It requires careful reading and writing, the synthesis of, information from many different sources, the ability to evaluate primary sources and. The Colored National Labor Union is established by Isaac Myers in Baltimore.
The Incorporation of America: Culture and Society in the Gilded Age: 25th Anniversary Edition. US History since 1877 HIST 1302-002 Tuesdays and Thursdays, 9:30-10:45 ... African-Americans, and others on American politics, economics, and society. Topics: Film: "Birth of a Nation," pt. Topics: Lecture 5: The Gilded Age: The Changing Nature of Work. ` �E> endobj 43 0 obj <> endobj 44 0 obj <>stream » Course Syllabus HIST 1200-02 American History Since 1865 _____ Instructors Professor: Victor McFarland ([email protected]) Zoom office hours: Monday 1-2pm, Thursday 1-2pm, or by appointment Graduate Teaching Assistants: Scott Anderson ([email protected]) and Lauren Jackson ([email protected]) _____ Course Delivery As with so much of campus life this semester, the plans for this … HIST 3455 - African American History since 1865 An exploration of the trials and triumphs that African Americans have experienced from Reconstruction to the present; topics include the Jim Crow era, the Great Migration, Civil Rights struggles, and black artistic and literary movements. This course examines the history of the United States from 1865 to the present.

H�dSMo�0��W�(� �Kv��r�.V;;x����Ζ�ߏ�p�v�!L����G2h�;r��ϻ~�,�����v�Q���� �3��"�j���3��p̻�H;��f� u��$�hEKGy�#��h�YF�T���! If you are a student with a disability, please feel free to contact me early in the semester for any help or accommodations you may need. ... HIST 083—African History through Pop Music (Lindsay) HIST 089—From Woodstock to Reagan: America in the 1970s (Waterhouse) ... HIST 128—American History Since 1865 (Donnally) HIST 133—Introduction to Chinese History (Tsin) Riis, How the Other Half Lives, vii-119. I’ve given preference to films that students can stream, either through Netflix, YouTube, or the educational film database Kanopy, which also includes film transcripts. The instructor will make every effort to reasonably accommodate all requests for the accommodation of religious beliefs. Disc.

(3-0). (Web Module #4 Final Report Due) Map Assignment: Recent America: The Vietnam War.

Weekly Assignment: Text, Chap. Send to friends and colleagues. Find materials for this course in the pages linked along the left. Between May 1 and May 3, an estimated forty-six African Americans are killed, and countless are injured by White people in Memphis. Congress approves the 14th Amendment, granting African Americans citizenship.The amendment also guarantees due process and equal protection under the law to all citizens.

To protect yourself from accidentally becoming a plagiarist, and to learn more about what constitutes plagiarism, visit Academic Integrity at MIT: A Handbook for Students. Topics under consideration include conflict over the frontier West; immigration and industrialization; the emergence of the U.S. as a global power; the Cold War at home and abroad; Civil Rights activism and other major social movements; and the transition to a digital age.

Topics: Lecture 11: The Reform Impulse: Reform from the Top - Progressivism. (Final Report on Web Module #1 Due) Map Assignment: Reconstruction: 19th Century Violence. Map Assignment: The New Era 1: World War I. Disc.

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These documentaries focus on African American history since 1865. Phone: 202.544.2422Email: info@historians.org, Payments: PO Box 347214, Pittsburgh PA 15251-4214, Baseball's Great Experiment: Jack Robinson and His Legacy, Guiding Principles on Taking a Public Stance, Policies and Procedures for Considering Amicus Brief Requests, Amicus Brief in Ahmad v. Michigan (October 2020), Letter Opposing DHS and CBP Policies (September 2020), AHA Statement on the Recent "White House Conference on American History” (September 2020), AHA Letter in Support of Women's History Museum (September 2020), AHA Letter Registering Concern over Séminaire de Saint-Sulpice (September 2020), ACLS Joint Statement on the Key Role of the Humanities (August 2020), AHA Statement on Department Closures and Faculty Firings (July 2020), AHA Letter Condemning Tenured Faculty Layoffs at Canisius (July 2020), AHA Statement on Historical Research during COVID-19 (July 2020), AHA Signs on to AAS Statement on the 2020 Hong Kong National Security Law (July 2020), AHA Letter Opposing New ICE Obstacles to Students from Foreign Countries (July 2020), Resolution Regarding Affiliations between ICE and Higher Education (June 2020), AHA Endorses Senate Resolution Recognizing the Tulsa Race Massacre Centennial (July 2020), AHA Statement on the History of Racist Violence in the United States (June 2020), Letter to Congress on Further CARES Funding for Higher Ed (June 2020), AHA Statement Regarding Historians and COVID-19 (April 2020), AHA Sends Letter to University System of Georgia Opposing Proposed Changes to the General Education Curriculum (March 2020), Statement Encouraging Temporary Adjustments to Faculty Review and Reappointment Processes during COVID-19 Crisis (March 2020), AHA Encourages Congress to Support NEH during COVID-19 Crisis (March 2020), AHA Joins Lawsuit Challenging ICE Records Disposition (March 2020), AHA Supports Release of Grand Jury Records of Historical Significance (March 2020), AHA Expresses Concern over Deletion of Immigration Records (Feb 2020), AHA Sends Letter to French President Emmanuel Macron with Concerns about Unclear Procedures for Declassification of Archives (Feb 2020), Letter of Concern about Risks of NARA Policy Regarding Electronic Records, Letter of Concern about the Proposed Closure and Sale of the NARA Facility in Seattle, AHA Statement Condemning the Use of Historical Sites in Warfare, Letter to National Archives and Records Administration Regarding Alteration of Photograph, AHA Calls on Nicaraguan President to Release History Professor, AHA Resolution Supporting Scholars off the Higher Education Tenure Track (December 2019), AHA Pushes for Reauthorization of Title VI College Affordability Act (October 2019), AHA Comments on Proposed NLRB Rule Change (October 2019), AHA Defends Emeritus Professor Romila Thapar (October 2019), AHA Signs onto Amicus Curiae Brief Providing Historical Context to the Decision to Rescind DACA, AHA Signs onto MESA letter to US Department of Education, AHA Signs onto Amicus Brief in Pitch v. United States, AHA Signs onto ASA Statement on Teaching Evaluations, AHA Statement on Domestic Terrorism, Bigotry, and History, AHA Opposes Elimination of History Department at Gordon College, AHA Expresses Support for the Right of Scholars to Sign the Academics for Peace Petition, AHA Supports Hilton, Hyatt, and Marriott Refusal to Aid in ICE Raids, AHA Expresses Concern about Access to the Guatemala Policía Nacional Archives, AHA Signs onto Letter of Support for Federal Funding of International Education and Foreign Language Program, AHA Endorses Coalition for International Education Letter for Congressional Title VI Funding, Letter of Concern over Departmental Changes at University of Tulsa, AHA Sends Letter of Concern to Stanford University, AHA Signs onto Letter Protesting Cuts to Humanities Programs in Brazil, AHA Signs onto Letter Protesting Alaskan Budget Cuts, AHA Urges Historians and Californians to Take Action (February 2019), Letter Protesting Michigan Mayor’s Termination of Journal Editor’s Contract, AHA Maintains Support for the Separation of Hungarian Politics and Academic Inquiry, AHA Expresses Concerns about Potential Impact of Plan S on the Humanities, A Bibliography of Historians' Responses to COVID-19, Historians on the Confederate Monument Debate, Advocacy with the National Coalition for History, Advocacy with the National Humanities Alliance, Directory of History Departments and Organizations, Resources for Globalizing the US History Survey, Resources for Tuning the History Discipline, The Decision to Secede and Establish the Confederacy: A Selection of Primary Sources, Plagiarism: Curricular Materials for History Instructors, Resources for Getting Started in Digital History, Evaluation of Digital Scholarship in History, Project Roles and a Consideration of Process and Product, Extending the Reach of Scholarly Society Work to HBCU Faculty, Final Report on Extending the Reach of Scholarly Society Work to HBCU Faculty, Annual Texas Conference on Introductory History Courses, Resources from the Texas Conference on Introductory History Courses, Resources from the 2nd Annual Texas Conference on Introductory Courses, 3rd Annual Texas Conference on Introductory Courses, 2018 Texas Conference on Introductory History Courses, 2019 Texas Conference on Introductory History Courses, 2020 Texas Conference on Introductory History Courses, Resources for Students and Early Career Professionals, Resources for Job Candidates and Search Committees.
Weekly Assignment: Text, Chap. This African American History course answers that question by tracing the accomplishments and obstacles of African Americans beginning with the slave trade on up to the modern Civil Rights movement. Lecture 2: Reconstruction: The Politics of Victory and the Adjustment to Defeat. Disc. Lecture 15: The 1920s: The Economics and Politics of Growth. This preview shows page 1 - 3 out of 7 pages. Understanding the political, economic, social, and cultural events of the last 150 years, helps reveal why the United States looks the way it does today, and illuminates many.

[Preview with Google Books], Williams, Robert F. Negroes with Guns.

27. Ebenezer Don Carlos Bassett becomes the first African American diplomat and presidential appointee when he is made minister to Haiti. D��R��`K�4=&,��Wm ���� z�P

endstream endobj 48 0 obj <>stream Lecture 17: The 1920s: The Crash, The Depression, and a "New Deal.". Sec. This subject offers an introduction to the social, political, economic, and cultural history of the United States – from the end of the American Civil War to the present. HIST 3331: African American History Since 1865 Cr. There are ten HIST 1200 discussion sections and one HIST 1200H honors section. endstream endobj 45 0 obj <>stream HTS 3025 African American History since 1865 Class Syllabus Class Discussion Week 4 - 08 September Monday – The Politics of History Reading: Jacquelyn Dowd Hall, “The Long Civil Rights Movement and the Political Use of the Past,” The Journal of American History, Vol. What was it like during slavery, or after emancipation, or during the years of discrimination under Jim Crow? 25. They offer assistance with all forms of academic, creative, and professional writing – including papers, applications, and theses. 0 3. History 1200 Syllabus.docx - Course Syllabus HIST 1200-02 American History Since 1865 Instructors Professor Victor McFarland(, ___________________________________________________________, Zoom office hours: Monday 1-2pm, Thursday 1-2pm, or by appointment, As with so much of campus life this semester, the plans for this course have changed, because of the COVID-19 pandemic. 23.