The Southwestern Historical Quarterly, Volume 77, July 1973 - April, 1974 Page: 269
568 p. : ill. (some col.), maps, ports. ; 23 cm.View a full description of this periodical.
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Southwestern Collection
POLITICS
"The Hero of San Jacinto Is Communing with the People: Sam Hous-
ton Speaks in Tyler, Monday, June 8, x857," by Bob Peters, Chronicles of
Smith County, Texas (Summer, I973). Sketches Texas political scene in
the middle i85os.
"Are Southern Party Leaders Really Different?" by Charles W. Wiggins,
The Journal of Politics (May, I973). Finds that southern political organ-
izations exhibit more similarity to their counterparts in other regions than
thirty years ago.
RELIGION
"First Catholic Church in Indian Territory-1872: St. Patrick's Church
at Atoka," by John Michalicka, The Chronicles of Oklahoma (Winter,
1972-1973). Provides an early history of church and founders.
"Beginnings of Methodism in Arkansas," by Walter N. Vernon, Arkansas
Historical Quarterly (Winter, 1972). Describes early Methodist work in
Arkansas.
SOCIAL AND INTELLECTUAL HISTORY
"Prohibition in New Mexico, 1917," by James A. Burran, New Mexico
Historical Review (April, 1973). Analyzes prohibition in New Mexico.
"The South as a Counterculture," by Sheldon Hackney, The American
Scholar (Spring, 1973). Explores contemporary relevance of the historical
southern counterculture.
"Circuses in Northwest Arkansas, 1865-1889," by Harold C. Tedford,
The Arkansas Historical Quarterly (Summer, 1973). Explores the popu-
larity of circuses in post-Civil War Arkansas.
"Urbanization in the South: A Unique Experience?" by Blaine A.
Brownell; "Are Southern Cities Unique? Persistence as a Clue," by Richard
J. Hopkins; and "Myth and New South City Murder Rates," by William
D. Miller, Mississippi Quarterly (Spring, 1973). Examine facets of urban-
ization in the South.
"The 'New South' Myth and Its Southern Propagandists," by Stephen
L. Cooper, North Carolina Journal of Speech and Drama (Spring, 1973).
Proposes investigation of a southern propaganda campaign designed to help
solve post-Civil War problems.269
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Texas State Historical Association. The Southwestern Historical Quarterly, Volume 77, July 1973 - April, 1974, periodical, 1973/1974; Austin, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth117148/m1/303/: accessed March 29, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Texas State Historical Association.