Browse by Articles
- Pensions for Soldiers' Widows: Congressional Attitudes During the 19th Century
- Pirates, Spies and Dark Nights of the Soul: Entering the Wacky World of Early American Studies
- Planning a Government Documents Instruction Program: A Strategic Approach to Outreach
- Playing Hardball: Brushing Off the Memory of a Civil Rights Giant
- Playing Harp and Accepting Change: A Conversation with Tim Dodge, Auburn University
- Play Matters: The Academic Librarian's Role in Fostering Historical Thinking
- The Power of Suggestion: Two Search Tips
- In Praise of Librarians and Archivists: Appreciating the Colleagues Who Make Professors' Jobs Easier
- Preserving the Library in the Digital Age
- Of Presidents and Papers
- Promoting Silkworms: Using Electronic Texts and Digital Images for a Historical Exhibition
- Puritan Amnesia and Secular Attitude: Newspapers and National Identity in Revolutionary America
- Pursuing Democracy: The First Hispanic Newspapers in the United States
- Rascalities and Notorieties: Salacious and Satirical Illustrations in the Flash Press of the Nineteenth Century
- Reading between the Lines: Exploring Postbellum Plantation Memoirists through Digitized Newspaper Collections
- Reading Between the Lines: Rediscovering the Home of a Founding Father
- Reading the Lives of Women through Their Obituaries: With Tips for Searching in Historical Newspapers
- Recovering Memories of a Defining Local Event: A Revolutionary-Era Tea Burning
- Religion and the Rise of the Second Ku Klux Klan, 1915-1922
- Reporting the War of 1812: U.S. Newspaper Coverage of Naval Captain David Porter