Only 24 years of Eliza Schuyler’s life were spent with Alexander Hamilton, Jane Kamensky writes. What would it mean to write her into the history of America’s founding?
To follow up on a comment I posted - the building at the entrance to Arlington is the Women’s Memorial, or the Women in Military Service for America Memorial. It’s housed in the hemicycle, built in the 30s as an entrance to Arlington but never really used that way: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Militar...
October 10, 2025 at 11:01 AM
To follow up on a comment I posted - the building at the entrance to Arlington is the Women’s Memorial, or the Women in Military Service for America Memorial. It’s housed in the hemicycle, built in the 30s as an entrance to Arlington but never really used that way: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Militar...
DACOWITS is gone, after nearly 75 years of important, forward-thinking work about the role of women in national defense. Hegseth claims the group had a “divisive” “agenda,” but he’s wrong and severely misunderstands - intentionally so, I think - the role the committee has played historically.
September 27, 2025 at 4:03 PM
DACOWITS is gone, after nearly 75 years of important, forward-thinking work about the role of women in national defense. Hegseth claims the group had a “divisive” “agenda,” but he’s wrong and severely misunderstands - intentionally so, I think - the role the committee has played historically.
I love Ben’s commitment to sharing public scholarly writing - take a look at what’s in this week’s share! Includes my piece that coincides with the anniversary of the Voting Rights Act and the 19th amendment this month.
Driving to Virginia tomorrow, so it’s #ScholarSunday on a Saturday! Here’s my 237th thread of great public scholarly writing & work, podcast episodes, new & forthcoming books from the last week. Add more below, share widely, & enjoy, all! 🗃️
I love Ben’s commitment to sharing public scholarly writing - take a look at what’s in this week’s share! Includes my piece that coincides with the anniversary of the Voting Rights Act and the 19th amendment this month.
I’m a historian and a K-12 educator and I use AI. My Bluesky is full of people I respect, all regularly posting about how they dislike AI and the people who use it. Many are in higher ed and/or the larger history field.
So - we’re just alienating K-12 teachers and others who are using AI tools now?
July 24, 2025 at 2:55 PM
I’m a historian and a K-12 educator and I use AI. My Bluesky is full of people I respect, all regularly posting about how they dislike AI and the people who use it. Many are in higher ed and/or the larger history field.
So - we’re just alienating K-12 teachers and others who are using AI tools now?
What can we do against such reckless hate? Enjoy & share widely the solidarity with all the amazing work in my 231st #ScholarSunday thread of public scholarly writing, podcasts, new & forthcoming books from the last week. 🗃️
What can we do against such reckless hate? Enjoy & share widely the solidarity with all the amazing work in my 231st #ScholarSunday thread of public scholarly writing, podcasts, new & forthcoming books from the last week. 🗃️
It’s small, but one of my favorite things is that I get to write a women’s history column each month. I love the research rabbit holes I go down, the stories I find, and the primary sources I discover. It’s not book 2but it’s what I have the ability to do right now, and it makes me very happy.
June 26, 2025 at 3:34 PM
It’s small, but one of my favorite things is that I get to write a women’s history column each month. I love the research rabbit holes I go down, the stories I find, and the primary sources I discover. It’s not book 2but it’s what I have the ability to do right now, and it makes me very happy.
I know my feed tends to include a lot of dumping on AI, and I get it, but are there really no other teachers or history PhDs on here playing with AI tools?
June 19, 2025 at 12:55 PM
I know my feed tends to include a lot of dumping on AI, and I get it, but are there really no other teachers or history PhDs on here playing with AI tools?
And some summer mornings, you open a book you’ve owned for 20 years, noticing something in it for the first time - a something that could, just maybe, lead to new research directions….
June 9, 2025 at 1:04 PM
And some summer mornings, you open a book you’ve owned for 20 years, noticing something in it for the first time - a something that could, just maybe, lead to new research directions….