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DAKOTA (SIOUX)

CLEMMONS, Linda. “‘Our Children are in danger of becoming little Indians’: Protestant Missionary Children and Dakotas, 1835-1862,” 25:2, 69-90.

STEVENS, Paul L. “Wabasha Visits Governor Carleton, 1776: New Light on a Legendary Episode of Dakota-British Diplomacy on the Great Lakes Frontier,” 16:1, 21-48.

DEMOCRATIC PARTY

BOYER, Hugh E. “The Decline of the Progressive Party in Michigan’s Upper Peninsula: The Case of Congressman William J. MacDonald in 1914,” 13:2, 75-94.

BRATT, Peter. “A Great Revolution in Feeling: The American Civil War in Niles and Grand Rapids, Michigan,” 31:2, 43 - 66.

CAPECI, Dominic J. “‘Never Leave Me’: The Wartime Correspondence of Peg and George Edwards, 1944 to 1945,” 27:2, 91-130.

DEMPSEY, Dave. “Perry Bullard: Liberal Lawmaker, 1972-1992,” 29:1, 97-117.

FINE, Sidney. “‘A Jewel in the Crown of All of Us’: Michigan Enacts a Fair Employment Practices Act, 1941-1958,” 22:1, 19-66.

GRANT, Philip A., Jr. “The Presidential Election of 1932 in Michigan,” 12:1, 83-94.

HERSHOCK, Martin J. “Copperheads and Radicals: Michigan Partisan Politics During the Civil War Era, 1860-1865,” 18:1, 29-69.

HOLLI, Melvin G. “Emil E. Hurja: Michigan’s Presidential Pollster,” 21:2, 125-138.

JENNINGS , Richard P. “Rhetorical Analysis of Chase S. Osborn’s 1910 Primary Campaign for Governor,” 17:2, 35-75.

ORTQUIST, Richard T. “The Perils of Victory: Michigan Democrats in the Wake of 1932,” 17:2, 21-33.

SMITH, Mike. “‘Let’s Make Detroit a Union Town’: The History of Labor and the Working Class in the Motor City,” 27:2, 157-173.

STEIN-ROGGENBUCK, Susan. “A Contest for Local Control: Emergency Relief in Depression-Era Michigan,” 26:2, 91-126.

VANDERMEER, Phillip. “Political Crisis and Third Parties: The Gold Democrats of Michigan,” 15:2, 61-84.

DE PEYSTER

WALSH, Martin W. “A War Council for the Drawing Room: Arent Schuyler de Peyster’s ‘Speech to the Western Indians,’” 28:1, 91-107.

DEPRESSION (THE GREAT)

STEIN-ROGGENBUCK, Susan. “A Contest for Local Control: Emergency Relief in Depression-Era Michigan,” 26:2, 91-126.

DETROIT

BARNETT, Le Roy. “Michigan Maps in the Detroit Evening News, 1873-1900,” 33:1, 99-108.

BROPHY, Anne. “‘The Committee . . . has stood out against coercion’: The Reinvention of Detroit Americanization, 1915-1931,” 29:2, 1-39.

BURNS, Andrea. “Waging Cold War in a Model City: The Investigation of ‘Subversive’ Influences in the 1967 Detroit Riot,” 30:1, 3-30.

CAPECI, Dominic J. “‘Never Leave Me’: The Wartime Correspondence of Peg and George Edwards, 1944 to 1945,” 27:2, 91-130.

CAPECI, Dominic J., Jr. and Martha Wilkerson. “The Detroit Rioters of 1943: A Reinterpretation,” 16:1, 49-72.

CARTER, Sue. “‘Women Don’t Do News: Fran Harris and Detroit’s Radio Station WWJ,” 24:2, 76-87.

DE MATTEO, Arthur E. “Organized Labor Versus the Mayor: The Detroit Federation of Labor and the Revised City Charter of 1914,” 21:2, 63-92.

DUNNIGAN, Brian Leigh. “‘The Prettiest Settlement in America’: A Select Bibliography of Early Detroit through the War of 1812.,” 27:1, 1-20.

GOLD, Kenneth M. “‘We just don’t want to keep on going to useless meetings’: Community Organizing at Detroit’s Jefferson Junior High School, 1966-1967,” 32:1, 97-121.

HATTER, Lawrence B. A., “The Transformation of the Detroit Land Market and the Formation of the Anglo-American Border,” 34:1, 83-99.

HOLLI, Melvin G. “ Mayoring in Detroit, 1824-1985: Is Upward Mobility the ‘Impossible Dream?’” 13:1, 1-19.

HYDE, Charles K. “The Dodge Brothers, the Automobile Industry, and Detroit Society in the Early Twentieth Century,” 22:2, 49-82.

HYDE, Charles, K. “Planning a Transportation System for Metropolitan Detroit in the Age of the Automobile: The Triumph of the Expressway,” 32:1, 59-95.

KERSTEIN, Andrew E. “Jobs and Justice: Detroit, Fair Employment, and Federal Activism during the Second World War,” 25:1, 76-101.

KEVE, Paul W. “Building a Better Prison: The First Three Decades of the Detroit House of Correction,” 25:2, 1-28.

KLUG, Thomas A. “Labor Market Politics in Detroit: The Curious Case of the ‘ Spolansky Act’ of 1931,” 14:1, 1-32.

KRAMER, Michael J. “‘Can’t Forget the Motor City’: CREEM Magazine, Rock Music, Detroit Identity, Mass Consumerism, and the Counterculture,” 28:2, 43-77.

LONGO, Julie. “Remembering the Renaissance City: Detroit’s Bicentennial Homecoming Festival and Urban Redevelopment,” 32:2, 89-118.

MIDDLETON, Richard. “Pontiac: Local Warrior or Pan-Indian Leader?” 32:2, 1-32.

MORRIS-CROWTHER, Jayne. “Municipal Housekeeping: The Political Activities of the Detroit Federation of Women’s Clubs in the 1020s,” 30:1, 31-57.

MURAGE, Njeru. “Making Migrants an Asset: The Detroit Urban League-Employers Alliance in Wartime Detroit, 1916 to 1919,” 26:1, 67-104.

REID, John B. “‘A Career to Build, a People to Serve, a Purpose to Accomplish’: Race, Class, Gender, and Detroit’s First Black Women Schoolteachers, 1865-1916,” 18:1, 1-27.

SKAFF, Sheila. “Ambivalence and Cigarettes: Egon Erwin Kisch’s ‘At Ford’s Place in Detroit,’ with a Translation of the Text,” 29:1, 119-131.                       

SHELLY, Cara L. “ Bradby’s Baptists: Second Baptist Church of Detroit, 1910-1946,” 17:1, 1-33.

SMITH, Michael O. “The City as State: Franchises, Politics, and Transit Development in Detroit, 1863-1879,” 23:1, 1-32.

SMITH, Mike. “‘Let’s Make Detroit a Union Town’: The History of Labor and the Working Class in the Motor City,” 27:2, 157-173.

STEVENS, Paul L. “The Indian Diplomacy of Capt. Richard B. Lernoult, British Military Commandant of Detroit, 1774-1775,” 13:1, 47-82.

VARGAS, Zaragosa. “Life and Community in the ‘Wonderful City of the Magic Motor’: Mexican Immigrants in 1920s Detroit,” 15:1, 45-68.

WOOD, Gregory. “‘The Paralysis of the Labor Movement’: Men, Masculinity, and Unions in 1920s Detroit,” 30:1, 31-57.

DETROIT EVENING NEWS

BARNETT, Le Roy. “Michigan Maps in the Detroit Evening News, 1873-1900,” 33:1, 99-108.

DIPLOMACY

ALLEN, Robert S. “His Majesty’s Indian Allies: Native Peoples, the British Crown, and the War of 1812,”14:2, 1-24.

ANASTAKIS, Dimitry, “Continental Auto Politics: The Failure of Opposition to the 1965 Auto Pact in Canada and the United States,” 27:2, 131-155.

CALLOWAY, Colin G. “The End of an Era: British-Indian Relations in the Great Lakes Region after the War of 1812,” 12:2, 1-20.

CARROLL, Francis M. “The Search for the Canadian-American Boundary along the Michigan Frontier: 1819-1827: The Boundary Commissions under Articles Six and Seven of the Treaty of Ghent,” 30:2, 77-103.

ERNST, John. “Forging a Fateful Alliance: The Role of Michigan State University in the Development of America’s Vietnam Policy,” 19:2, 49-66.

FIXICO, Donald L. “The Alliance of the Three Fires in Trade and War, 1630-1812,” 20:2, 1-23.

GRAY, Susan E. “Limits and Possibilities: White-Indian Relations in Western Michigan in the Era of Removal,” 20:2, 71-91.

HORSMAN, Reginald. “On to Canada: Manifest Destiny and United States Strategy in the War of 1812,” 13:2, 1-24.

MEIJER, Hank. “Arthur Vandenberg and the Fight for Neutrality, 1939,” 16:2, 1-21.

____ . “Hunting for the Middle Ground: Arthur Vandenberg and the Mackinac Charter, 1943,” 19:2, 1-21.

PETERS, Bernard C. “Hypocrisy on the Great Lakes Frontier: The Use of Whiskey by the Michigan Department of Indian Affairs,” 18:2, 1-13.

STEVENS, Paul L. “The Indian Diplomacy of Capt. Richard B. Lernoult, British Military Commandant of Detroit, 1774-1775,” 13:1, 47-82.

____ . “Wabasha Visits Governor Carleton, 1776: New Light on a Legendary Episode of Dakota-British Diplomacy on the Great Lakes Frontier,” 16:1, 21-48.  

WALSH, Martin W. “A War Council for the Drawing Room: Arent Schuyler de Peyster’s ‘Speech to the Western Indians,’” 28:1, 91-107.

DODGE, JOHN FRANCIS AND HORACE ELGIN

HYDE, Charles K. “` The Dodge Brothers, the Automobile Industry, and Detroit Society in the Early Twentieth Century,” 22:2, 49-82.

DOUGHERTY, PETER

TANNER, Helen Hornbeck, “Mapping the Grand Traverse Indian Country: The Contributions of Peter Dougherty,” 31:1, 201-247.