
The Tedious Heroism of David Ruggles

The Curious Affair of the Horsewhipped Senator: A Diplomatic Crisis That Didn’t Happen

To Remember or to Forget: The Story of Philanthropists Catherine Williams Ferguson and Isabella Marshall Graham’s Unlikely Interracial Collaboration

The Influences of the Underworld: Nineteenth-Century Brothel Guides, Calling Cards, and City Directories

Incarcerating Children in the Age of Emancipation

Copernicus at the Newsstand

Buying and Selling Staten Island

New-York Knicks Reconsidered

Power, Space, and Race: Evangelical Gotham

On the margins of the margin

Between Demo and Aristo: Civil Society and the “Revolutionary Settlement” in New York’s Columbia County

“But, That’s Just Not True!”

Slaughterhouse Rules: The Deregulation of Food Markets in Antebellum New York

Hamilton, Burr, Livingston, Clinton, Van Buren: Building Banks, Canals, and a Political System in New York State

Acquiring a Taste for Defiance

Corporations, what are they good for?

Interracial Roads to American Freedom

Hijinks on the Hudson?

The City in Frames: Otis Bullard’s Moving Panorama of New York

Anthony’s Broadway on a Rainy Day

Bread and Butter Activism

Gangs, the Five Points, and the American Public

Ink-Stained Wretch

Where There’s Smoke, There’s Fire

Black Shakespeareans in Old New York

The Common Dust of Potter’s Field

The Iroquois on the Web

Of Spoons and Empires

Local Haunts

The Gang’s Not All Here

The Visible Public

Harry Potter, My Daughter, Elihu Smith, and Me

The Past Impaneled

Donna Merwick’s New World
Creative Writing
Reviews
ABOUT
Welcome to Commonplace, a destination for exploring and exchanging ideas about early American history and culture. A bit less formal than a scholarly journal, a bit more scholarly than a popular magazine, Commonplace speaks—and listens—to scholars, museum curators, teachers, hobbyists, and just about anyone interested in American history before 1900. It is for all sorts of people to read about all sorts of things relating to early American life—from architecture to literature, from politics to parlor manners. It’s a place to find insightful analysis of early American history as it is discussed in scholarly literature, as it manifests on the evening news, as it is curated in museums, big and small; as it is performed in documentary and dramatic films and as it shows up in everyday life.
In addition to critical evaluations of books and websites (Reviews) and poetic research and fiction (Creative Writing), our articles explore material and visual culture (Objects); pedagogy, the writing of literary scholarship, and the historian’s craft (Teach); and diverse aspects of America’s past and its many peoples (Learn). For more great content, check out our other projects, (Just Teach One) and (Just Teach One African American Print).
How to cite Commonplace articles:
Author, “Title of Article,” Commonplace: the journal of early American life, date accessed, URL.
Sophie White, “Trading Looks Race, Religion and Dress in French America,” Commonplace: the journal of early American life, accessed September 30, 2019, https://commonplace.online/article/trading-looks-race-religion-dress-french-america/
Joshua R. Greenberg, editor
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