Zobrazeno 1 - 10
of 13
pro vyhledávání: '"Strother E. Roberts"'
Autor:
Strother E. Roberts
Publikováno v:
The William and Mary Quarterly. 79:357-392
Autor:
Strother E. Roberts
Publikováno v:
The New England Quarterly. 92:391-430
Imperial wars and Atlantic markets drove a boom in turpentine production in turn-of-the-eighteenth-century New England. English Colonists used techniques learned from Huguenot refugees to exploit local pines in a quest for profits that threatened woo
The Dog Days of Winter: Indigenous Dogs, Indian Hunters, and Wintertime Subsistence in the Northeast
Autor:
Strother E. Roberts
Publikováno v:
Northeastern Naturalist. 24:H1-H21
Prior to European settlement, indigenous members of the species Canis lupus familiaris (Domestic Dog) was, aside from humans, the most common large predator in the North American northeast. Dogs served Indian communities throughout the year, but thei
Autor:
Strother E. Roberts
Focusing on the Connecticut River Valley—New England's longest river and largest watershed— Strother Roberts traces the local, regional, and transatlantic markets in colonial commodities that shaped an ecological transformation in one corner of t
Autor:
Strother E. Roberts
Publikováno v:
The Journal of Interdisciplinary History. 48:568-569
Autor:
Strother E. Roberts
Publikováno v:
Pennsylvania History: A Journal of Mid-Atlantic Studies. 79:345-356
William Pencak, editor of Pennsylvania History , wrote in 1996: Pennsylvania’s history cannot be understood without reference to the regions around it. Pennsylvania’s role in the development of the Southern backcountry and the Ohio Valley, trade
Autor:
Strother E. Roberts
Publikováno v:
The New England Quarterly. 83:743-746
Autor:
Strother E. Roberts
Publikováno v:
Ethnohistory. 57:597-624
The history of the Canadian Arctic and Subarctic hints at how certain aboriginal American communities constructed identities across the lines drawn by differences in language and culture. This history also suggests that aboriginal com- munities' abil
Autor:
Strother E. Roberts
Publikováno v:
The New England Quarterly. 83:73-101
In the eighteenth-century Connecticut Valley, colonists from all walks of life steadily protested the White Pines Acts. Their experience with popular resistance to imperial authority—sometimes passive, sometimes violent—prepared valley inhabitant