Michigan Historical Review Subject Index
Fair Employment Practices
HALL, Jake. “Anti-Injunction Campaigns and the Transformation of Labor Law in Detroit, 1915 to 1921,” 36:1, 1-29.
KERSTEN, Andrew E. “Jobs and Justice: Detroit, Fair Employment, and Federal Activism during the Second World War,” 25:1, 76-101.
Farm Labor
HALL, Kevin T. "The Befriended Enemy: German Prisoners of War in Michigan," 41:1, 57-80.
ROSALES, Steven. "'These Streets are Mexican': An Oral History of the Mexican American Community of Saginaw, Michgan, 1920-1980," 40:2, 33-62.
Farming
BRUDER, Anne L. “New Patients at the Old Asylum: Memory and Mental Health in Michigan,” 44:1, 1-22.
CIADELLA, Joseph Stanhope. "A Landscape of Ruin and Repair: Parks, Potatoes, and Detroit's Environmental Past, 1879-1900," 40:1, 49-72.
HALL, Kevin T. "The Befriended Enemy: German Prisoners of War in Michigan," 41:1, 57-80.
HERSHOCK, Martin J. ‘“Free Commoners by Law’: Tradition, Transition, and the Closing of the Range in Antebellum Michigan,” 29.2, 97-123.
HOEFFERLE, Caroline. “‘Just at Sunrise’: The Sunrise Communal Farm in Rural Mid-Michigan, 1971-1978,” 23:2, 71-104.
HOUDEK, John T. and Charles F. Heller Jr. “The Emergence of Prosperous Farmers and Businessmen in Nineteenth-Century Kalamazoo County, Michigan,” 37:2, 53-78
KERRIGAN, William. “Apples on the Border: Orchards and the Contest for the Great Lakes,” 34:1, 25-41.
NYGREN, Joshua. "A Producer's Republic: Rural Zoning, Land Use, and Citizenship in the Great Lakes Cutover, 1920-1940," 40:1, 1-26.
LAUCK, Jon. “The National Farmers Organization and Farmer Bargaining Power,” 24:2, 88-127.
LEWIS, Kenneth E. “Mapping Antebellum Euro-American Settlement Spread in Southern Lower Michigan,” 30:2, 105-134.
SALAS, Nora. “‘Pablo’s Problem’: Michigan Chicano Movement Anticolonialism and the Farm Bureau’s Peasant Menace, 1962-1972.” 45:2, 1-38.
Fertility
ROSS, Alexander G. “Fertility Change on the Michigan Frontier: Saginaw County, 1840-1850,” 12:2, 69-86.
Festivals
RYPMA, Daniel J. "Mourning the Forest: Logging and Public Memory in West Michigan," 41:1, 1-24.
Fifth Michigan Infantry Regiment
COMBS, H. Jason, Donald Maness, and Sally McVey. "Into the Heart of Dixie: Franklin Fox and the 15th Michigan," 40:1, 97-106.
SEBRELL, Thomas E. II. “‘The Fighting Fifth’: The Fifth Michigan Infantry Regiment in the Civil War’s Peninsula Campaign,” 35:2, 27-51.
Fires
FRIDAY, Matthew J. “Morality vs. Legality: Michigan’s Burt Lake Indians and the Burning of Indianville,” 33:1, 109-123.
TRAN, Andrina. "An Experiment in the Moral Imagination: Russel Kirk, Clinton Wallace, and the Conservative Hobohemia," 42:1, 1-34.
TERRIE, Philip. “‘The Necessities of the Case’: The Response to the Great Thumb Fire of 1881,” 31:2, 91-116.
WILES, Richard. "A Bitter Memory: Seeking "Maamaw Gwayak" (Social Justice) at Burt Lake," 42:1, 61-74.
First Michigan Colored Infantry
SMITH, Michael O. “Raising a Black Regiment in Michigan: Adversity and Triumph,” 16:2, 23-41.
Fishing
DOHERTY, Robert. “‘We Don’t Want Them To Hold Their Hands Over Our Heads’: The Economic Strategies of the L’Anse Chippewas, 1830-1860,” 20:2, 47-70.
LaCOMBE, Kent. "Lake Huron's Entangled Eden: Fish, Fisheries, and Lost Opprotunities in Freshwater Borderlands, 1900-1940," 41:1, 25-56.
NELSON, John William. “The Ecology of Travel on the Great Lakes Frontier: Native Knowledge, European Dependence, and the Environmental Specifics of Contact.” 45:1, 1-26.
Flint, Michigan
BAWARDI, Han J. “'Why Do Arabs Own Grocery Stores?': Arabic-Speaking Merchants in Flint, Michigan,” 44:2, 67-96.
HENTHORN, Thomas. “A Catholic Dilemma: White Flight in Northwest Flint,” 31:2, 1-42.
LYNCH, Timothy P. “‘Sit Down! Sit Down!’: Songs of the General Motors Sit-Down Strike, 1936-1937,” 22:2, 1-47.
WEST, Kenneth B. “‘On the Line’: Rank and File Reminiscences of Working Conditions and the General Motors Sit-Down Strike of 1936-1937,” 12:1, 57-82.
WEST, Kenneth B. “Standard Cotton Products and the General Motors Sit-Down Strike: Some ‘Forgotten Men’ Remembered,” 14:1, 57-73.
Food
BENTLEY, Amy. “Booming Baby Food: Infant Food and Feeding in Post-World War II America,” 32:2, 63-88.
BOLES, Frank. “‘Stirring Constantly’: 150 Years of Michigan Cookbooks” 32:2, 33-62.
NELSON, John William. “The Ecology of Travel on the Great Lakes Frontier: Native Knowledge, European Dependence, and the Environmental Specifics of Contact.” 45:1, 1-26.
Ford, Gerald
DALEY, Matthew Lawrence and Scott L. Stabler. “'The World's Greatest Minstrel Show Under the Stars': Blackface Minstrels, Community Idenitity, and the Lowell Showboat, 1932-1977,” 44:2, 1-35.
MILES, David. “Political Experience and Anti-Big Government: The Making and Breaking of Themes in Gerald Ford’s 1976 Presidential Campaign,” 23:1, 105-122.
STABLER, Scott L. and Matthew Lawrence Daley. “'The World's Greatest Minstrel Show Under the Stars': Blackface Minstrels, Community Idenitity, and the Lowell Showboat, 1932-1977,” 44:2, 1-35.
Ford, Henry
CATALANO, Salaina. "When It Happened Here: Michigan and the Transnational Development of American Facism, 1920-1945," 46:1, 29-67.
GLEASON, Douglas P. "Money Men, Misdemeanors, and Motorcar Makers: The Uncompromising Vision of Henry Ford and Those He Left Behind," 42:2, 81-96.
MCCARTHY, Tom. “Henry Ford, Industrial Ecologist or Industrial Conservationist?: Waste Reduction and Recycling at the Rouge,” 27:2, 53-88.
SKAFF, Sheila. “Ambivalence and Cigarettes: Egon Erwin Kisch’s ‘At Ford’s Place in Detroit,’ with a Translation of the Text,” 29:1, 119-131.
STOCKTON, Ronald R. “McGuffey, Ford, Baldwin, and the Jews,” 35:2, 85-96.
Ford Motor Company
GLEASON, Douglas P. "Money Men, Misdemeanors, and Motorcar Makers: The Uncompromising Vision of Henry Ford and Those He Left Behind," 42:2, 81-96.
HYDE, Charles K. “The Dodge Brothers, the Automobile Industry, and Detroit Society in the Early Twentieth Century,” 22:2, 49-82.
MATTHEWS, J. Scott. “Nippon Ford,” 22:2, 83-102.
MCCARTHY, Tom. “Henry Ford, Industrial Ecologist or Industrial Conservationist?: Waste Reduction and Recycling at the Rouge,” 27:2, 53-88.
MEYER, Steve. “An Economic ‘Frankenstein’: UAW Workers’ Responses to Automation at the Ford Brook Park Plant in the 1950s,” 28:1, 63-89.
SKAFF, Sheila. “Ambivalence and Cigarettes: Egon Erwin Kisch’s ‘At Ford’s Place in Detroit,’ with a Translation of the Text,” 29:1, 119-131.
VARGAS, Zaragosa. “Life and Community in the ‘Wonderful City of the Magic Motor’: Mexican Immigrants in 1920s Detroit,” 15:1, 45-68.
Ford Peace Ship
GOODIER, Susan. “The Price of Pacifism: Rebecca Shelley and Her Struggle for Citizenship,” 36:1, 71-101.
Forestry
NYGREN, Joshua. "A Producer's Republic: Rural Zoning, Land Use, and Citizenship in the Great Lakes Cutover, 1920-1940," 40:1, 1-26.
RYPMA, Daniel J. "Mourning the Forest: Logging and Public Memory in West Michigan," 41:1, 1-24.
VAUGHN, David K. "The Au Sable River Lumberman's Monument: William B. Mershon's Struggle to Create a Meaningful Memorial of the Michigan Lumbering Era," 43:2, 1-36.
Fort Custer
HALL, Kevin T. "The Befriended Enemy: German Prisoners of War in Michigan," 41:1, 57-80.
Fox
JUNG, Patrick J. “Toward the Black Hawk War: The Sauk and Fox Indians and the War of 1812,” 38:1, 27-52.
French American Expeditionary Force
BRATTON, Joel J. "Marcus Bowlby and World War I," 41:1, 81-100.
French in Early America
ENGLEBERT, Robert. “Merchant Representatives and the French River World, 1763-1803,” 34:1, 63-82.
GOUGH, Barry. “Michilimackinac and Prairie du Chien: Northern Anchors of British Authority in the War of 1812,” 38:1, 83-105.
HOLLI, Melvin G. “The Founding of Detroit by Cadillac,” 27:1, 129-136.
LaFOREST, James. "A Metis Family in the Detroit River Region and Pays D'en Haut," 42:2, 67-80.
ST-ONGE, Nicole. “The Persistence of Travel and Trade: St. Lawrence River Valley Engagés and the American Fur Company, 1818-1840,” 34:2, 17-37.
TEASDALE, Guillaume. “Old Friends and New Foes: French Settlers and Indians in the Detroit River Border Region,” 38:2, 35-62.
TOUPS, Eric. "More Than Just a Missionary: The Jesuits, the Wyandot, and Colonial Crises in French Detroit, 1728-1751," 46:1, 1-28.
TRASK, Kerry A. “Settlement in a Half-Savage Land: Life and Loss in the Métis Community of La Baye,” 15:1, 1-27.
TUCKER, Patrick M. “From Fallen Timbers to the British Evacuation of Detroit, 1794-1796: The Roman Catholic Priest Who Was a British Agent,” 37:1, 41-76.
TUCKER, Patrick M. and Laurel E. Heyman. “Welcome to Hard Times: Two French Merchants and Militiamen in the Detroit River Region during the War of 1812,” 38:1, 53-81.
WALSH, Martin W. "Revenge Against the Idol: Competing Magical Systems on the Detroit River, 1670," 43:2, 55-64.
WOLF, James C. “The Midwest Capuchin Province of St. Joseph, Michigan: Its History and Its Archives,” 27.1, 137-154.
Fugitive Slave Laws
THICK, MATTHEW R. "'The Exploded Humbug': Antebellum Michigan, Personal Liberty Laws, and States' Rights," 42:2, 53-65.
Fur Traders and Trading
NELSON, John William. “The Ecology of Travel on the Great Lakes Frontier: Native Knowledge, European Dependence, and the Environmental Specifics of Contact.” 45:1, 1-26.
ST-ONGE, Nicole. “The Persistence of Travel and Trade: St. Lawrence River Valley Engagés and the American Fur Company, 1818-1840,” 34:2, 17-37.
WIDDER, Agnes Haigh. “The John Askin Family Library: A Fur-Trading Family’s Books,” 33:1, 27-57.
Furniture
SWAYAMPRAKASH, Ramya. “Dredge a River, Make a Nation Great: Shipping, Commerce, and Territoriality in the Detroit River, 1870-1905.” 45:1, 27-46.
Furniture Manufacturing
KLEIMAN, Jeffrey. “The Rule from Above: Businessmen, Bankers, and the Drive to Organize in Grand Rapids, 1890-1906,” 12:2, 45-68.
ST. LOUIS, Scott Richard. “A 'Self-Made Town': Semi-Annual Furniture Expositions and the Development of Civic Identity in Grand Rapids, 1878-1965,” 44:2, 37-65.