The Junto

A Group Blog on Early American History

Skip to content
  • Home
  • About
  • Members
    • Ben Park
    • Michael D. Hattem
    • Sara Georgini
    • Rachel Herrmann
    • Joseph M. Adelman
    • Kenneth Owen
    • Tom Cutterham
    • Jessica Parr
    • Roy Rogers
    • Christopher Jones
    • Michael Blaakman
    • Sara Damiano
    • Christopher F. Minty
    • Alyssa Zuercher Reichardt
    • Seth Perry
    • Casey Schmitt
    • Mark Boonshoft
    • Katy Lasdow
    • Matt Karp
    • Glenda Goodman
    • Eric Herschthal
    • Mandy Izadi
    • Hannah Bailey
    • Jordan Taylor
    • Julia M Gossard
    • Nora Slonimsky
    • Carla Cevasco
    • Emily Yankowitz
    • Adam McNeil
    • Elbra David
    • Ebony Jones
    • Philippe Halbert
    • Vanessa Holden
    • Lindsay Keiter
  • Resources
    • Archive
    • Index
    • Bibliography
    • Links
  • The Junto Podcast Network
    • The JuntoCast
    • The History Carousel
  • Contribute

Tag Archives: Michael D. Hattem

The Week in Early American History

February 8, 2015 By Michael D. Hattem in The Week in Early American History Tags: alchemy, Alexander Hamilton, birds, censorship, conference posters, George Washington, Groundhog Day, John Hope Franklin, Michael D. Hattem, Paul Revere, Rachel Hope Cleves, Second Bank of the United States, Thomas Jefferson, Voltaire Leave a comment

TWEAHOn to the links! Continue reading →

Spread the word:

  • Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window)
  • Click to share on Twitter (Opens in new window)

Post navigation

What is “The Junto?”

The Junto is a group blog made up of junior early Americanists—graduate students and junior faculty—dedicated to providing content of general interest to other early Americanists and those interested in early American history, as well as a forum for discussion of relevant historical and academic topics.

Follow

      

Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License. Each contributor to the blog retains the rights to their own individual contributions. If you would like to use any content in full, please email us at: thejuntoblog [at] gmail [dot com].

Facebook

Facebook
My Tweets

What’s Being Read Today

  • Creole Comforts and French Connections: A Case Study in Caribbean Dress
    Creole Comforts and French Connections: A Case Study in Caribbean Dress
  • National Identity and the American Revolution
    National Identity and the American Revolution
  • Q&A: Ibram Kendi, Stamped From the Beginning
    Q&A: Ibram Kendi, Stamped From the Beginning
  • Guest Post: The Problem of Loyalism before the American Revolution
    Guest Post: The Problem of Loyalism before the American Revolution
  • The Story of "Evacuation Day"
    The Story of "Evacuation Day"
  • An Indian Chintz Gown: Slavery and Fashion
    An Indian Chintz Gown: Slavery and Fashion
  • Was The American Revolution A Good Thing?
    Was The American Revolution A Good Thing?
  • The 1619 Project and the Work of the Historian
    The 1619 Project and the Work of the Historian
  • Seriously, though, was the American Revolution a Civil War?
    Seriously, though, was the American Revolution a Civil War?
  • About
    About

Recent Comments

  • The (My) UnEssay | The Dual Professor on Assigning the Unessay in the U.S. Survey
  • Resolve and the Second Book – Allison Truitt on Roundtable on How NOT To Write Your Second Book: Tamara Thornton on Choosing New Topics
  • 'Narrative History and the Collapsing of Historical Distance' by Christopher Jones - Yale University Press London BlogYale University Press London Blog on Narrative History and the Collapsing of Historical Distance
  • Customer Post: Teaching the Caribbean within the Age of Mammoth Early The USA – OmoVisa on Guest Post: Teaching the Caribbean in the Age of Vast Early America
  • infographiclink2021 on Q&A with Edward E. Andrews, Author of Native Apostles

What We Write About

17th Century 18th Century 19th Century Abolitionism Abraham Lincoln academia Adams African-American history AHA Alexander Hamilton American Revolution Antebellum Archives Atlantic History Atlantic World Benjamin Franklin book review British Empire capitalism Caribbean Civil War conferences Constitution cultural history Digital History digital humanities Early Republic Fashion Founders Gender George Washington graduate school Guest Posts historical memory historiography History of Fashion Interview Job Market John Adams Junto March Madness March Madness Maritime history material culture McNeil Center for Early American Studies Methodology museums Narrative History Native American history Native Americans New England newspapers New York City Omohundro Institute of Early American History and Culture pedagogy Political history Politics Popular History Print Culture Public History Publishing race religion religious history research Roundtable Slavery teaching The JuntoCast Thomas Jefferson twitter vastearlyamerica Virginia women women's history writing

Archives

Categories

Other Blogs

Religion in American History
The Historical Society
The Way of Improvement Leads Home
Historiann
Boston 1775
U.S. Intellectual History
Gradhacker
History Carnival
Profhacker
Uncommonplace Book
Age of Revolutions
Black Perspectives
Uncommon Sense–The Blog

The Junto

Footer menu

  • Home
  • About
  • Members
  • Resources
  • The Junto Podcast Network
  • Contribute
Create a free website or blog at WordPress.com.
↑
Cancel
Privacy & Cookies: This site uses cookies. By continuing to use this website, you agree to their use.
To find out more, including how to control cookies, see here: Cookie Policy