The records of the u. S. Senate and the house of representatives and which sponsors the series. Researcher talks invites scholars to tell us about their projects and how the records support them. Since the highly visible senate and house investigations of the 1950s have received much researcher attention over the last few years we have invited historians to speak about the records. Weve asked them to talk about labor and management, better known as the mclellan committee, several have made presentations based on the research on the house unamerican activities committee. Historians have conducted Considerable Research in the Senate Special committee to investigate organized crime and interstate commerce better mean as the key fofr committee. We are pleased to have tammy ingram, associate professor of history at the college of charleston whose talk is titled dear senator,s us the key fofr and the anticrime crusade in the south. She has researched senator kefauvers records at and personal
100 years ago president Woodrow Wilson signed the bill creating the National Park service, and thursday we look back at the caretakers of these natural and historic treasures. Beginning at 10 00 a. M. Eastern and throughout the day, we take you to National Park Service Sites across the country as recorded by cspan. At 7 00 p. M. Eastern weve live from the National Park services most visited historic home, arlington house, the robert e. Lee memorial at Arlington National cemetery. Joining us with your phone calls as we talk with robert stanton, former National Park Service Director and brandon buys, the former arlington house site thursday, the 100th anniversary of the National Park service live from arlington house at 7 00 p. M. Eastern on American History tv on cspan 3. Up next, history professor tammy ingram discusses her book the wickedest city in america. Sex, race and organized crime in the jim crow south. She chronicles the Crime Investigation city chair in 1950 and 51 and field
Thank you for attending todays researcher talk, im the historian at the center for legislative archives, part of the National Archives that holds the records of the u. S. Senate and the house of representatives and which sponsors the series. Researcher talks invites scholars to tell us about their projects and how the records support them. Since the highly visible senate and house investigations of the 1950s have received much researcher attention over the last few years we have invited historians to speak about the records. Weve asked them to talk about labor and management, better known as the mclellan committee, several have made presentations based on the research on the house unamerican activities committee. Historians have conducted Considerable Research in the Senate Special committee to investigate organized crime and interstate commerce better mean as the Kefauver Committee. We are pleased to have tammy ingram, associate professor of history at the college of charleston whose