In this Issue
- Volume 20, Number 5, Special Issue 2020
- Issue
- Special Issue on Black and Indigenous History
Ohio Valley History is a refereed academic journal published by The Filson Historical Society, Cincinnati Museum Center, and University of Cincinnati. The journal’s focus is the history and culture of the Ohio River Valley and Upper South, including Kentucky, Ohio, Indiana, Illinois, and West Virginia. It covers the frontier/pioneer, early National, and antebellum periods; the Civil War and Reconstruction; and the 20th Century, including Civil Rights and urbanization.
viewing issue
Volume 20, Number 5, Special Issue 2020Table of Contents
Introduction
Articles
- Ancient Metropolis: Prehistoric Cincinnati
- Originally published: Volume 17, Number 2, Summer 2017
- pp. 3-24
- The Ohio Country and Indigenous Geopolitics in Early Modern North America, circa 1500–1760
- Originally published: Volume 18, Number 1, Spring 2018
- pp. 7-26
- A Thousand Years of American Indian History in the Filson's Collection
- Originally published: Volume 18, Number 1, Spring 2018
- pp. 70-80
- “I Would Not Have a White Upon the Premises”: The Ohio Valley Salt Industry and Slave Hiring in Illinois, 1780-1825
- Originally published: Volume 15, Number 2, Summer 2015
- pp. 49-69
- "To Treat with All Nations": Invoking Authority in the Chickasaw Nation, 1783–1795
- Originally published: Volume 18, Number 1, Spring 2018
- pp. 27-44
- Servants and Slaves in Louisville: Race, Ethnicity, and Household Labor in an Antebellum Border City
- Originally published: Volume 11, Number 1, Spring 2011
- pp. 3-25
- The Road Not Taken: Rumor, Race, and Indian Sovereignty in the Early Nineteenth Century
- Originally published: Volume 18, Number 1, Spring 2018
- pp. 85-89
- Searching for Slavery: Fugitive Slaves in the Ohio River Valley Borderland, 1830–1860
- Originally published: Volume 8, Number 4, Winter 2008
- pp. 38-63
- The Specter of Cholera in Nineteenth-Century Cincinnati
- Originally published: Volume 16, Number 2, Summer 2016
- pp. 21-40
- Whether It Really Be Truth or Fiction: Colonel Reuben T. Durrett, the Filson Club, and Historical Memory in Postbellum Kentucky
- Originally published: Volume 9, Number 4, Winter 2009
- pp. 27-47
- What is the Use of Parks?: The Debates Over Parks and the Response of Louisville’s African American Community to Racial Segregation, 1895–1930
- Originally published: Volume 9, Number 1, Spring 2009
- pp. 21-39
- Race, Sex and Riot: The Springfield, Ohio Race Riots of 1904 and 1906 and the Sources of Anti-Black Violence in the Lower Midwest
- Originally published: Volume 6, Number 1, Spring 2006
- pp. 27-44
- It Was North of Tennessee: African American Migration to Louisville and the Meaning of the South
- Originally published: Volume 3, Number 3, Fall 2003
- pp. 37-52
- The Gateway to the South: Regional Identity and the Louisville Civil Rights Movement
- Originally published: Volume 4, Number 1, Spring 2004
- pp. 43-60
- Disorder at the Derby: Race, Reputation, and Louisville’s 1967 Open Housing Crisis
- Originally published: Volume 15, Number 2, Summer 2015
- pp. 28-48
- Investing in Segregation: The Long Struggle for Racial Equity in the Cairo, Illinois, Public Schools
- Originally published: Volume 14, Number 3, Fall 2014
- pp. 49-67
- It Could Be Dangerous! Gay Liberation and Gay Marriage in Louisville, Kentucky, 1970
- Originally published: Volume 12, Number 1, Spring 2012
- pp. 45-64
Previous Issue
Next Issue
Additional Information
Copyright
Copyright © Cincinnati Museum Center and Filson Historical Society