February News about History and Historians

Historians debate the return of the Elgin Marbles and other artifacts. In History Today.

What the British learned, and didn’t learn, from the U.S. Civil War. On Military History.

Seventy-five years later, the original movie recording of planting the flag on Iwo Jima is missing. In the Washington Post‘s Retropolis.

Historians have paid little attention to Poland’s resistance to Hitler, says Roger Moorhouse in First to Fight: the Poland War 1939 (reviewed in History Today).

What Is the American History for Freedom project and should Congress pass it?

Who was right about Americans—Dickens or Tocqueville?  On Law & Liberty.

A Marxist discusses Marx’s and Engel’s views of slavery (in connection with the New York Times‘ 1619 Project).

Why did some innovations take so long to occur?

American Historical Association tries to bring teaching to the center of the profession, with slow progress. In Inside Higher Ed.

A historian has been selected as president of Rutgers University, reports the AHA.

Tulsa, Oklahoma, city officials order a search for the mass grave of victims of the 1921 massacre of African-Americans.

Acton Institute discusses President James Garfield, an impressive figure whose career was ended by an assassin six months after his election in 1880.

Historically innovative countries: England, the Netherlands and—the Saadi Empire?  Anton Howe discusses. 

Ten accidents that changed history (from the Reader’s Digest)

The Palmer raids: President Wilson’s crackdown on immigrants in 1920 is discussed on Reason.com.

Who was Frédéric Bastiat? An AIER video with David Hart.

The fates of Confederacy president Jefferson Davis and Andrew Johnson, the first president to be impeached, were closely intertwined. On Retropolis in the Washington Post.

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