Skip Navigation

You appear to be using a web browser that does not fully support cascading style sheets (CSS). For a more pleasant viewing experience, please consider upgrading to Firefox 2+ or Internet Explorer 6+. Note that all information is accessible regardless of the browser you use. If you are not using a browser to view this site, please disregard this message.

OBSCENITY LAWS

BURTON , Shirley J. “Obscene, Lewd, and Lascivious: Ida Craddock and the Criminally Obscene Women of Chicago, 1873-1913,” 19:1, 1-16.

OHIO

BARNHART, Terry A. “‘A Common Feeling’: Regional Identity and Historical Consciousness in the Old Northwest, 1820-1860,” 29:1, 39-70.

BORDEN, Timothy G. “‘ Toledo Is a Good Town for Working People’: Richard T. Gosser and the UAW’s Fight for Pensions,” 26:1, 45-65.

OJIBWA

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

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.

CLIFTON , James A. “ Michigan’s Indians: Tribe, Nation, Estate, Racial, Ethnic, or Special Interest Group?” 20:2, 93-152.

DEMERS, E. A. S. “Native-American Slavery and Territoriality in the Colonial Upper Great Lakes Region, 28:2, 163-172.

DOHERTY, Robert. “‘We Don’t Want Them To Hold Their Hands Over Our Heads’: The Economic Strategies of the L’Anse Chippewas, 1830-1860,” 20:2, 47-70.

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

HENDERSHOT, Robert M. “The Legacy of an Ojibwe ‘Lumber Chief’: David Shoppenagon, 29:2, 41-69.  

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

____ . “John Johnston’s 1822 Description of the Lake Superior Chippewa,” 20:2, 25-46.

____ . “A Note on Lake Superior Earthquakes,” 22:1, 125-131.

____ . “ Wa-bish-kee-pe-nas and the Chippewa Reverence for Copper,” 15:2, 47-60.

PFLUG, Melissa A. “Politics of Great Lakes Indian Religion,” 18:2, 15-31.

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.

TRASK, Kerry A. “Settlement in a Half-Savage Land: Life and Loss in the Métis Community of La Baye,” 15:1, 1-27.

OLD NORTHWEST

BARNHART, Terry A. “‘A Common Feeling’: Regional Identity and Historical Consciousness in the Old Northwest, 1820-1860,” 29:1, 39-70.

PALLANTE, Martha. “The Trek West: Early Travel Narratives and Perceptions of the Frontier,” 21:1, 83-99.

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.

WILLIG, Timothy D. “Prophetstown on the Wabash: The Native Spiritual Defense of the Old Northwest,” 23:2, 115-158.

OSBORN, CHASE S.

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

OTTAWA

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

MCCLURKEN, James M. “ Ottawa Adaptive Strategies to Indian Removal,” 12:1, 29-55.

PFLUG, Melissa A. “Politics of Great Lakes Indian Religion,” 18:2, 15-31.

OX BOW

MERRILL, Peter C. “ Summers at Ox-Bow: The Early Days of a Michigan Art Colony,” 22:1, 109-123.