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Project MUSE - From Property to Education: Public Schooling, Race, and the Transformation of Suffrage in the Early National North

Project MUSE - From Property to Education: Public Schooling, Race, and the Transformation of Suffrage in the Early National North
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How Pekin streets like Dirksen Court, Haines Avenue were named

The Magnifying Glass: Mashpee, Reverend Apess And The Age Of Reform

Starting in the 1820s and up until the time of the Civil War, reform movements swept through the United States as people tried to speak out against the wrongs in

The Magnifying Glass: In Search Of Self-Government

About the treatment of the Native Americans by first the English and then by the US government, Dee Brown, author of “Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee,” says, “They made many promises, more than I can remember, but they never kept but one; they promised to take our land, and they took it.” After having his people moved five times in the late 1800s, one Sioux chief said cynically, “I think you had better put the Indians on wheels and you can run them about whenever you wish.” In 2006, the office of the Assistant Secretary–Indian Affairs issued a Proposed Finding that included a historical overview of the Mashpee Wampanoags. In that finding, it is equally tragic to see the number of times the Massachusetts Legislature took away rights and freedoms from the Wampanoags and imposed upon them different forms of restrictive governing.

Spanning Time: Rebecca Kellogg, a Broome County pioneer and monumental woman

Spanning Time: Rebecca Kellogg, a Broome County pioneer and monumental woman Gerald Smith, Special to the Binghamton Press & Sun-Bulletin © Doug Miller The brass plaque denoting the resting place for Rebecca Kellogg Ashley. In the Town of Windsor, not far from the village of the same name, there is a boulder with a brass plaque affixed to it.  Thousands have passed by the monument with few paying little or no attention to it. Yet, it denotes the story of a woman whose life and impact should be known by everyone. I am referring to Rebecca Kellogg, who was born on Dec. 22, 1695 in Deerfield, Massachusetts. With her family, the little girl lived in the western part of that state, and during Queen Anne’s War, a raid took place on that town on Feb. 29, 1704. Joint French and Indian forces attacked the town. During the raid in the pre-dawn hours, 56 colonists were killed, including 25 children. Rebecca, three siblings, and her father, Martin, were among 1

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