. 2, pp. 119-42.

TOMMY STRINGER. Air Activities of Texas: A Small Town's Contribution to the Big War [Air Activities was Corsicana air field prog. to train pilots for WWII]. East Texas Hist. Jour., 36, no. 2, pp. 10-21.

DANIEL E. SUTHERLAND [ed.] "We must do the best we can": The Civil War Letters of Albert Chipman, 76th Illinois Infantry: Part 1 [documents with introduction]. Mil. Hist. of the West, 28, Spring, 49-94.

."We must do the best we can": The Civil War Letters of Albert Chipman, 76th Illinois Infantry: Part 2. Mil. Hist. of the West, 28, Fall, 185-223.

WILEY SWORD. The Other Stonewall: The Short Life and Brilliant Career of Patrick Cleburne [1828-1864]. Civil War Times Ill., 36, February, 36-44.

BRENT TARTER. The Barron Family: A Virginia Naval Dynasty [1732-1892]. Va. Cavalcade, 47, Autumn, 166-77.

WILLIAM G. THOMAS III. In the Valley of the Shadow: Communities and History in the American Civil War. Va. Mag. Hist. and Biog., 106, Sum- mer, 301-18.

JERRY THOMPSON. "Gloom Over Our Fair Land": Socorro County During the Civil War. N.M. Hist. Rev., 73, April, 99-119.

EUGENE C. TIDBALL. The View from the Top of the Knoll: Capt. John C. Tidball's Memoir of the First Battle at Bull Run. Civil War Hist., 44, Sept., 175-93.

JOE L. TODD. "Softened as into a Dream": The Letters of Robert B. Huston [1864-1900]. Oklahoma Rough Rider. Chron. Okla., 76, Spring, 4-19.

B. KEITH TONEY. "Dying As Brave Men Should Die": The Attack and Defense of Burnside's Bridge. Civil War Rgmts., 6, no. 2, pp. 89-118.

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HELEN TRIMPI, ed. Lafayette McLaws' Aide-de-Camp: The Maryland Cam- paign Diary of Captain Henry Lord Page King. Civil War Rgmts., 6, no. 2, pp. 23-57.

MICHAEL G. WADE. "I Would Rather Be Among the Comanches": The Mili- tary Occupation of Southwest Louisiana, 1865. La. Hist., 39, Winter, 45- 64.

MATTHEW WARSHAUER. The Battle of New Orleans Reconsidered: Andrew Jackson and Martial Law. La. Hist., 39, Summer, 261-91.

. Andrew Jackson as a "Military Chieftain" in the 1824 and 1828 Presidential Elections: The Ramifications of Martial Law on American Republicanism. Tenn. Hist. Quar., 57, Spring/Summer, 4-23.

ANSLEY HERRING WEGNER. Phantom Pain: Civil War Amputation and North Carolina's Maimed Veterans. N.C. Hist. Rev., 75, July, 277-96.

MARK A. WEITZ. Drill, Training, and the Combat Performance of the Civil War Soldier: Dispelling the Myth of the Poor Soldier, Good Fighter. Jour. Mil. Hist., 62, April, 263-90.

WILLIAM R. WELLS II. "Every Protection That Was Asked for ...": The United States Revenue Cutter Ingham, Texas Independence, and New Or- leans, 1835. La. Hist., 39, Fall, 457-79.

FRANK WHEELER. "Our Confederate Dead": The Story Behind Savannah's Confederate Monument. Ga. Hist. Quar., 82, Summer, 382-97.

CLAY WILLIAMS. Lost Chance to Save Vicksburg. Jour. Miss. Hist., 60, Spring, 5-19.

The Wrath of Sherman [special issue: 4 articles on Sherman's 1864 cam- paign]. Civil War Times Ill., 37, Oct.

RICHARD ZEITLIN. The Iron Brigade Melded [rev. essay of The Men Stood Like Iron], Wis. Mag. Hist., 81, Summer, 294-96.

GARY ZELLAR. Occupying the Middle Ground: African Creeks in the First Indian Home Guard, 1862-1865 [African American (former slaves and free blacks of Creek and Seminole nations) soldiers in the U.S. Army during the Civil War]. Chron. Okla., 76, Spring, 48-71.

POLITICS AND GOVERNMENT

WHIT AYERS and JON McHENRY. Whither Southern Republicans? Sou. Cult., 4, Spring, 19-27.

ALWYN BARR. Reconstruction Change and Continuity in Brazoria County, Texas. Houston Rev., 18, no. 2 [1996], 114-23.

MICHAEL LES BENEDICT. A New Look at the Impeachment of Andrew Johnson. Pol. Sci. Quar., 113, Fall, 493-511.

PRISCILLA BENHAM. Houston Mayors: Developing a City [1837-1857], East Texas Hist. Jour., 36, no. 1, pp. 60-71.

THAD BEYLE. High Costs of Winning-And Losing [sou. gov. races]. Sou. Cult., 4, Spring, 71-77.

WARREN M. BILLINGS. The Return of Sir William Berkeley. Va. Cavalcade, 47, Summer, 100-109.

EARL BLACK. The Newest Southern Politics. Jour. Pol., 60, Aug., 591-612. JOHN DAVID BLADEK. "Virginia Is Middle Ground": The Know Nothing Party

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and the Virginia Gubernatorial Election of 1855. Va. Mag. Hist. and Biog., 106, Winter, 35-70.

DAN BLUE. Reflections on Redistricting. Sou. Cult., 4, Spring, 88-90. FRED BLUE. The Salmon P. Chase Papers: A Review Essay. Civil War Hist.,

44, Dec., 285-88. DAVID L. CHAPPELL. The Divided Mind of Southern Segregationists. Ga. Hist.

Quar., 82, Spring, 45-72. . What's Racism Got to Do With It? Orval Faubus, George Wallace,

and the New Right [rev. essay of 3 books]. Ark. Hist. Quar., 57, Winter, 453-71.

J. W. COOKE. The Life and Death of Colonel Solomon P. Sharp [1787-1825], Part 1: Uprightness and Inventions; Snares and Nets. Filson Club Hist. Quar., 72, Jan., 24-41.

LANCE A. COOPER. "A Slobbering Lame Thing"? The Semicolon Case Re- considered [Ex Parte Rodriguez, 1873]. Southwestern Hist. Quar., 101, Jan., 320-39.

BARRY A. CROUCH. A Political Education: George T. Ruby [African- American Texas state senator] and the Texas Freedmen's Bureau. Houston Rev., 18, no. 2 [1996], 144-56.

NATALIE DAVIS. Follow the Money [Ala. politics]. Sou. Cult., 4, Spring, 62-70.

DOUGLAS R. EGERTON. Black Independence Struggles and the Tale of Two Revolutions: A Review Essay [of 7 books]. Jour. Sou. Hist., 64, Feb., 95-116.

JIM FAY. Lincoln and Douglas at the Bryant Cottage [pre-debates mtg. of July 29, 1858]. Lincoln Herald, 100, Spring, 11-28.

MICHAEL W. FITZGERALD. Republican Factionalism and Black Empowerment: The Spencer-Warner Controversy and Alabama Reconstruction, 1868- 1880. Jour. Sou. Hist., 64, Aug. 473-94.

ROBERT H. FOWLER. Mouth of the South [N.C. Governor Zebulon Vance]. Civil War Times Ill., 37, June, 46-52, 76.

LINDA G. FRYER. Documents Relating to the Formation of the Carolina Com- pany in Scotland, 1682. S.C. Hist. Mag., 99, April, 110-34.

FREDERICK B. GATES. The Georgia Land Act of 1803: Political Struggle in a One-Party State. Ga. Hist. Quar., 82, Spring, 1-21.

ANITA SHAFER GOODSTEIN. A Rare Alliance: African American and White Women in the Tennessee Elections of 1919 and 1920. Jour. Sou. Hist., 64, May, 219-46.

COLE BLEASE GRAHAM JR. Between a Rock and a Hard Place: South Caroli- na's Republican Presidential Primary [20th cent.]. Sou. Cult., 4, Spring, 43-51.

SUSAN-MARY C. GRANT. Representative Mann: Horace Mann [1796-1859], the Republican Experiment, and the South. Jour. Am. Stud., 32, April, 105-23.

FERREL GUILLORY. The Culture of Southern Politics [intro. to 8 essays]. Sou. Cult., 4, Spring, 16-18.

. A Political Paradox: North Carolina's Twenty-Five Years Under Jim Hunt and Jesse Helms. Sou. Cult., 4, Spring, 52-61.

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EDWARD F. HAAS. Political Continuity in the Crescent City: Toward an In- terpretation of New Orleans Politics, 1874-1986. La. Hist., 39, Winter, 5-18.

MARTIN HALPERN. Arkansas and the Defeat of Labor Law Reform in 1978 and 1994. Ark. Hist. Quar., 57, Summer, 99-133.

CHARLES M. HARVEY. Missouri from 1849 to 1861. Mo. Hist. Rev., 92, Jan., 119-34.

GILBERTO HINOJOSA. Texas-Mexico Border: A Turbulent History. Texas Jour., 20, FalllWinter [1997], 10-15.

WARREN R. HOFSTRA. "The Extention [sic] of His Majesties Dominions": The Virginia Backcountry and the Reconfiguration of Imperial Frontiers. Jour. Am. Hist., 84, March, 1281-1312.

M. V. HOOD III and IRWIN L. MORRIS. Boll Weevils and Roll-Call Voting: A Study in Time and Space. Legislative Stud. Quar., 23, May, 245-69.

PAUL HORTON. Submitting to the "Shadow of Slavery": The Secession Crisis and Civil War in Alabama's Lawrence County. Civil War Hist., 44, June, 111-36.

SAMUEL C. HYDE JR. Mechanisms of Planter Power in Eastern Louisiana's Piney Woods, 1810-1860. La. Hist., 39, Winter, 19-44.

NED IRWIN. The Lost Papers of the "Lost State of Franklin." Jour. East. Tenn. Hist., 69, [1997], pp. 84-96.

KENNETH R. JANKEN. From Colonial Liberation to Cold War Liberalism: Walter White, the NAACP, and Foreign Affairs, 1941-1955. Ethnic and Racial Stud., 21, Nov., 1074-95.

JEFFERY A. JENKINS and BRIAN R. SALA. The Spatial Theory of Voting and the Presidential Election of 1824. Am. Jour. Pol. Sci., 42, Oct., 1157-79.

CRAIG ALLAN KAPLOWITZ. A Breath of Fresh Air: Segregation, Parks, and Progressivism in Nashville, Tennessee, 1900-1920. Tenn. Hist. Quar., 57, Fall, 132-49.

THOMAS J. KiFFMEYER. From Self-Help to Sedition: The Appalachian Volun- teers in Eastern Kentucky, 1964-1970. Jour. Sou. Hist., 64, Feb., 65-94.

DESMOND KING. A Strong or Weak State? Race and the US Federal Govern- ment in the 1920s. Ethnic and Racial Stud., 21, January, 21-47.

KATE S. KIRKLAND. For All Houston's Children: Ima Hogg and the Board of Education, 1943-1949. Southwestern Hist. Quar., 101, April, 460-95.

MILTON M. KLEIN. Academic Freedom at the University of Tennessee: The McCarthy Era. Jour. East. Tenn. Hist., 69, [1997], pp. 62-83.

DEAN J. KOTLOWSKI. Richard Nixon and the Origins of Affirmative Action. Historian, 60, Spring, 523-41.

. Nixon's Southern Strategy Revisited. Jour. Policy History, 10, no. 2, pp. 207-38.

HARRY S. LAVER. "Chimney Corner Constitutions": Democratization and Its Limits in Frontier Kentucky. Reg. Ky. Hist. Soc., 95, Autumn, 337-67.

IRA M. LECHNER. Massive Resistance: Virginia's Great Leap Backward [school deseg.]. Va. Quar. Rev., 74, Autumn, 631-40.

CALVIN R. LEDBETTER. Carl Bailey [gov. of Ark., 1937-41]: A Pragmatic Reformer, Ark. Hist. Quar., 57, Summer, 134-59.

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ALEX LICHTENSTEIN. The Cold War and the "Negro Question" [rev. essay of three books]. Radical Hist. Rev., 72, Fall, 185-93.

WILLIAM A. LINK. The Jordan Hatcher Case: Politics and "A Spirit of Insub- ordination" in Antebellum Virginia. Jour. Sou. Hist., 64, Nov., 615-48.

ISIDOR LOEB. The Beginnings of Missouri Legislation [1804]. Mo. Hist. Rev., 92, April, 222-37.

KYLE LONGLEY. White Knight for Civil Rights? The Civil Rights Record of Senator Albert A. Gore, Sr. Tenn. Hist. Quar., 57, Fall, 114-31.

RICHARD LOWE. The Freedmen's Bureau and Local White Leaders in Virginia. Jour. Sou. Hist., 64, Aug., 455-72.

VAUGHN MAY. Promoting Good by Being Quiet: Racial Moderation in Ten- nessee, 1967-1971. Tenn. Hist. Quar., 56, Winter, 278-93.

LARRY MCCLELLAN. The Know-Nothings and Democratic Organization in Harrison County. East Texas Hist. Jour., 36, no. 2, pp. 22-34.

MAC MCCORKLE. "The Dread Handwriting is on the Wall": Confronting the New Republican South. Sou. Cult., 4, Spring, 28-42.

DENNIS K. McDANIEL. The First Congressman Martin Dies [1870-1922] of Texas. Southwestern Hist. Quar., 102, Oct., 130-61.

ROBERT M. S. McDONALD. Race, Sex, and Reputation: Thomas Jefferson and the Sally Hemings Story. Sou. Cult., 4, Summer, 46-63.

MICHAEL A. McDONNELL. Popular Mobilization and Political Culture in Revolutionary Virginia: The Failure of the Minutemen and the Revolution from Below. Jour. Am. Hist., 85, Dec., 946-81.

GORDON B. McKINNEY. Zebulon Vance and His Reconstruction of the Civil War in North Carolina. N.C. Hist. Rev., 75, Jan., 69-85.

MATTHEW MULCAHY. The "Great Fire" of 1740 and the Politics of Disaster Relief in Colonial Charleston. S.C. Hist. Mag., 99, April, 135-57.

CYNTHIA E. OROZCO. Regionalism, Politics, and Gender in Southwest History: The League of United Latin American Citizens' Expansion into New Mexico from Texas, 1929-1945, Western Hist. Quar., 29, Winter, 459-83.

GEORGE S. PABIS. Delaying the Deluge: The Engineering Debate over Flood Control on the Lower Mississippi River, 1846-1861. Jour. Sou. Hist., 64, Aug., 421-54.

SANDRA M. PETROVICH. Robert Cavelier, Sieur de la Salle's Adventures and Texas: The Making and Breaking of French Colonial Policy. East Texas Hist. Jour., 36, no. 2, pp. 35-41.

AARON D. PURCELL. Undermining the TVA: George Berry, David Lilienthal, and Arthur Morgan. Tenn. Hist. Quar., 57, Fall, 168-89.

KAREN ROBBINS. Ambition Rewarded: James McHenry's [1753-1816] Entry into Maryland Politics. Md. Hist. Mag., 93, Summer, 190-214.

ROLDOLFO ROCHA. The Sting of Power and Rebellion [Texas/U.S and Mex. boundary dispute]. Texas Jour., 20, Fall/Winter [1997], 22-27.

WILLIAM WARREN ROGERS JR. "Not Reconstructed By A Long Ways Yet": Southwest Georgia's Disputed Congressional Election of 1870. Ga. Hist. Quar., 82, Summer, 257-82.

LEONARD SCHLUP. Hernando De Soto Money [1839-1912]: War Advocate and Anti-Imperialist, 1898-1900. Jour. Miss. Hist., 60, Winter, 315-39.

MATTHEW SCHOENBACHLER. Republicanism in the Age of Democratic Revo-

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lution: The Democratic-Republican Societies of the 1790s. Jour. Early Rep., 18, Summer, 237-61.

WILLIAM G. SHADE. "The Most Delicate and Exciting Topics": Martin Van Buren, Slavery, and the Election of 1836. Jour. Early Rep., 18, Fall, 459- 84.

MEGAN TAYLOR SHOCKLEY. King of the Wild Frontier vs. King Andrew I: Davy Crockett and the Election of 1831. Tenn. Hist. Quar., 57 [56], Fall [1997], 158-69.

FLOYD C. SHOEMAKER. David Barton [1783-1837], John Rice Jones [1759- 1824] and Edward Bates [1793-1869]: Three Missouri State and Statehood Founders. Mo. Hist. Rev., 92, April, 254-70.

SHLOMO SLONIM. Motives at Philadelphia, 1787: Gordon Wood's Neo- Beardian Thesis Reexamined [plus comment by Wood and rejoinder by Slonim]. Law and Hist. Rev., 16, Fall, 527-66.

JOHN DAVID SMITH. "The Work It Did Not Do Because It Could Not": Georgia and the "New" Freedmen's Bureau Historiography [review essay]. Ga. Hist. Quar., 82, Summer, 331-49.

NAN SNOW and DOROTHY STUCK. The Formidable Roberta Fulbright [1874- 1953, mother of Sen. J. Wm. Fulbright]. Ark. Hist. Quar., 57, Spring, 33-45.

THOMAS T. SPENCER. Printer and Politician: The Political Career of George L. Berry, 1907-1948. Tenn. Hist. Quar., 57 [56], Fall [1997], 213-29.

RICHARD H. STECKEL. Migration and Political Conflict: Precincts in the Mid- west on the Eve of the Civil War [1860 election]. Jour. Interdis. Hist., 28, Spring, 583-603.

LANDON R. Y. STORRS. Gender and the Development of the Regulatory State: The Controversy over Restricting Women's Night Work in the Depression- Era South. Jour. Policy Hist., 10, no. 2, pp. 179-206.

JAMES R. SWEENEY. Southern Strategies: The 1970 Election for the United States Senate in Virginia. Va. Mag. Hist. and Biog., 106, Spring, 165-200.

ROBERT THOMPSON. Barefoot and Pregnant: The Education of Paul Van Dalsem [Ark. legislator, 1936-76]. Ark. Hist. Quar., 57, Winter, 377-407.

SUE TOLLESON-RHINEHART. Can the Flower of Southern Womanhood Bloom in the Garden of Southern Politics? Sou. Cult., 4, Spring, 78-87.

MICHAEL TOWER. Fred Tecumseh Waite [1853-1895]: The Outlaw Statesman [former outlaw, became atty. gen. of Chickasaw nation]. Chron. Okla., 76, Summer, 190-217.

FRANK TOWERS. Violence as a Tool of Party Dominance: Election Riots and the Baltimore Know-Nothings, 1854-1860. Md. Hist. Mag., 93, Spring, 4-37.

TIMOTHY B. TYSON. Robert F. Williams, "Black Power," and the Roots of the African American Freedom Struggle. Jour. Am. Hist., 85, Sept., 540-70.

JACK R. VAN DER SLIK and STEPHEN J. SCHWARK. Clinton and the New Cov- enant: Theology Shaping a New Politics or Old Politics in Religious Garb. Jour. Church and State, 40, Autumn, 873-90.

DONALD R. WALKER. Attacking the Texas Tammany: Caro Brown [journalist] vs. George B. Parr of Duval County. Tex. Gulf Hist. and Bio. Rec., 34, pp. 20-33.

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MATTHEW WARSHAUER. Andrew Jackson as a "Military Chieftain" in the 1824 and 1828 Presidential Elections: The Ramifications of Martial Law on American Republicanism. Tenn. Hist. Quar., 57, Spring/Summer, 4-23.

KIRT H. WILSON. The Contested Space of Prudence in the 1874-1875 Civil Rights Debate [U.S. Congress]. Quar. Jour. Speech, 84, May, 131-49.

KEVIN L. YUILL. The 1966 White House Conference on Civil Rights. Hist. Jour., 41, March, 259-82.

RELIGION

FRANS C. AMELINCKX. Social Christianity in Short Stories and Novellas of Michel Seligny [1807-67, La. creole writer]. La. Hist., 39, Winter, 65-72.

BRYON C. ANDREASEN. Proscribed Preachers, New Churches: Civil Wars in the Illinois Protestant Churches During the Civil War. Civil War Hist., 44, Sept., 194-211.

ALWYN BARR. Black Urban Churches on the Southern Frontier, 1865-1900. Jour. Negro Hist., 82, Fall [1997], 368-83.

MARK K. BAUMAN. Factionalism and Ethnic Politics in Atlanta: The German Jews from the Civil War through the Progressive Era. Ga. Hist. Quar., 82, Fall, 533-58.

and BOBBI MALONE. Directions in Southern Jewish History [intro. to sp. issue on sou. Jewish hist.]. Am. Jewish Hist., 85, Sept. [1997], 191-93.

and BOBBI MALONE. Directions in Southern Jewish History II. [intro. to sp. issue on sou. Jewish hist.]. Am. Jewish Hist., 85, Dec. [1997], 351-52.

ROSALIE BECK. W. H. Witsitt and Texas Baptists. Baptist Hist. and Heritage, 33, Autumn, 42-48.

SHAUNA BIGHAM and ROBERT E. MAY. The Time O' All Times? Masters, Slaves, and Christmas in the Old South. Jour. Early Rep., 18, Summer, 263-88.

JAMES D. BRATT. The Reorientation of American Protestantism, 1835-1845. Church Hist., 67, March, 52-82.

KAREN O'DELL BULLOCK. Buckner Baptist Benevolences and the Texas Bap- tist Convention: Partnership of Hearts and Hands and Hope [pastorate of Robert Cooke Buckner (1833-1919)]. Baptist Hist. and Heritage, 33, Au- tumn, 71-86.

H. B. CAVALCANTI. God and Labor in the South: Southern Baptists and the Right to Unionize, 1930-1950. Jour. Church and State, 40, Summer, 639- 60.

DAVID L. CHAPPELL. Religious Ideas of the Segregationists. Jour. Am. Stud., 32, Aug., 237-62.

DONALD CUNNIGEN. Working for Racial Integration: The Civil Rights Activ- ism of Bishop Duncan Montgomery Gray of Mississippi. Anglican and Epis. Hist., 67, Dec., 480-501.

CHARLES DEWEESE. Relevancy for Today: Doing Baptist History in a Climate of Controversy-Principles and Pitfalls. Baptist Hist. and Heritage, 33, Autumn, 57-60.

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TOBY DRUIN. The Baptist Standard, Texas Baptists, and Southern Baptists. Baptist Hist. and Heritage, 33, Autumn, 61-70.

LARRY ESKRIDGE. "One Way": Billy Graham, the Jesus Generation, and the Idea of an Evangelical Youth Culture [Graham as southerner]. Church Hist., 67, March, 83-106.

SETH FORMAN. The Unbearable Whiteness of Being Jewish: Desegregation in the South and the Crisis of Jewish Liberalism. Am. Jewish Hist., 85, June [1997], 121-42.

EDWIN S. GAUSTAD. Thomas Jefferson, Religious Freedom, and the Supreme Court. Church Hist., 67, Dec., 682-94.

EUGENE D. GENOVESE. Olmsted's Cracker Preacher. Sou. Cult., 4, Fall, 54-62. C. WALKER GOLLAR. Catholic Slaves and Slaveholders in Kentucky. Catholic

Hist. Rev., 84, Jan., 42-62. GARY C. GRASSL. Joachim Gans of Prague: The First Jew in English America.

Am. Jewish Hist., 86, June, 195-217. MARK I. GREENBERG. Becoming Southern: The Jews of Savannah, Georgia,

1830-70. Am. Jewish Hist., 86, March, 55-75. BARRY HANKINS. Principle, Perception, and Position: Why Southern Baptist

Conservatives Differ from Moderates on Church-State Issues. Jour. Church and State, 40, Spring, 343-70.

DAVID C. R. HEISSER. Bishop [Patrick Neison] Lynch's Civil War Pamphlet on Slavery [pro]. Catholic Hist. Rev., 84, Oct., 681-96.

E. BROOKS HOLIHELD. Theology as Entertainment: Oral Debate in American Religion. Church Hist., 67, Sept., 499-520.

CHARLES F. IRONS. And All These Things Shall Be Added unto You: The First African Baptist Church, Richmond, 1841-1865. Va. Cavalcade, 47, Win- ter, 26-35.

CHARLES A. ISRAEL. From Biracial to Segregated Churches: Black and White Protestants in Houston, Texas, 1840-1870. Southwestern Hist. Quar., 101, April, 428-58.

WILLIAM COURTLAND JOHNSON. "A Delusive Clothing": Christian Conversion in the Antebellum Slave Community. Jour. Negro Hist., 82, Summer [1997], 295-311.

GLENN JONAS. The Political Side of B. H. Carroll. Baptist Hist. and Heritage, 33, Autumn, 49-56.

GEORGE FENWICK JONES and PAUL MARTIN PEUCHER, trans. and ed. "We Have Come to Georgia With Pure Intentions": Moravian Bishop August Gottlieb Spangenberg's Letters From Savannah, 1735 [trans. documents w/intro.]. Ga. Hist. Quar., 82, Spring, 84-120.

YITZCHAK KEREM. The Settlement of Rhodian and Other Sephardic Jews in Montgomery and Atlanta in the Twentieth Century. Am. Jewish Hist., 85, Dec. [1997], 373-91.

HERMAN LANDAU. First-Person History: American Ghetto [memoir of Jewish neighborhood of Louisville]. Filson Club Hist. Quar., 72, April, 193-98.

BILL J. LEONARD. Baptists in the South: A New Connectionalism. Rev. and Expositor, 95, Winter, 75-85.

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OTTO LOHRENZ. The Advantage of Rank and Status: Thomas Price [1733-83], A Loyalist Parson of Revolutionary Virginia. Historian, 60, Spring, 561- 77.

H. CLARK MADDUX. Edgar Henry Mullins [1860-1928] and Evangelical De- velopments in the Southern Baptist Convention. Baptist Hist. and Heritage, 33, Spring, 62-73.

GWIN MORRIS. J. Frank Norris: Rascal or Reformer. Baptist Hist. and Heri- tage, 33, Autumn, 21-40.

JOHN E. MURRAY and METIN M. COSGEL. Market, Religion, and Culture in Shaker Swine Production, 1788-1880. Agric. Hist., 72, Summer, 552-73.

MARK NEWMAN. The Baptist State Convention of North Carolina and Deseg- regation, 1945-1980. N.C. Hist. Rev., 75, Jan., 1-28.

DONALD L. PARMAN. Riding Circuit in Arkansas, 1844-1845: An Excerpt from the Autobiography of Reverend William Graham. Ark. Hist. Quar., 57, Autumn, 309-39.

. "Wholly Occupied with my Special Work": Reverend William Gra- ham's Stay at Fort Coffee and New Hope, 1845-1847. Chron. Okla., 76, Fall, 262-81.

MARY PATILLO-McCoY. Church Culture as a Strategy of Action in the Black Community. Am. Sociol. Rev., 63, Dec., 767-84.

WILLIAM M. PINSON JR. Texas Baptist Contributions to Ethics: The Life and Influence of T[homas]. B [uford]. Maston [b. 1897] Baptist Hist. and Heri- tage, 33, Autumn, 7-20.

LAWRENCE N. POWELL. When Hate Came to Town: New Orleans' Jews and George Lincoln Rockwell. Am. Jewish Hist., 85, Dec. [1997], 393-419.

KARL PREuSS. Personality, Politics, and the Price of Justice: Ephraim Frisch, San Antonio's "Radical" Rabbi. Am. Jewish Hist., 85, Sept. [1997], 263- 88.

TIMOTHY F. REILLY. The Conscience of a Colonizationist: Parson [Theodore] Clapp and the Slavery Dilemma. La. Hist., 39, Fall, 411-41.

TERRY LEE RIOUX. A Biographical Sketch of George Washington Carroll [1855-1935], Tx. Gulf Hist. and Bio. Rec., 34, 1998, pp. 2-19.

LEONARD ROGOFF. Is the Jew White? The Racial Place of the Southern Jew. Am. Jewish Hist., 85, Sept. [1997], 195-230.

DANIEL J. SALEMSON, ed. "to spend some time as a missionary among the colored people": The Civil War Writings of an Indiana Quaker in the South. Southern Friend, 20, Spring, 5-75.

JIM SCHMIDT. The Reverend John Joachim Zubly's "The Law of Liberty" Sermon: Calvinist Opposition to the American Revolution. Ga. Hist. Quar., 82, Summer, 350-68.

GARDINER H. SHATTUCK JR. "Contending from the Walls of Sion": The Gen- eral Convention Special Program and the Crisis in American Society, 1967-1973. Anglican and Epis. Hist., 67, Dec., 507-38.

MARCO SIOLI. Huguenot Traditions in the Mountains of Kentucky: Daniel Trabue's Memories. Jour. Am. Hist., 84, March, 1313-33.

JACK R. VAN DER SLIK and STEPHEN J. SCHWARK. Clinton and the New Cov- enant: Theology Shaping a New Politics or Old Politics in Religious Garb. Jour. Church and State, 40, Autumn, 873-90.

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DEBORAH R. WEINER. Middlemen of the Coalfields: The Role of Jews in the Economy of Southern West Virginia Coal Towns, 1890-1950. Jour. Appal. Stud., 4, Spring, 29-56.

HOLLACE AVA WEINER. The Mixers: The Role of Rabbis Deep in the Heart of Texas. Am. Jewish Hist., 85, Sept. [1997], 289-332.

ANITA Boss WEISERT and CARL E. KRAMER, ed. German Protestants on the Urban Frontier: The Early History of Louisville's St. John's Evangelical Church. Filson Club Hist. Quar., 72, Oct., 379-418.

LEE SHAI WEISSBACH. East European Immigrants and the Image of Jews in the Small-Town South. Am. Jewish Hist., 85, Sept. [1997], 231-62.

THOMAS E. WILL. The American School of Ethnology: Science and Scripture in the Proslavery Argument. Sou. Historian, 19, Spring, 14-34.

MIKE WILLIAMS. 100 Years after the Whitsitt Controversy: The Role of B[enajah]. H[arvey]. Carroll [Controversy centered on when immersion began as baptism ritual of church]. Baptist Hist. and Heritage, 33, Autumn, 41.

GARY PHILLIP ZOLA. Southern Rabbis and the Founding of the First National Association of Rabbis. Am. Jewish Hist., 85, Dec. [1997], 353-72.

SCIENCE AND MEDICINE

SEAN PATRICK ADAMS. Partners in Geology, Brothers in Frustration: The Antebellum Geological Surveys of Virginia and Pennsylvania. Va. Mag. Hist. and Biog., 106, Winter, 5-34.

CHARLOTTE G. BORST. Teaching Obstetrics at Home: Medical Schools and Home Delivery Services in the First Half of the Twentieth Century. Bull. Hist. Med., 72, Summer, 220-45.

RANDAL L. HALL. Southern Conservatism at Work: Women, Nurses, and the 1878 Yellow Fever Epidemic in Memphis. Tenn. Hist. Quar., 56, Winter, 244-61.

MARIANNE LEUNG. Making the Radical Respectable: Little Rock Clubwomen and the Cause of Birth Control during the 1930s. Ark. Hist. Quar., 57, Spring, 17-32.

JENNIFER DAVIS McDAID. With Lame Legs and No Money: Virginia's Dis- abled Confederate Veterans. Va. Cavalcade, 47, Winter, 14-25.

SYLVIA B. MORRIS. Doctoring in the Cullman County Area Before 1900. Ala. Rev., 51, July, 198-207.

DAVID A. NORRIS. "For the Benefit of Our Gallant Volunteers": North Caro- lina's State Medical Department and Civilian Volunteer Efforts, 1861- 1862. N.C. Hist. Rev., 75, July, 297-326.

GEORGE S. PABIS. Delaying the Deluge: The Engineering Debate over Flood Control on the Lower Mississippi River, 1846-1861. Jour. Sou. Hist., 64, Aug., 421-54.

CHARLES E. PARRISH and LELAND R. JOHNSON. J. Stoddard Johnston Versus the Army Engineers on Canalization of the Kentucky River [1880s-90s]. Filson Club Hist. Quar., 72, Jan., 3-23.

.Engineering the Kentucky River: A Disastrous Debut. Reg. Ky. Hist. Soc., 95, Autumn, 369-94.

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TODD L. SAVITT. Training the "Consecrated, Skillful, Christian Physician": Documents Illustrating Student Life at Leonard Medical School, 1882- 1918 [black med. college affiliated with Shaw Univ., Raleigh, N.C.]. N.C. Hist. Rev., 75, July, 250-76.

LOREN SCHWENINGER. Doctor Jack: A Slave Physician on the Tennessee Fron- tier. Tenn. Hist. Quar., 57, Spring/Summer, 36-41.

C. CALVIN SMITH. Serving the Poorest of the Poor: Black Medical Practitio- ners in the Arkansas Delta, 1880-1960. Ark. Hist. Quar., 57, Autumn, 287-308.

R. C. SMOOT. Dreams, Brick, and Mortar: John Sharpe Chambers and the Origins of the University of Kentucky Medical Center [1920s]. Filson Club Hist. Quar., 72, Jan., 42-75.

MELBOURNE TAPPER. An "Anthropathology" of the "American Negro": An- thropology, Genetics, and the New Racial Science, 1940-1952. Social Hist. of Med. 10, August [1997], 263-89.

BILL L. WEAVER. An Analysis of the Patient Population at the Alabama Insane Hospital, 1861-1892. Ala. Rev., 51, Jan., 37-51.

W. CURTIS WORTHINGTON. Theodore Gaillard Thomas, M.D. [1831-1903]: A South Carolinian's Contribution to the Development of American Medi- cine. S.C. Hist. Mag., 99, Oct., 340-57.

SOCIAL, CULTURAL, AND INTELLECTUAL

MICHAEL C. C. ADAMS. "When the Man knows Death": The Civil War Poems of Nathaniel Southgate Shaler. Reg. Ky. Hist. Soc., 96, Winter, 1-28.

TED ALEXANDER. Destruction, Disease, and Death: The Battle of Antietam and the Sharpsburg Civilians. Civil War Rgmts., 6, no. 2, pp. 142-73.

FREDERICK ALLEN. The American Spirit [history of Bourbon whiskey; Ky. and Tenn.]. Am. Heritage, 49, May/June, 82-92.

SHARON LUBKEMANN ALLEN. Dispossessed Sons and Displaced Meaning in Faulkner's Modem Cosmos. Miss. Quar., 50, Summer [1997], 427-43.

FRANS C. AMELINCKX. Social Christianity in Short Stories and Novellas of Michel Seligny [1807-67, La. creole writer]. La. Hist., 39, Winter, 65-72.

ROD ANDREW JR. Soldiers, Christians, and Patriots: The Lost Cause and Southern Military Schools, 1865-1915. Jour. Sou. Hist., 64, Nov., 677- 710.

STEPHEN ARON. The Legacy of Daniel Boone: Three Generations of Boones and the History of Indian-White Relations. Reg. Ky. Hist. Soc., 95, Summer [1997], 219-36

BRAD AUSTIN. "College Would Be a Dead Old Dump Without It": Intercol- legiate Athletics in East Tennessee During the Depression Era. Jour. East. Tenn. Hist., 69, [1997], 29-61.

REBECCA J. BAILEY. "I Never Thought of My Life as History": A Story of the Hillbilly Exodus and the Price of Assimilation. Jour. Appal. Stud., 3, Fall [1997], 231-42.

JUDITH T. BAINBRIDGE. A "Nursery of Knowledge": The Greenville Female Academy, 1819-1854. S.C. Hist. Mag., 99, Jan., 6-33.

EDWARD E. BAPTIST. Accidental Ethnography in an Antebellum Southern

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Newspaper: Snell's Homecoming Festival [Fla. trickster]. Jour. Am. Hist., 84, March, 1355-83.

PAULA C. BARNES. The Junior League Eleven: Elite Women of Little Rock Struggle for Social Justice. Ark. Hist. Quar., 57, Spring, 46-61.

C. HOMER BAST. Benjamin Keene, 1694-1770: Middling Planter of Dorches- ter County. Md. Hist. Mag., 93, Spring, 38-67.

SEAN BENSON. The Abrahamic Mythopoeia of Sutpen's Design: "Notrespect- ability" in Search of a Dynasty. Miss. Quar., 50, Summer [1997], 451-64.

SHAUNA BIGHAM and ROBERT E. MAY. The Time O' All Times? Masters, Slaves, and Christmas in the Old South. Jour. Early Rep., 18, Summer, 263-88.

ROBIN BLYN. Memory Under Reconstruction: Beloved and the Fugitive Past. Ariz. Quar., 54, Winter, 111-40.

LARRY G. BOWMAN. Cannibals and Sports: The Texas League Comes to Longview and Tyler, Texas, 1932. East Texas Hist. Jour., 36, no. 1, pp. 48-59.

D. CLAYTON BROWN. Modernizing Rural Life: South Carolina's Push for Public Rural Electrification. S.C. Hist. Mag., 99, Jan., 66-85.

KATHLEEN M. BROWN. Antiauthoritarianism and Freedom in Early America. Jour. Am. Hist., 85, June, 77-85.

LES M. BROWN and JOYCE COMPTON BROWN. Riding the Rail to Legend: The North Cove "Tally War" [conflict bet. immigrant workers and residents, 1906] As Show of Force, As Manipulated Account, As Oral History. Jour. Appal. Stud., 4, Fall, 225-38.

TITUS BROWN. A New England Missionary and African-American Education in Macon: Raymond G. Von Tobel at the Ballard Normal School, 1908- 1935. Ga. Hist. Quar., 82, Summer, 283-304.

W. FITZHUGH BRUNDAGE. Commemoration and Conflict: Forgetting and Re- membering the Civil War [rev. essay of 2 books]. Ga. Hist. Quar., 82, Fall, 559-74.

VICTORIA E. BYNUM. "White Negroes" in Segregated Mississippi: Miscege- nation, Racial Identity, and the Law. Jour. Sou. Hist., 64, May, 247-76.

ZACHARY RYAN CALo. From Poor Relief to the Poorhouse: The Response to Poverty in Prince George's County, Maryland, 1710-1770. Md. Hist. Mag., 93, Winter, 393-427.

GAVIN JAMES CAMPBELL. "Music With the Bark On": The Southern Journeys of John and Alan Lomax. Sou. Cult., 4, Fall, 114-19.

DOUGLAS W. CARLSON. "Drinks He to His Own Undoing": Temperance Ide- ology in the Deep South. Jour. Early Rep., 18, Winter, 659-91.

ALMA K. CARPENTER. Haller Nutt: A Correction [Nutt was not a doctor]. Jour. Miss. Hist., 60, Summer, 146-53.

JAMES C. CARPER. William Morgan Beckner [1841-1910]: The Horace Mann of Kentucky. Reg. Ky. Hist. Soc., 96, Winter, 29-60.

MICHAEL W. CASEY. The Closing of Cordell Christian College: A Microcosm of American Intolerance during World War I. Chron. Okla., 76, Spring, 20-37.

DAVID L. CHAPPELL. The Divided Mind of Southern Segregationists. Ga. Hist. Quar., 82, Spring, 45-72.

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SOUTHERN HISTORY IN PERIODICALS 353

DEREK COHEN. The Culture of Slavery: Caliban and Ariel. Dalhousie Rev., 76, Summer [1996], 153-75.

ROBERT COHEN, ed. Public Schools in Hard Times: Letters from Georgia Educators and Students to Eleanor and Franklin Roosevelt, 1933-1940 [documents with intro.]. Ga. Hist. Quar., 82, Spring, 121-49.

J. W. COOKE. The Life and Death of Colonel Solomon P. Sharp [1787-1825]: Part 2: A Time to Weep and a Time to Mourn. Filson Club Hist. Quar., 72, April, 121-51.

CARME MANUEL CUENCA. An Angel in the Plantation: The Economics of Slavery and the Politics of Literary Domesticity in Caroline Lee Hentz's The Planter's Northern Bride. Miss. Quar., 51, Winter, 87-104.

JONATHAN S. CULLICK. The Making of a Historian: Robert Penn Warren's Biography of John Brown. Miss. Quar., 51, Winter, 33-54.

PETER T. DALLEO and J. VINCENT WATCHORN III. Baltimore, the "Babe," and the Bethlehem Steel League, 1918. Md. Hist. Mag., 93, Spring, 88-106.

JOHN WALKER DAVIS. An Air of Defiance: Georgia's State Flag Change of 1956. Ga. Hist. Quar., 82, Summer, 305-30.

JESU'S F. DE LA TEJA. Discovering the Tejano Community in "Early" Texas. Jour. Early Rep., 18, Spring, 73-98.

PAMELA DEAN. "Dear Sisters" and "Hated Rivals": Athletics and Gender at Two New South Women's Colleges, 1893-1920 [Sophie Newcomb Col- lege and North Carolina Normal and Industrial College; part of a special issue on sport in the American South]. Jour. Sport Hist., 24, Fall, 341-57.

TAMARA DENISSOVA. Richard Wright: The Problem of Self-Identification. Miss. Quar., 50, Spring [1997], 239-53.

RITA DOVE. Meditation: On the Bus with Rosa Parks. Ga. Rev., 52, Winter, 642-55.

ANDREW DOYLE. Foolish and Useless Sport: The Southern Evangelical Cru- sade Against Intercollegiate Football. Jour. Sport Hist., 24, Fall, 317-40.

LESLIE W. DUNBAR. The Final New South? Va. Quar. Rev., 74, Winter, 49-58. WAYNE K. DURRILL. New Schooling for a New South: A Community Study

[Wilson County, N.C.] of Education and Social Change, 1875-1885. Jour. Soc. Hist., 31, Fall [1997], 155-81.

JODELLA K. DYRESON. Sporting Activities in the American-Mexican Colonies of Texas, 1821-35. Jour. Sport Hist., 24, Fall [1997], 269-84.

SUSAN A. EACKER. Gender in Paradise: Harriet Beecher Stowe and Postbellum Prose on Florida. Jour. Sou. Hist., 64, Aug., 495-512.

CHARLES EAST. A Talk with Lewis P. Simpson. Sou. Rev., 34, Winter, 89-111. LYNNE A. EBERHARDT. Passion and Propriety: Tidewater Marriages in the

Colonial Chesapeake. Md. Hist. Mag., 93, Fall, 324-47. Edgar Allan Poe's Baltimore. Md. Hist. Mag., 93, Winter, 466-75. GEORGE B. ELLENBERG. "May the club work go on Forever": Home Demon-

stration and Rural Progressivism in 1920s Ballard County. Reg. Ky. Hist. Soc., 96, Spring, 137-66.

JOHN N. FAIN. The Diary [1856-70] of Hiram Fain of Rogersville: An East Tennessee Secessionist. Jour. East Tenn. Hist., 69, [1997], pp. 97-114.

ROBERT A. FERGUSON. "With What Majesty Do We There Ride Above the Storms!": Jefferson at Monticello. Va. Quar. Rev., 74, Autumn, 581-96.

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Louis FERLEGER and RICHARD H. STECKEL. Faulkner's South: Is There Truth in Fiction? Jour. Miss. Hist., 60, Summer, 105-21.

SALLY FITZGERALD. Flannery O'Connor: Patterns of Friendship, Patterns of Love. Ga. Rev., 52, Fall, 407-25.

AARON S. FOGLEMAN. From Slaves, Convicts, and Servants to Free Passengers: The Transformation of Immigration in the Era of the American Revolution. Jour. Am. Hist., 85, June, 43-76.

ANGELA B. FREEMAN. The Origins and Fortunes of Negativity: The West Virginia Worlds of [Tom] Kromer [1906-69], [Breece D'J] Pancake [1952-79], and [Pinckney] Benedict [1964- ][fict. writers]. App. Jour., 25, Spring, 244-69.

BENJAMIN FRIEDLANDER. Auctions of the Mind: Emily Dickinson and Aboli- tion. Ariz. Quar., 54, Spring, 1-26.

EUGENE D. GENOVESE. Olmsted's Cracker Preacher. Sou. Cult., 4, Fall, 54-62. LANGHORNE GIBSON JR. Dash and Drama: Irene Langhorne Gibson, 1873-

1956. Va. Cavalcade, 47, Winter, 4-13. JAMES R. GOFF JR. The Rise of Southern Gospel Music. Church Hist., 67,

Dec., 722-44. JAMES W. GOODRICH. Richard Campbell [early-19th cent. trader/trapper]: The

Missouri Years. Mo. Hist. Rev., 92, April, 297-309. MELISSA FAY GREENE. The Old History-as-Novel Gambit: Leo Frank as a

Fictional Character [rev. essay of The Old Religion by David Mamet]. Ga. Hist. Quar., 82, Spring, 73-83.

ROBERT A. GROSS. The Impudent Historian: Challenging Deference in Early America. Jour. Am. Hist., 85, June, 92-97.

ROBERT H. GUDMESTAD. Baseball, the Lost Cause, and the New South in Richmond, Virginia, 1883-1890. Va. Mag. Hist. and Biog., 106, Summer, 267-300.

KAREN GUENTHER. Judge Roy's Playground: A History of Astroworld [Hous- ton amusement park]. East Texas Hist. Jour., 36, no. 2, pp. 58-67.

THERESA M. GUZMAN-STOKES. A Flag and a Family: Richard Gill Forrester, 1847-1906 [first Union flag raised over Richmond, 1865]. Va. Cavalcade, 47, Spring, 52-63.

JEFFREY HADLER. Remus Orthography: The History of the Representation of the African-American Voice. Jour. Folklore Research, 35, May-Aug., 99- 126.

GRACE ELIZABETH HALE. Granite Stopped Time: The Stone Mountain Memo- rial and the Representation of White Southern Identity. Ga. Hist. Quar., 82, Spring, 22-44.

JACQUELYN DOWD HALL. Open Secrets: Memory, Imagination, and the Re- fashioning of Southern Identity. Am. Quar., 50, March, 109-24.

. "You Must Remember This": Autobiography as Social Critique. Jour. Am. Hist., 85, Sept., 439-65.

RANDAL L. HALL. Southern Conservatism at Work: Women, Nurses, and the 1878 Yellow Fever Epidemic in Memphis. Tenn. Hist. Quar., 56, Winter, 244-61.

PHILLIP HAMILTON. Revolutionary Principles and Family Loyalties: Slavery's

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Transformation in the St. George Tucker Household of Early National Virginia. William and Mary Quar., 3d ser., 55, Oct., 531-56.

DAVID HENIGE. The Melungeons Become a Race [rev. of Brent Kennedy's The Melungeons; part of a three-article forum on the book], App. Jour., 25, Spring, 270-86.

. Henige Answers Wilson [reply to critique (see below)]. App. Jour., 25, Spring, 297-98.

DANIEL J. HERMAN. The Other Daniel Boone: The Nascence of a Middle-Class Hunter Hero, 1784-1860. Jour. Early Rep., 18, Fall, 429-57.

TODD A. HERRING. Kidnapped and Sold in Natchez: The Ordeal of Aaron Cooper, a Free Black Man. Jour. Miss. Hist., 60, Winter, 341-53.

ELIZABETH JANE WALL HINDS. The Spirit of Trade: Olaudah Equiano's Con- version, Legalism, and the Merchant's Life. African Am. Rev., 32, Winter, 635-47.

FRED HOBSON. The Sins of the Fathers: Lillian Smith and Katherine Du Pre Lumpkin [secular racial "conversion narratives"]. Sou. Rev., 34, Autumn, 755-79.

WARREN R. HOFSTRA. "The Extention [sic] of His Majesties Dominions": The Virginia Backcountry and the Reconfiguration of Imperial Frontiers. Jour. Am. Hist., 84, March, 1281-1312.

PATRICK HUBER. "Battle Songs of the Southern Class Struggle": Songs of the Gastonia Textile Strike of 1929. Sou. Cult., 4, Summer, 109-22.

PAUL ANDREW HUTTON. "Going to Congress and making allmynacks is my trade": Davy Crockett, His Almanacs, and the Evolution of a Frontier Legend. Jour. West, 37, April, 10-22.

JOHN C. INSCOE. Appalachian Odysseus: Love, War, and Best-Sellerdom in the Blue Ridge [rev. essay of Charles Frazier's Cold Mountain]. App. Jour., 25, Spring, 330-37.

ANYA JABOUR. "Grown Girls, Highly Cultivated": Female Education in an Antebellum Southern Family. Jour. Sou. Hist., 64, Feb., 23-64.

. Masculinity and Adolescence in Antebellum America: Robert Wirt at West Point, 1820-1821. Jour. Family Hist., 23, Oct., 393-416.

KATHY JENNINGS. White Like Me: A Confesssion on Race, Region, and Class. App. Jour., 25, Winter, 150-75.

MARY CARROLL JOHANSEN. "Intelligence, Though Overlooked": Education for Black Women in the Upper South, 1800-1840. Md. Hist. Mag., 93, Winter, 443-65.

JUDY JONES. Digging for Roots: Are Mountain Melungeons a Geneological Discovery or a Virtual Community? Sou. Exp., 26, Spring, 20-24.

PATRICIA SMITH JONES. Dialect As a Deterrent to Cultural Stripping: Why Appalachian Migrants Continue to Talk That Talk. Jour. Appal. Stud., 3, Fall [1997], 253-61.

SARAH JUDSON. Cultivating Citizenship in the Kindergartens of Atlanta, 1890s-1920s. Atlanta Hist., 41, Winter, 17-30.

JOE KARAGANIS. Negotiating the National Voice in Faulkner's Late Work. Ariz. Quar., 54, Winter, 53-81.

REBECCA KEANE-TEMPLE. The Sounds of Sanctuary: Horace Benbow' s Con- sciousness. Miss. Quar, 50, Summer [1997], 445-50.

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THOMAS J. KIFFMEYER. From Self-Help to Sedition: The Appalachian Volun- teers in Eastern Kentucky, 1964-1970. Jour. Sou. Hist., 64, Feb. 65-94.

LAWRENCE EDWARD KIGHT. "The State is on Trial": Governor Edmund F. Noel and the Defense of Mississippi's Legal Institutions Against Mob Violence [early 1900s]. Jour. Miss. Hist., 60, Fall, 191-222.

MARTHA E. KINNEY. "If Vanquished I Am Still Victorious": Religious and Cultural Symbolism in Virginia's Confederate Memorial Day Celebra- tions, 1866-1930. Va. Mag. Hist. and Biog., 106, Summer, 237-66.

KATE S. KIRKLAND. For All Houston's Children: Ima Hogg and the Board of Education, 1943-1949. Southwestern Hist. Quar., 101, April, 460-95.

GEORGE B. KIRSCH. Bats, Balls, and Bullets: Baseball and the Civil War. Civil War Times III., 37, May, 30-37.

TORU KIUCHI and YOSHINOBu HAKUTANI. The Critical Response in Japan to Richard Wright. Miss. Quar., 50, Spring [1997], 353-64.

MILTON M. KLEIN. Academic Freedom at the University of Tennessee: The McCarthy Era. Jour. East. Tenn. Hist., 69, [1997], 62-83.

ROBERT KOPPELMAN. Lee Hays [of the Weavers, 1914-1981]: A Literary Reconsideration. Sou. Folklore, 55, no. 2, pp. 75-100.

BONNIE J. KRAUSE. The Mary Buie Museum, Oxford, Mississippi, as a WPA Community Art Center, 1939-1942. Jour. Miss. Hist., 60, Fall, 241-54.

FRANCES W. KUNSTLING. Southern Literature at the End of the Century [rev. essay of 3 books]. N.C. Hist. Rev., 75, April, 205-12.

THEODORE C. LANDSMARK. Comments on African American Contributions to American Material Life. Winterthur Port., 33, Winter, 261-82.

PATRICIA R. LEME1E. Tios and Tantes: Familial and Political Relationships of Natchitoches and the Spanish Colonial Frontier. Southwestern Hist. Quar., 101, Jan., 340-58.

J. PAUL LESLIE. The Evangeline League's Man in the Blue Serge Suit: Trials and Tribulations [hist. of umpires of the Evangeline baseball league, 1934- 57]. La. Hist., 39, Spring, 167-88.

DEEGEE LESTER. Tennessee's Bold Fenian Men. Tenn. Hist. Quar., 56, Win- ter, 262-77.

PAUL A. LEVENGOOD. In the Absence of Scarcity: The Civil War Prosperity of Houston, Texas. Southwestern Hist. Quar., 101, April, 400-26.

LLOYD LEWIS. Propaganda and the Kansas-Missouri War. Mo. Hist. Rev., 92, Jan., 135-48.

JIAN LI. A History of the Chinese in Charleston. S.C. Hist. Mag., 99, Jan., 34-65.

ALEX LICHTENSTEIN. Putting Labor' s House in Order: The Transport Workers Union and Labor Anti-Communism in Miami during the 1940s. Labor Hist., 39, February, 7-23.

WILLIAM A. LINK. The Jordan Hatcher Case: Politics and "A Spirit of Insub- ordination" in Antebellum Virginia. Jour. Sou. Hist., 64, Nov., 615-48.

TERRY W. LIPSCOMB. The Legacy of Ainsley Hall. S.C. Hist. Mag., 99, April, 158-79.

OTTO LOHRENZ. The Advantage of Rank and Status: Thomas Price [1733-83], A Loyalist Parson of Revolutionary Virginia. Historian, 60, Spring, 561- 77.

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BRUCE LOWERY. Integration at Alabama's Historically Black Colleges and Universities. Sou. Hist., 19, Spring, 35-59.

ROBERT D. LUKENS. The New South on Display: The Appalachian Expositions of 1910 and 1911. Jour. East. Tenn. Hist., 69, [1997], 1-28.

STEPHEN E. MAIZLISH. Salmon P. Chase: The Roots of Ambition and the Origins of Reform. Jour. Early Rep., 18, Spring, 47-70.

DAVID D. MARCH. Sobriquets of Missouri and Missourians. Mo. Hist. Rev., 92, Jan., 149-67.

CHARLES H. MARTIN. Integrating New Year's Day: The Racial Politics of College Bowl Games in the American South. Jour. Sport Hist., 24, Fall, 358-77.

ROBERT MASON. Surviving the Blue Killer, 1918 [influenza epidemic in Ala- mance County, N.C.]. Va. Quar. Rev., 74, Spring, 343-56.

JANICE M. MCCLELLAND. A Structural Analysis of Desegregation: Clinton High School, 1954-1958. Tenn. Hist. Quar., 56, Winter, 294-309.

GORDON B. McKINNEY. The First False Frontier: Eastern Kentucky and the Movies. Reg. Ky. Hist. Soc., 96, Spring, 119-36.

NORMAN C. MCLEOD. Not Forgetting the Land We Left: The Irish in Ante- bellum Richmond. Va. Cavalcade, 47, Winter, 36-47.

FRANK MCMAHON. Rereading The Outsider: Double-Consciousness and the Divided Self [part of a special issue on works of Richard Wright]. Miss. Quar., 50, Spring [1997], 289-305.

CHRISTOPHER C. MEYERS. "The Wretch Vickery" and the Brooks County Civil War Slave Conspiracy. Jour. Southwest Ga. Hist., 12, Fall [1997], 27-38.

PATRICK B. MILLER. The Manly, the Moral, and the Proficient: College Sport in the New South. Jour. Sport Hist., 24, Fall, 285-316.

. The Anatomy of Scientific Racism: Racialist Responses to Black Athletic Achievement. Jour. Sport Hist., 25, Spring, 119-51.

JACK B. MOORE. A Personal Appreciation of Richard Wright's Universality. Miss. Quar., 50, Spring [1997], 365-74.

PATRICIA A. MOORE and W. KENT MOORE. Desegregation of the Lowndes County School System: "Easier Than Most People Think." Jour. Southwest Ga. Hist., 12, Fall [1997], 39-64.

CHRISTOPHER MORRIS. The Articulation of Two Worlds: The Master-Slave Relationship Reconsidered. Jour. Am. Hist., 85, Dec., 982-1007.

JOHN M. MURRIN. In the Land of the Free and the Home of the Slave, Maybe There Was Room Even for Deference. Jour. Am. Hist., 85, June, 86-91.

WINSTON NAPIER. Affirming Critical Conceptualism: Harlem Renaissance Aesthetics and the Formation of Alain Locke's Social Philosophy. Mass. Rev., 39, Spring, 93-112.

K. F. NEIGHBOURS. William H. Sandusky [1813-1846; civil surveyor] in Texas: A Polish Descendant. East Texas Hist. Jour., 36, no. 1, pp. 26-34.

FRANCES LOUISA NICHOL. Flem Snopes's Knack for Verisimilitude in Faulkner's Snopes Trilogy. Miss. Quar., 50, Summer [1997], 493-505.

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THOMAS E. WILL. The American School of Ethnology: Science and Scripture in the Proslavery Argument. Sou. Hist., 19, Spring, 14-34.

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CARY CARSON. Colonial Williamsburg and the Practice of Interpretive Plan- ning in American History Museums. Pub. Historian, 20, Summer, 11-51.

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EDWARD F. HAAS. Political Continuity in the Crescent City: Toward an In- terpretation of New Orleans Politics, 1874-1986. La. Hist., 39, Winter, 5-18.

RANDAL L. HALL. Southern Conservatism at Work: Women, Nurses, and the 1878 Yellow Fever Epidemic in Memphis. Tenn. Hist. Quar., 56, Winter, 244-61.

HARVEY H. JACKSON III. Seaside, Florida: Robert Davis and the Quest for Community. Atlanta Hist., 42, Fall, 41-51.

MARILYNN S. JOHNSON. Gender, Race, and Rumours: Re-examining the 1943 Race Riots [in Beaumont, Tx., Detroit, and Harlem]. Gender and Hist., 10, Aug., 252-77.

CRAIG ALLAN KAPLOWITZ. A Breath of Fresh Air: Segregation, Parks, and Progressivism in Nashville, Tennessee, 1900-1920. Tenn. Hist. Quar., 57, Fall, 132-49.

MARK P. LEONE and SILAS D. HURRY. Seeing: The Power of Town Planning in the Chesapeake. Hist. Archaeology, 32, no. 4, pp. 34-62.

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MICHAEL P. MCCARTHY. Baltimore's Highway Wars Revisited. Md. Hist. Mag., 93, Summer, 136-57.

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MATTHEW MULCAHY. The "Great Fire" of 1740 and the Politics of Disaster Relief in Colonial Charleston. S.C. Hist. Mag., 99, April, 135-57.

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CHARLES EDWARDS O'NEILL. The French Regency and the Colonial Engi- neers: Street Names of Early New Orleans. La. Hist., 39, Spring, 207-14.

MARTHA R. SEVERENS. The Charleston Renaissance. Carologue, 14, Autumn, 16-21.

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DAVID A. SMITH. From the Mississippi to the Mediterranean: The 1891 New Orleans Lynching and its Effects on United States Diplomacy and the American Navy [lynching of 11 Italians led to tensions bet. U.S. and Italy causing U.S. to strengthen navy]. Sou. Historian, 19, Spring, 60-85.

ALVIN 0. TURNER and VICKY L. GAILEY. The Best City in the Best County: Enid's Golden Era, 1916-1941. Chron. Okla., 76, Summer, 116-39.

MARIE TYLER-McGRAw. Becoming Americans Again: Re-envisioning and Revising Thematic Interpretation at Colonial Williamsburg. Pub. Histo- rian, 20, Summer, 53-76.

LAUREL THATCHER ULRICH. Freedom, Equality, and Collaborative History at Colonial Williamsburg. Pub. Historian, 20, Summer, 93-99.

LEA STONE WILLIAMS. Boundaries, Boosterism, and Bureaucrats: The Struggle of East Point, Georgia, against Annexation in the 1920s. Atlanta Hist., 42, Fall, 22-33.

ELEANOR RAMSAY WILLIAMSON. Exceptional Attainments and Constructive Force: Women, Education, and the Arts in Norfolk, 1871-1933. Va. Cav- alcade, 47, Spring, 64-75.

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CARME MANUEL CUENCA. An Angel in the Plantation: The Economics of Slavery and the Politics of Literary Domesticity in Caroline Lee Hentz's The Planter's Northern Bride. Miss. Quar., 51, Winter, 87-104.

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SUSAN A. EACKER. Gender in Paradise: Harriet Beecher Stowe and Postbellum Prose on Florida. Jour. Sou. Hist., 64, Aug., 495-512.

LYNNE A. EBERHARDT. Passion and Propriety: Tidewater Marriages in The Colonial Chesapeake. Md. Hist. Mag., 93, Fall, 324-47.

GEORGE B. ELLENBERG. "May the club work go on Forever": Home Demon- stration and Rural Progressivism in 1920s Ballard County. Reg. Ky. Hist. Soc., 96, Spring, 137-66.

BRUCE FEHN. African-American Women and the Struggle for Equality in the Meatpacking Industry, 1940-1960. Jour. Women's Hist., 10, Spring, 45- 69.

ABBY L. FERBER. Constructing Whiteness: The Intersections of Race and Gender in US White Supremacist Discourse. Ethnic and Racial Stud., 21, January, 48-63.

DARCY R. FRYER. The Mind of Eliza Pinckney: An Eighteenth-Century Wom- an's Construction of Herself, S.C. Hist. Mag., 99, July, 215-37.

LANGHORNE GIBSON JR. Dash and Drama: Irene Langhorne Gibson, 1873- 1956. Va. Cavalcade, 47, Winter, 4-13.

ANITA SHAFER GOODSTEIN. A Rare Alliance: African American and White Women in the Tennessee Elections of 1919 and 1920. Jour. Sou. Hist., 64, May, 219-46.

JACQUELYN DOWD HALL. "You Must Remember This": Autobiography as Social Critique. Jour. Am. Hist., 85, Sept., 439-65.

RANDAL L. HALL. Southern Conservatism at Work: Women, Nurses, and the 1878 Yellow Fever Epidemic in Memphis. Tenn. Hist. Quar., 56, Winter, 244-61.

KIMBERLY S. HANGER. "Desiring Total Tranquility" and Not Getting It: Con- flict Involving Free Black Women in Spanish New Orleans. Americas, 54, April, 541-56.

SALLY SARTAIN HERMSDORFER. For "The Cultured Mothers of the Land": Racist Imagery in the Old South Fiction of Tennessee Suffragist Elizabeth Avery Meriwether [1824-1916]. Tenn. Hist. Quar., 57 [56], Fall [1997], 182-95.

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PATRICK J. HUBER. "Caught Up in the Violent Whirlwind of Lynching": The 1885 Quadruple Lynching in Chatham County, North Carolina. N.C. Hist. Rev., 75, April, 134-60.

ANYA JABOUR. "Grown Girls, Highly Cultivated": Female Education in an Antebellum Southern Family. Jour. Sou. Hist., 64, Feb., 23-64.

MARY CARROLL JOHANSEN. "Intelligence, Though Overlooked": Education for Black Women in the Upper South, 1800-1840. Md. Hist. Mag., 93, Winter, 443-65.

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SARAH JUDSON. Cultivating Citizenship in the Kindergartens of Atlanta, 1890s-1920s, Atlanta Hist., 41, Winter, 17-30.

WILLIAM T. KERRIGAN. Race, Expansion, and Slavery in Eagle Pass, Texas, 1852. Southwestern Hist. Quar., 101, Jan., 274-301.

KATE S. KIRKLAND. For All Houston's Children: Ima Hogg and the Board of Education, 1943-1949. Southwestern Hist. Quar., 101, April, 460-95.

ANDREA MERYL KIRSHENBAUM. "The Vampire That Hovers Over North Caro- lina": Gender, White Supremacy, and the Wilmington Race Riot of 1898. Sou. Cult., 4, Fall, 6-30.

SUSAN E. KLEPP. Revolutionary Bodies: Women and the Fertility Transition in the Mid-Atlantic Region, 1760-1820. Jour. Am. Hist., 85, Dec., 910-45.

JANE G. LANDERS. Female Conflict and Its Resolution in Eighteenth-Century St. Augustine. Americas, 54, April, 557-74.

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SUSAN MANNING. Black Voices, White Bodies: The Performance of Race and Gender in How Long Brethren. Am. Quar., 50, March, 24-46.

MARTHA H. PATTERSON. "kin o' rough jestice fer a parson": Pauline Hopkins's Winona [1902] and the Politics of Reconstructing History. African Am. Rev., 32, Fall, 445-60.

ELIZABETH ANNE PAYNE and LOUISE BOYLE, photographer. The Lady Was a Sharecropper: Myrtle Lawrence and the Southern Tenant Farmers' Union. Sou. Cult., 4, Summer, 5-27.

ELIZABETH POKEMPNER. "Unusual Qualifications": Teachers at the Bryn Mawr School, 1885-1901. Md. Hist. Mag., 93, Spring, 76-87.

CAROL WALTER RAMAGOSA. Eliza Lucas Pinckney' s Family in Antigua, 1668-1747. S.C. Hist. Mag., 99, July, 238-58.

CHERYL RODRIGUEZ. Activist Stories: Culture and Community in Black Wom- en's Narratives of Grassroots Community Work. Frontiers, 19, no. 2, pp. 94-112.

HELEN C. ROUNTREE. Powhatan Indian Women: The People Captain John Smith Barely Saw. Ethnohistory, 45, Winter, 1-29.

MARGARET C. RUNG. Paternalism and Pink Collars: Gender and Federal Em- ployee Relations, 1941-50. Bus. Hist. Rev., 71, Autumn [1997], 381-416.

DAVID J. RUTLEDGE, ed. Elizabeth Jamison's [1814-1888] Tale of the War. S.C. Hist. Mag., 99, Oct., 312-39.

PATRICIA A. SCHECHTER. "All the Intensity of My Nature": Ida B. Wells, Anger, and Politics. Radical Hist. Rev., no. 70, Winter, 48-77.

BARBARA ELLEN SMITH. Walk-Ons in the Third Act: The Role of Women in Appalachian Historiography. Jour. Appal. Stud., 4, Spring, 5-28.

NAN SNOW and DOROTHY STUCK, The Formidable Roberta Fulbright [1874- 1953, mother of Sen. J. Wm. Fulbright]. Ark. Hist. Quar., 57, Spring, 33-45.

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