“Fellow-citizens, we cannot escape history.”
—Abraham Lincoln, December 1, 1862
“Who controls the past controls the future:
who controls the present controls the past.”
—George Orwell, 1984 (1949)
Required Text
- Zachary M. Schrag, The Princeton Guide to Historical Research (Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 2021) [JSTOR]
Additional Readings
- 1619 Project, intro by Nikole Hannah-Jones, New York Times, August 19, 2019. [WEB]
- Eric Alterman, “The Decline of Historical Thinking,” The New Yorker, Feb. 4, 2019 [WEB]
- Carlisle Indian School Digital Resource Center, Dickinson College (2013-) [WEB]
- College History Projects, Dickinson College Archives & Special Collections (1998-) [WEB]
- Anna Dickinson, Perils of the Hour (1864), Knowledge for Freedom seminar (2022) [WEB]
- Dickinson & Slavery, House Divided Project at Dickinson College (2019) [WEB]
- Erica Armstrong Dunbar, “George Washington, Slave Catcher,” NYT, Feb. 16, 2015 [WEB]
- Gardner Digital Library, Cumberland County Historical Society (2016-) [WEB]
- Lincoln’s Writings: The Multi-Media Edition. House Divided Project (2015) [WEB]
- Jennifer Schuessler, “His Martin Luther King Biography Was a Classic,” NYT 6/4/19 [WEB]
- Slave Stampedes of the Southern Borderlands, House Divided Project (2022) [WEB]
- Moshik Temkin, “Historians Shouldn’t Be Pundits,” New York Times, June 26, 2017. [PDF]
- Laurel Thatcher Ulrich, “The Living Mother of a Living Child”: Midwifery and Mortality in Post-Revolutionary New England.” William & Mary Quarterly 46 (Jan. 1989): 27-48 [JSTOR]
- Underground Railroad Online Handbook, NPS / House Divided Project (2023) [WEB]
- Unofficial Teacher’s Guide to Spielberg’s Lincoln, House Divided Project (2013) [WEB]
Critical Essay
On Monday, February 27, students will submit a 4-6 page typed, double-spaced essay offering a critical response to the Dickinson & Slavery initiative. Essays should identify some of the most compelling elements of the project as well as areas that might need improvement or greater development. Students should cite a variety of primary and secondary sources using Chicago-style footnotes. Additional information will be available on the annotated assignment guidelines at the course site. Essays will be graded on research effort, depth of analysis, and quality of prose. Late essays will be penalized up to 5 points each day.
Research Journal
On Monday, April 3, students will submit two research journal entries (2-3 pp. each or 500 to 1,000 words each), posted PRIVATE at the course website, detailing their efforts to find relevant sources for an investigation into one of the figures highlighted on the biography project list. The first entry should focus on the search for primary sources at local archives (Dickinson, CCHS, or AHEC) and within online databases. The second journal entry should focus on investigation of secondary sources obtained through library and digital research. Each entry should include Chicago-style footnotes and a properly formatted Chicago-style bibliography of works consulted (at least six sources per entry). All entries should include at least 2 to 3 images, properly captioned and credited. Students may also choose to embed short instructional videos where relevant. Entries will be graded on research effort, depth of analysis and quality of prose. Late research journals will be penalized up to 5 points each day.
Biography Project
The highlight of this semester will be a multi-media biography project that analyzes a forgotten or misunderstood person from Dickinson or Carlisle history. Students will begin by drafting a 10- to 12-page research paper (due on Wednesday April 19 –REVISED) that describes the life and times of their subject as well as offering an assessment of how the college or local community should better commemorate this figure. Students will then revise and transform their draft essay into a teaching website on the free platform Weebly (due on Thursday, May 11) that will include a short biographical film, an interactive timeline, and a proposed wayside marker for the historical figure. Projects will be graded on research and design efforts, depth of analysis, and quality of prose. Late submissions will be penalized 5 points per day.
Grade Distribution
Class Participation 30 percent
Critical essay 20 percent
Research journal 20 percent
Biography project 30 percent
Day | Date | Discussion Topic | Reading Assignment |
Tuesday | 1/24 | Methods & Expectations | — |
Thursday | 1/26 | LAB: Henry W. Spradley | Dickinson & Slavery: 2019 Report |
Tuesday | 1/31 | Defining History & Historical Thinking | Schrag, ch. 1-2 + Alterman, Temkin |
Thursday | 2/2 | LAB: “Lincoln” and Hollywood | “Lincoln” (2013) movie guide |
Tuesday | 2/7 | Getting Started | Schrag, ch. 3 + 1619 Project dialectic |
Thursday | 2/9 | LAB: Martha Ballard’s Diary | Ulrich article |
Tuesday | 2/14 | Understanding Historiography | Schrag, ch. 4 + Dunbar op-ed |
Wednesday | 2/15 | LECTURE: Erica Armstrong Dunbar | 7pm, ATS |
Thursday | 2/16 | LAB: Tom Torlino | Carlisle Indian School + Wiki |
Tuesday | 2/21 | The Politics of Evidence | Schrag, ch. 5 |
Tuesday | 2/21 | BELL LECTURE: Chris Bilodeau | 430pm, Denny 317 |
Thursday | 2/23 | FIELD TRIP: House Divided studio | Dickinson & Slavery: Our Research |
Monday | 2/27 | Critical essays due | By 5pm via email |
Tuesday | 2/28 | Types of Sources | Schrag, ch.6- 7 |
Thursday | 3/2 | LAB: Underground Railroad | UGRR handbook + Slave Stampedes |
Tuesday | 3/7 | Finding Sources | Schrag, ch. 8-9 |
Thursday | 3/9 | FIELD TRIP: College Archives | Journals: Clarke, Miller, Reiersen, Stout + College History Projects |
Tuesday | 3/14 | NO CLASS (Spring Break) | |
Thursday | 3/16 | NO CLASS (Spring Break) | |
Tuesday | 3/21 | Close Reading | Schrag, ch. 10 + Schuessler |
Thursday | 3/23 | FIELD TRIP: CCHS (21 N. Pitt Street) | Gardner + Journals: Donoghue, Forte + articles: May 22 + Oct 5 |
Tuesday | 3/28 | Making History: Research | Schrag, ch. 11-12 |
Thursday | 3/30 | LAB: Best research practices | Journals: Goldberg, Solnit, Wingert |
Monday | 4/3 | Research journals due | By 5pm by post |
Monday | 4/3 | PFLAUM LECTURE: Penny von Eschen | 7pm, Althouse 106 |
Tuesday | 4/4 | Making History: Basic Writing | Schrag, ch. 13 |
Thursday | 4/6 | LAB: Anna Dickinson | Dickinson (1864), KFF seminar |
Tuesday | 4/11 | Making History: Storytelling | Schrag, ch. 14 |
Thursday | 4/13 | FIELD TRIP: Walking Tours | Dickinson & Slavery / Civil War Carlisle |
Saturday | 4/15 | WERT LECTURE: Jonathan Holloway | ATS, 7PM – 8PM (required) |
Tuesday | 4/18 | NO CLASS | |
Wednesday | 4/19 | Draft project essays due | By 5pm via email |
Thursday | 4/20 | Making History: Style Guide | Schrag, ch. 15 |
Tuesday | 4/25 | Going Public | Schrag, ch. 16 |
Thursday | 4/27 | LAB: Building websites | Student Hall of Fame |
Tuesday | 5/2 | Student presentations | Project drafts |
Thursday | 5/4 | Student presentations | Project drafts |
Thursday | 5/11 | Biography projects due | By 5pm via email |