SIXTH ANNUAL WESTERN HISTORY SYMPOSIUM

Similar documents
SEVENTH ANNUAL WESTERN HISTORY SYMPOSIUM

1. The United States Naval and the National Institute of Health are in this state. 4. This state is the home to Mount Rushmore.

DOCTORAL/RESEARCH INSTITUTIONS RECEIVING FULBRIGHT AWARDS FOR

CSCAA NCAA Division I Scholar All-America Teams

All-Time College Football. Attendance. All-Time NCAA Attendance. Annual Football Bowl Subdivision (FBS) Attendance. Annual Total NCAA Attendance

TROJAN SEXUAL HEALTH REPORT CARD. The Annual Rankings of Sexual Health Resources at American Colleges and Universities. TrojanBrands.

Military Service: Migration and a Path to Middle Class Status

D.B. 48, F. 1, 5-15; D.B. 100, F ; D.B.

PATHS OF LIFE. American Indians of the Southwest

Ethnic Studies Asst 54, ,315-3, ,229 6,229. Gen Honors/UC Asso 64, ,402-4, ,430 24,430

Ethnic Studies Asst 55, ,755-2, ,111 4,111

ACROSS the USA. By Annette Breedlove

Table 2 Overall Heterodox-Adjusted Rankings for Ph.D.-Granting Institutions in Economics

College of Liberal Arts and Sciences Aspirational and Operational Peers

Finding Aid for the Alan Le May Papers, No online items

Colorado River Basin. Source: U.S. Department of the Interior, Bureau of Reclamation

2013 Sexual Health. Report Card. The Annual Rankings of Sexual Health Resources at American Colleges and Universities BRAND CONDOMS

50 U.S. STATES AND TERRITORIES

THE CIVIL WAR LESSON TWO THE CONFEDERATE ARMY

Department of Defense Regional Council for Small Business Education and Advocacy Charter

By Brian L. Yoder, Ph.D.

Weights and Measures Training Registration

THE METHODIST CHURCH (U.S.)

ARL SUPPLEMENTARY STATISTICS A COMPILATION OF STATISTICS FROM THE MEMBERS OF THE ASSOCIATION OF RESEARCH LIBRARIES

October 31, 2009 DIVISION COMMANDER DEPARTMENT % OF GOAL

Clarissa Woelfel Confer

WikiLeaks Document Release

COLORADO PLATEAU COOPERATIVE ECOSYSTEM STUDIES UNIT. AMENDMENT SIX TO COOPERATIVE and JOINT VENTURE AGREEMENT. between

Decline Admission to Boston College Law School Fall 2018

Foreign Policy related to the War of 1812 The Young Republic. President Washington through President Monroe

FDP Expanded Clearinghouse Participants (as of February 8, 2018)

Sears Directors' Cup Final Standings

United States Colored Troops (U.S.C.T.) Lesson Plan

PROVENANCE: Collection of microfilm from multiple sources. Donated to the Arizona Historical Society in 2012 by the Arizona Historical Foundation.

WRP Natural Resources Committee s Southeastern Arizona/New Mexico (SoAZ/NM Project)

NBKRC Mid-Year Bankruptcy Filings Report. (July 2013)

Chapter 4: Revolutionary Pennsylvania

Cumberland County Historical Society

Colony: People: Economy: Natural Resources: Religion:

Request for Qualifications City of Merriam, Kansas Budget: $100,000 RFQ Deadline: February 20, 2015

Colleges/Universities with Exercise Science/Kinesiology-related Graduate Programs

Curriculum Vita. Education

COLORADO PLATEAU COOPERATIVE ECOSYSTEM STUDIES UNIT. AMENDMENT TWO TO COOPERATIVE and JOINT VENTURE AGREEMENT. between NAVAJO NATION.

Acm762 AG U.S. VITAL STATISTICS BY SECTION, 2017 Page 1

VETERANS DAY SPEECH 2016

College Profiles - Navy/Marine ROTC

PRESS RELEASE Media Contact: Joseph Stefko, Director of Public Finance, ;

The number of masters degrees awarded for all program areas at Land-grant institutions rose by 11,318 degrees (18%).

West Virginia. Copyright 2010 LessonSnips

2009 Marketing Academia Labor Market Survey May 20, 2009

FY 2014 Per Capita Federal Spending on Major Grant Programs Curtis Smith, Nick Jacobs, and Trinity Tomsic

Western Society of Soil Science Records,

List of Association of American Universities (AAU) Member Institutions

Priscilla A. Dowden-White, Ph.D Westminster Place St. Louis, Missouri (314) (h) (314) (w)

Fifth Battalion, Seventh Cavalry Regiment Association. First Cavalry Division (Airmobile) ( ) Third Infantry Division (2004-Present)

2015 State Hospice Report 2013 Medicare Information 1/1/15

COLORADO PLATEAU COOPERATIVE ECOSYSTEM STUDIES UNIT

Mark Raymond Harrington photograph collection,

DRAFT. Buffalo Soldiers in the American Southwest OVERVIEW THE AMERICAN SOUTHWEST. Background & Origin of Buffalo Soldiers

Jason Pierce, Ph.D. Associate Professor Angelo State University Office #: (325)

HOME HEALTH AIDE TRAINING REQUIREMENTS, DECEMBER 2016

AMERICAN ASSOCIATION FOR AGRICULTURAL EDUCATION FACULTY SALARIES

Guidelines for Grant Applications

1. The University of Alabama 2. Alvernia University 3. American University 4. Appalachian State University 5. Arcadia University 6.

Education. Dissertation. Fields. Teaching Experience. Paper Presentations

STATE INDUSTRY ASSOCIATIONS $ - LISTED NEXT PAGE. TOTAL $ 88,000 * for each contribution of $500 for Board Meeting sponsorship

GROWING THE MIDDLE: SECURING THE FUTURE LOS ANGELES


World War II Invasion and Conquests. Pacific

U.S. Psychology. Departments

ROTC Representatives Share Lessons From Service

Request for Proposal. Event Program Development for the Investigative Reporting Program s Annual Symposium and Workshops CONTENTS


NSTC COMPETITIVE AREA DEFINITIONS. UIC Naval Service Training Command (NSTC), Great Lakes, IL

Engineering bachelor s degrees recovered in 2008

Date: 9/29/15 Attached Document Attached is the budget breakdown, and the schedule with bios for the speakers for the ACUI Conference.

Salary and Demographic Survey Results

Curriculum Vitae BRIAN D. CARROLL

Kelly N. Fayard 1 Prospect Street New Haven, Connecticut

Curriculum Vitae. 521 Loomis Court Carleton College Northfield, MN

NEW JERSEY LIKE NEW YORK, NEW JERSEY WAS INITIALLY COLONIZED. Founded, 1664

STATE AGRICULTURAL ORGANIZATIONS SUPPORTING S. 744 AS APPROVED BY THE SENATE AGRICULTURE COMMITTEE

By Brian L. Yoder, Ph.D.

GARREY EDWARD CARRUTHERS

TABLE 3c: Congressional Districts with Number and Percent of Hispanics* Living in Hard-to-Count (HTC) Census Tracts**

JOSEPH W. WIPPL Fred Pardee School of Global Affairs, Boston University 121 Bay State Road Boston, MA (office)

House Prices: A pictorial review

Ph.D. in History The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, 2013

ANNEX D. Procedure for Field Level Selection and Coordination of the Use of Radio Frequencies

Settlement: George Washington s French And Indian War

2 All-Time College football Attendance. All-Time NCAA Attendance. Annual Football Bowl Subdivision (FBS) Attendance

TABLE 3b: Congressional Districts Ranked by Percent of Hispanics* Living in Hard-to- Count (HTC) Census Tracts**

Libby R. Tronnes Curriculum vitae

National Collegiate Soils Contest Rules

Pipeline Safety Regulations and the Effects on Operator Qualification Programs. March 28, 2017

Aaniiih Nakoda College Abilene Christian University Alabama A&M University Alcorn State University American Samoa Community College (American Samoa)

Mike DeSimone's 2006 College Football Division I-A Top 119 Ratings Bowl Schedule

Associate Degrees for Transfer Awarded in Academic Year May 2017

Individual Intern Coaching Sessions, Mitch Owen Leadership Yesterday, Today, Tomorrow, Judy Barth 5:15 pm Adjourn for Day Dinner on your own

Robert William John Cocks (Jack) Obituary for Robert "Jack" Cocks

Transcription:

SIXTH ANNUAL WESTERN HISTORY SYMPOSIUM SPONSORED BY THE SHARLOT HALL MUSEUM AND THE PRESCOTT CORRAL OF WESTERNERS INTERNATIONAL AUGUST 8, 2009 In Search of Tom Horn Speaker: Dr. Larry Ball Time: 10:00 A.M. Place: Museum The process of uncovering the facts of Tom Horn s life have proven to be as elusive to his biographer as Horn himself was in real life. Author Larry Ball, who is currently writing a biography on Horn, has concluded that much of what has been accepted as fact respecting this enigmatic figure of Western lore is simply incorrect, as previous writers have relied too heavily on Horn s wildly imaginative autobiography and, to some extent, on the legend that evolved after Horn s execution in Cheyenne, Wyoming in 1903. Dr. Ball, who has made it his mission to set the record straight, will discuss his efforts to uncover the true facts respecting the representations by Horn and others of Horn s life as an Army scout in Arizona, and a Pinkerton and cattle detective and, allegedly, a hired assassin, in Wyoming. Larry Ball is a native of Arkansas. He graduated of Arkansas State University and earned his PhD in Western History at the University of Colorado. Dr. Ball returned to Arkansas State in 1970 as a professor of history and taught there until he retired in 2001. He is the author of several books concerning law enforcement in the West, including The United States Marshals of New Mexico and Arizona Territories, 1846-1912; Desert Lawmen: The High Sheriffs of New Mexico and Arizona, 1846-1912; and Ambush at Bloody Run: The Wham Payroll Robbery of 1889. He is presently completing a biography on Tom Horn. 1

Colonel Benjamin H. Grierson in Arizona, 1885-1886 Speaker: Dr. Bruce Dinges Time: 11:00 A.M. Place: Museum A sub-title for this program could well be I Am Very Well Satisfied That I Am In No Way Connected With This Indian Mess. Colonel Benjamin Grierson, a well-respected Civil War cavalry officer, came to Arizona in 1885 in command of the 10 th Cavalry an all Black unit generally referred to as the Buffalo Soldiers. They were not warmly received either by the Department commander General George Crook or by the local residents. The presentation will focus on Grierson s command at Ft. Whipple, his frustration at being shunted aside by General Crook, and his actions in dealing with a conflict between the settlers and Indians on the Hualapai Reservation. Bruce Dinges is director of publications at the Arizona Historical Society and editor-inchief of The Journal of Arizona History. He is also the executive director of the Arizona History Convention. A graduate of Rice University, where he earned his M.A and Ph.D. degrees, Dr. Dinges is a specialist on the frontier army and has published numerous articles and reviews, and has contributed introductions, chapters and essays, to a variety of books and other publications on military history. He has also taught at Prairie View A&M University, the University of Arizona, and Pima Community College. Dr. Dinges is a past president of Westerners International. He is the editor, with Shirley Leckie, of A Just and Righteous Cause: Benjamin Grierson s Civil War Memoir (Southern Illinois University Press). In Their Own Words: The Overland Diaries of Women Who Settled the West Speaker: Dr. Reba Wells Grandrud Time: 1:30 P.M. Place: Museum What was it like to be a woman traveling on the Oregon Trail, the California Trail or the Southern Route to California in the mid-19 th Century? Who were these women and how 2

did they feel about up-rooting their lives? Between 1840 and 1870, more than a quarter million Americans moved west across the continent. Some went for adventure, some for the new and exotic experience, to see the elephant. But women often went because they had no choice but to follow their husbands, fathers or brothers who had determined to seek their fortune in the West. As shapers of families, these women persevered by relying on their traditional roles and a strong supportive network. They were, indeed, ordinary women, caught up in a momentous event of history. Reba Wells Grandrud, a past president of Westerners International, retired in 1998 as National Register Coordinator for the Arizona State Historic Preservation Office and in 2000, as Director of the Arizona Historical Society Museum in Papagp Park. Since her retirement she has continued working for the preservation of history on behalf of a wide range of non-profits, including the Arizona History Convention, Westerners International, the Sunnyslope Historical Society, the Pioneers Cemetery Association and a variety of organizations that support our national trails system: The Partnership for the national trails System, the Oregon-California Trails Association, the Anza Foundation and the old Spanish Trail Association. A New Mexico native, Dr. Grandrud holds degrees from the University of New Mexico in Education, Southwest History and History of the American West. She has lived in Arizona since 1982. Governor Alexander O. Brodie and Arizona's Fight for Statehood Speaker: Charles Herner Time: 2:30 P.M. Place: Museum At the turn of the Twentieth Century, the question of statehood was foremost in the minds of many Arizona residents. Indeed, for years both the Arizona Democratic and Republican parties had been calling for statehood, and Arizona s delegate to Congress routinely had actively pushed the issue in Washington. But, for a variety of reasons, little progress had been made. After the Spanish-American War, however, conditions seemed much more favorable, particularly after Theodore Roosevelt became president and 3

appointed his Rough Rider friend Alexander O. Brodie Governor of the Arizona Territory. In this presentation, the speaker examines Brodie's largely unheralded efforts to achieve statehood and explains why his efforts failed. Charles Herner was born in Jerome when the community boasted about 10,000 people and the mines were still going strong. He grew up in Douglas and attended the University of Arizona, receiving BA and MA degrees in American History. He taught history at Canyon del Oro High School in Tucson for 27 years and had a secondary career in the U.S. Army Reserve. Mr. Herner is the author of The Arizona Rough Riders and has recently completed a full-length biography of Alexander Oswald Brodie, an Arizona Rough Rider and Arizona s 15 th territorial governor. Neither Wolf Nor Dog Speakers: Dr. John Langellier Time: 3:30 P.M. Place: Museum Dr. Sandra Lynch Trapped between two worlds, Hoomothaya, or Mike Burns, was neither Yavapai Indian nor Anglo soldier. Captured by soldiers as a small boy, Burn grew up in a white world and was educated at the Carlisle Indian School. Nevertheless, upon his return from this Pennsylvania school to his ancestral home at Ft. McDowell, he had to learn to be an Indian. As a scout and soldier for the U.S. Army, Burns was an eye-witness to the ending of American Indian control of the West. Burns left behind him a manuscript of his life and experiences during this important period of the settlement and development of the Arizona Territory. The manuscript and its anticipated publication in 2010 is the main focus of this presentation. John Langellier is the executive director of the Sharlot Hall Museum. He received his BA and MA in history and historical archeology from the University of San Diego and his Ph.D. with an emphasis in U.S. military history from Kansas State University. He also 4

undertook work at the Ph.D. level at Marquette University with an emphasis on U.S. government relations with the American Indian. John is the author, co-author, or editor of dozens of books and monographs, and has served as a consultant to motion pictures and television since 1973. Prior to assuming his current position at the Museum his career in public history included nearly fifteen years with the Department of Defense, a decade at the Autry Museum in Los Angels, and most recently as deputy director of the Ronald Reagan Presidential Library. Sandra Lynch is the Curator of Anthropology for the Sharlot Hall Museum. She holds multiple degrees from Colorado State University, including a BS in Agricultural Sciences, an MS in Agricultural Economics and a Ph.D. in Poultry Science. In more recent years she earned a second Ph.D. in anthropology from the University of California, Riverside. Her professional resume is diverse, including five years as a professional lobbyist for the poultry industry and ten years as a buyer for a commercial publishing company. Dr. Lynch has curated a number of exhibits for the Museum, including The Baskets Keep Talking: the Continuing Story of the Yavapai-Prescott Indian Tribe, and the coming trilogy Arizona on an Alien Planet; Beasts-Savannah South of the Snow, and the Village. John Wayne: An American Icon Speaker: Dr. Jack Ziegler Time: 7:30 P.M. Place: Hotel St. Michael John Wayne was one of the most popular leading men in Hollywood history. This largerthan-life actor created unforgettable characters such as the Ringo Kid (Stagecoach), Sgt. John Stryker (Sands of Iwo Jima) and Rooster Cogburn (True Grit) that amaze and delight audiences even today. Dr. Jack Ziegler, an expert on Western film, will utilize clips from some of Wayne s most significant roles from The Big Trail (1930) to The Shootist (1976) as background for his commentary on the importance of the Duke s landmark performances. Dr. Ziegler maintains that Wayne grew into a nuanced and 5

gifted actor who, within the Western genre, portrayed a variety of characters from the tragic to the comic. Jack Ziegler grew up near Asbury Park, New Jersey and obtained his Ph.D. degree in English from the University of Connecticut. Dr. Ziegler was posted to Ft. Huachuca with the U.S. Army in 1971 and following his discharge chose to remain in Arizona. He was an Administrator and English and Humanities professor at Cochise College until his retirement in 2004. Dr. Ziegler lives in Tombstone and devotes his time to speaking and writing about the post-civil War West and the Western film. 6