• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content

History 111

Fall 2019

  • Syllabus
  • Course schedule
  • Assignments
  • Resources

Uncategorized

Resources for December 5 – Civil War, Culinary History, White Reluctance

Resources for December 5 – Civil War, Culinary History, White Reluctance

by Leslie Madsen · Dec 5, 2019

More videos with Jon Townshend and Michael Twitty

An photo of black Union soldiers intentionally altered to make them appear to be wearing gray coats.
Be careful with sources online! See “The Modern Falsification of a Civil War Photograph.”

Filed Under: Uncategorized

Native California dance

by Leslie Madsen · Sep 24, 2019

Contemporary Chumash dancers:

Reenactment of a Napoleonic ball (1811):

Filed Under: Uncategorized

Visit to the Idaho Anne Frank Human Rights Memorial

Visit to the Idaho Anne Frank Human Rights Memorial

by Leslie Madsen · Sep 10, 2019

On Thursday, September 19, class will meet at the Idaho Anne Frank Human Rights Memorial for a tour of the memorial with Dr. Dan Prinzing of the Wassmuth Center for Human Rights, our course’s service-learning partner.

We will begin promptly at 10:30 a.m. Please dress appropriately for the weather, as we will be outside for 60-75 minutes.

The memorial sits at 777 S 8th Street in Boise, adjacent to the Cabin and the downtown library.

Here’s a map to the memorial:

Satellite map view depicting location of Anne Frank Human Rights Memorial

It’s a short walk to campus, but if you prefer to drive, there is limited parking near the memorial.

Here are walking directions from the ILC to the memorial:

  • Walk from the ILC to the Boise River.
  • Turn left on the Boise River greenbelt.
  • Go under the Capitol Boulevard bridge.
  • Veer left and proceed up the sloping sidewalk toward 9th Street.
  • Instead of crossing 9th Street, turn right. Walk across the large footbridge (rust-colored frame with wooden plank footing) to the other side of the river.
  • The memorial sits directly on the other side of the bridge.
Walking directions from the ILC to the memorial

Filed Under: Uncategorized

Welcome to History 111: U.S. History I (to 1877)

Welcome to History 111: U.S. History I (to 1877)

by Leslie Madsen · Aug 27, 2019

I’m looking forward to this course! More content will appear here as we move through the semester. For now, explore the menu at the top of the page.

Mid-19th-century photo of Chief Crane, Potawatomi, holding tomahawk and unidentified Native American man in delegation to Washington
Chief Crane, Potawatomi, holding tomahawk and unidentified Native American man in delegation to Washington, D.C. Washington D.C, None. [Between 1855 and 1865, printed later] Photograph. https://www.loc.gov/item/2007678836/.
Photograph depicts a line from the poem Plain Language from Truthful James by Francis Bret Harte, 1870, showing Truthful James, Bill Nye, and Ah Sin sitting on boxes and barrels, cheating in a game of Euchre.
Harte, Bret, Weller, F. G, photographer. “Till at last he put down a right bower, which the same Nye had dealt unto me.” United States, ca. 1871. Littleton, N.H.: F.G. Weller, Jun. 12. Photograph. https://www.loc.gov/item/2006676729/.
Stereograph showing a group of slaves including men, women and children gathered outside a building at the Foller Plantation in Cumberland Landing, Pamunkey Run, Virginia.
Gibson, James F, photographer. A Group of “contrabands”
. United States Virginia, 1862. [Hartford, Conn.: The War Photograph & Exhibition Co., No. 21 Linden Place] Photograph. https://www.loc.gov/item/2011660086/.

Filed Under: Uncategorized

Copyright © 2026 · No Sidebar Pro on Genesis Framework · WordPress · Log in