HISTORY OF WYOMING

History 1251, Autumn Term, 2009

 

Fairness Policy re: 1st Exam

General Instructions for AHC Visits

Extra Credit Opportunities

 

Dr. Phil Roberts                                                                                                                                                                        T, Th, 9:35-10:50 a.m.

Office: 356 History Bldg., 766-5311 or 766-5101                                                                                                                 129 Classroom Bldg.

Office Hours: W, 1-3 p.m., Th., 11-Noon, and by appointment                                                                                       E-mail: philr@uwyo.edu

 

TEACHING ASSISTANTS:

      Andrea Binder, 766-4333, 56 History Bldg.,  abinder@uwyo.edu

Office Hours: T-Th, 11-12:30, and by appointment.  Andrea  will be grading papers for students with last names beginning with the letters H-O

       Robert Lang, 766-4333,  56 History Bldg.,     rlang4@uwyo.edu

Office Hours: T-Th, 11-12:30, and by appointment.  Robert will be grading papers for students with last names beginning with the letters P-Z

        Phil will be grading papers for students with last names beginning with the letters.A-G.

 

OBJECTIVE: The course is a general thematic survey to encourage an understanding of Wyoming history, how it relates to the history of the West and the rest of America, and how it has influenced the present.   

                While strict chronological progression of the state’s history, This course will be set up thematically, although generally, events occurring before 1940 will be discussed in the first half of the semester and later events, in the second half.  In neither half, however, will the course be taught in terms of strict chronology. Students will be provided with sufficient chronological context, given that, in history, past actions influence later events. Students will be expected to understand the main themes in the state’s history as well as to recognize the context in the wider national/international perspective.

                The lectures and readings will provide a general overview and encourage further reading in Wyoming and Western history. Consequently, it is essential for the student to keep up with the reading assignments (both printed and on the web) and to have a clear understanding of the chronology of Wyoming events, particularly those since 1890. Also, the class will include an opportunity for each student to work with primary documents in the American Heritage Center, providing training on how historians work with one-of-a-kind original documents.

                This course satisfies the University Studies V1 requirement. Study of the Wyoming and United States Constitutions is an important part of the class.

 

COURSE REQUIREMENTS:  The readings for this class are not difficult although, for those unfamiliar with history courses, initially, they may seem to be extensive. The main “texts” actually are sets of articles, available on the web. These readings will be particularly important to understand the various events in the state’s history while the lectures are designed to provide the thematic framework. The readings will provide context and continuity, but they will NOT duplicate the lectures. Successful completion of the class requires careful reading of the assigned texts and good note-taking during lectures.

                Readings in Wyoming History is a compilation of scholarly articles with footnote citations and well-developed historical arguments. Don’t be deceived by the brevity of some of the readings, thinking they will be particularly easy to read and understand. Each article will require careful reading. The other assigned books were written for the popular audience and, consequently, are neither extensively footnoted nor difficult to read. 

Written outlines may be provided for some lectures although students will be required to develop better note-taking skills to satisfy the requirements for the course.  On the rare occasions when PowerPoint is used, the emphasis will be on photographic images and maps—not on repeating what is said in the lectures or duplicating student notes. Consequently, relentless attendance will be required in order to succeed in this class. Along with exams and quizzes, a short research paper, based on primary sources, will be required.

                Because class attention will be necessary for successful completion of the course, all students are asked to turn off cell phones and pagers during lectures.  It is expected that students will be using computers, if desired, for note-taking and not for playing games or showing images that distract from full attention in the class and bother students in the proxity. Violations of this behavior may be reflected in verbal request to go elsewhere to conduct viewing and/or penalty assessment of the final grade, particularly the portion respecting participation.

 

REQUIRED BOOKS: Copies of all books (and the State Constitution) are on reserve in Coe Library. 

Geoffrey O’Gara. What You See in Clear Water: Indians, Whites, and A Battle Over Water in the American West. (New York: Random House, 2000).

Robert Righter. Crucible for Conservation: The Struggle for Grand Teton National Park. (Moose: Grand Teton Natural History Assoc., 1982, 2000)

Phil Roberts, A New History of Wyoming. (currently available only on the web)

Phil Roberts, Buffalo Bones: Stories from Wyoming's Past (available only on the web)

Phil Roberts, editor. Readings in Wyoming History. (web edition), available entirely on the web. Other editions are still available, but the fifth edition contains a number of essays not included in earlier editions.

Elinore Pruitt Stewart. Letters of a Woman Homesteader. (Lincoln: Bison Books, 1989). Other editions also OK.

Wyoming Constitution.  (Available for purchase, but also on reserve at Coe Library circulation and on the web).

United States Constitution. (On reserve at Coe Library circulation and on the web).

 

EXAMS: One exam, 100 points each (0%); the final exam, 150 points (20%); Constitution exam, 100 points (20%); research exercises, AHC research paper, 75 points (10%); five unannounced quizzes, 25 points, (5%)..  Absolutely no make-up quizzes will be given. Make-up exams will be given ONLY IF the student informs the professor or TA before the exam is to be administered with a valid reason for missing the scheduled time. Students are expected to be familiar with the university rules governing plagiarism and academic dishonesty which will be enforced in this class.  This applies to the AHC assignments as well as to the exams.

                American Heritage Center visits will be scheduled, beginning in mid-September. Each student will be assigned one of these days to go during the regularly scheduled class period.  The names/dates will be noted on the webpage for this class. When preparing the essay for completion of the AHC assignment, go to this page for General Instructions.   When the American Heritage Center assignments are made, students are expected to attend on the date they are assigned. Unless PRIOR approval of the instructor is given, missing the date will result in losing all credit for the AHC assignment.

AHC scheduled visits:

Group 1: A-C  (Sept. 17)

Group 2: D-G:  (Sept. 22)

Group 3: H-I:  (Sept. 24)

Group 4: J-L: (Sept. 29)

No one goes Oct. 6--mid-term exam that day.

Group 5: M-O: (Oct. 8)

Group 6: P-Ri: (Oct. 13)

Group 7: Ro-S: (Oct. 15)

Group 8: T-Z: (Oct. 20)

 

                Extra Credit: Additional “extra-credit” points may be earned, from time to time, by attending history-related lectures outside regularly scheduled classes. These opportunities will be announced in advance and will require proof of attendance at the event and a brief statement about the lecture program.  Points given will be determined by the event. Up to a maximum of 20 points may be earned in this fashion.

 

GRADING PROCEDURE: The final grade will be calculated on the total "points" earned during the semester, tentatively based on the following scale:  A: 405-450 points   B: 360-404  points  C: 315-359 points  D: 270-314 points   F: 299 or fewer. The grades in this course will not be “curved.” You will earn your own grade regardless of what others in the class may do. Everyone could earn the grade of “A,” but also the grade of “F.”

 

PLAGIARISM AND ACADEMIC DISHONESTY: Students are expected to know and understand the university’s policies on plagiarism and academic dishonesty. The university rules will be strictly enforced in this class. http://www.uwyo.edu/DOSsupport/docs/Policies%20and%20Resources/Academic%20Honesty.docx

 

Outlines of lectures will be posted to the web. These are intended to supplement, but not replace student notes.  Except for the one time during which each student will be at the AHC, all students will be expected to attend and take notes, using the outlines and WyoCast for general guidance on the main ideas presented and for review.

For access to Wyocast, click on the below listed link and go to "Wyoming History" and click again.

http://wyocast.uwyo.edu/WyoCast/Catalog/pages/catalog.aspx?catalogId=b3edf27d-f1a3-4752-b149-e95d7c7dd956

Then go to "Fall 2009" and click. Below you will find the link to History 1251. Click on that and you are there and ready to view the recorded lectures.

 

OUTLINE OF TOPICS, MEETINGS AND ASSIGNMENTS (subject to minor change)

 

Aug. 25: Introduction. .

 

Thurs., Aug. 27:  Organizing Concepts in Wyoming History

Readings in Wyoming History, Introduction

               

Tues., Sept. 1: Early Exploration and the Fur Trade.

New History of Wyoming, Chap. 1:  Original Residents, Explorers and the Fur Trade

                New History of Wyoming, Chap. 2: Lessons from the Fur Trade

 

Thurs., Sept. 3:  Wyoming as a Trail to Somewhere Else

New History of Wyoming, Chap. 3: Trails Across Wyoming

Fort Laramie treaties (1851, 1868)

 

Tues., Sept. 8: Only Workers and Managers: The Problem of Absentee Ownership

New History of Wyoming, Chap. 4: Coming of Rails

Pacific Railway Acts

Readings in Wyoming History, Selections from John Crowley’s Diary 

                New History of Wyoming, Chap. 6: Public Lands

 

Thurs., Sept. 10:  Women Suffrage and Issues of Equality

New History of Wyoming, Chap. 5: Establishing the Territory and Granting Women Equal Rights

Buffalo Bones: Stories from Wyoming's Past:  The 1st Woman Juror

Readings in Wyoming History, Near Repeal of Women Suffrage

Reading: Stewart, Letters of a Woman Homesteader (entire book).

 

Tues., Sept. 15: Nine Booms, Eight Busts: Wyoming’s Economy Across Time

New History of Wyoming, Chap. 7: Minerals in Territorial Wyoming 

Readings in Wyoming History, Cowboys Form a Health Cooperative

 

Thurs., Sept. 17:  Statehood and the “Grand Old Men of Wyoming Politics”

Readings in Wyoming History, Wyoming’s Estelle Reel

Readings in Wyoming History, School Bells and Winchesters

Readings in Wyoming History, The Contest for the Capital.

Group 1 goes to the American Heritage Center (A-C)

 

Tuesday, Sept. 22: Unified/Divided: The Issues of Sectionalism

New History of Wyoming, Chap. 8, The War, The Invasion

                                Group 2 goes to the American Heritage Center (D-G)

 

Thurs., Sept. 24: Wilderness Conundrum: Preservation, Conservation, Development

Robert Righter. Crucible for Conservation: The Crusade to Save Grand Teton National Park. (entire book).

New History of Wyoming, Chap. 11: Conservation and National Parks

Readings in Wyoming History, Progressivism Comes to Yellowstone: Theodore Roosevelt and Professional Land Management Agencies in the Yellowstone Ecosystem

Readings in Wyoming History, Commodification of Wildlife

Readings in Wyoming History, Harvard Cook in the Wyoming Badlands

                                Group 3 goes to the American Heritage Center (H-I)

 

Tues., Sept. 29: Bucking Horse and Buffalo: Significance of Symbols in Wyoming History and Myth

New History of Wyoming, Chap. 10: Wyoming’s Self-Image

Buffalo Bones: Stories from Wyoming's Past: Edison, the Light Bulb and the Eclipse

Buffalo Bones: Stories from Wyoming’s Past: Equality State? Cowboy State?

Group 4 goes to the American Heritage Center (J-L)

 

THE EXAM SCHEDULED FOR OCT 1 HAS BEEN POSTPONED TO OCT 6.

Thurs., Oct. 1: Review of Lectures.  Please bring questions you have from the lectures and readings. This will NOT be a complete repeat or summary of lectures so far. The professor will be responding to specific questions you may have about the lectures and readings to this point.

 

Tues.,  Oct. 6:  MID-TERM EXAM--on all readings (including two books), lectures and materials covered so far.  Click here for Review Sheet.

                The exam will be essay in style. Please bring an examination "blue-book" to class. No electronic devices are allowed today and students are reminded to keep cell phones turned off during the exam. The exam will be designed for completion in 80 minutes and you will not be given additional time due to scheduling commitments in this room. Keep this in mind as you prepare for the exam.

 

                                Please note schedule change: Group 5 goes to the American Heritage Center (M-O) ON OCT. 8

 

Thurs., Oct. 8:  Issues of Diversity           

Readings in Wyoming History, Ethnicity in Wyoming

Readings in Wyoming History, The Wyoming Experience: Chinese in Wyoming

Readings in Wyoming History, Lovell's Mexican Colony 

Readings in Wyoming History, My One Hobby   

                             Group 5 goes to the American Heritage Center (M-O)

 

Tues.,  Oct. 13:  Wyoming from 1890-1920  

                New History of Wyoming, Chap. 12: Into the 20th Century 

Readings in Wyoming History, Evolution of Roads

Buffalo Bones: Stories from Wyoming's Past, Lovejoy's Toy: Wyoming's First Car

Buffalo Bones: Stories from Wyoming's Past: Torrey's Roughriders

            History of Wyoming Oil

New History of Wyoming, Chap. 9: History of Wyoming Oil 

                                Group 6 goes to the American Heritage Center (P-Ri)

 

Thurs., Oct. 15: Drought More Than Flood: Water in Wyoming

Reading: O’Gara, What You See in Clear Water (entire book).

New History of Wyoming, Chap. 13, Water and Irrigation

Readings in Wyoming History: Same Decision, Different Result?

Colorado River compact.

               Buffalo Bones: Stories from Wyoming's Past: 'Drizzling Rain Kept All Indoors': Wyoming’s First Arbor Day, 1888

 Group 7 goes to the American Heritage Center (Ro-S)

 

Tues., Oct. 20: Wyoming’s Great Depression (1920-1935)

New History of Wyoming, Chap. 14: The 1920s in Wyoming

Readings in Wyoming History, Give Them What They Want

Buffalo Bones: Stories from Wyoming's Past: Somewhere West of Laramie

Buffalo Bones: Stories from Wyoming's Past: The Builder of the World's Oldest Cabin

                Buffalo Bones: Stories from Wyoming's Past: Wyoming's First License Plates

                                    Group 8 goes to the American Heritage Center (T-Z)

 

Thurs., Oct. 22: The Wyoming Constitution.

Reading: Wyoming Constitution

Reading: U. S. Constitution.

Readings in Wyoming History,: Wyoming Constitutional Convention and Adoption of Wyoming’s Constitution, 1889, and the Aftermath

 

Tues., Oct. 27: WYOMING CONSTITUTION EXAM

                                Discussion of The United States Constitution will be on Oct. 29.

 

Thurs., Oct. 29: Constitution Exam.. THE WYOMING EXAM WILL BE ADMINISTERED ON OCT. 27.

 

Tues., Nov. 3: New Deal in Wyoming

New History of Wyoming, Chapter 15: Depression and New Deal

                History of Wyoming's Sales Tax

 

Thurs., Nov. 5: World War II in Wyoming

Readings in Wyoming History, The 100-Octane Fuel Plant

Readings in Wyoming History, O’Mahoney and Japanese Relocation

 

Tues., Nov. 10: The Quiet Decade: Wyoming in the 1950s

Readings in Wyoming History,  The Textbook Controversy at the University of Wyoming

Readings in Wyoming History,  The Emerging Civil Rights Movement

Buffalo Bones: Stories from Wyoming's Past, Sleeping with the Nuclear Genie

Readings in Wyoming History, Quest for Public Television

Readings in Wyoming History,  Visions Beyond an Arrow of Fire

 

Thurs., Nov. 12: The 1960s: Severance Taxes and the “Black 14”

Buffalo Bones: Stories from Wyoming's Past: President Kennedy's Visit to Wyoming, 1963

Readings in Wyoming History,  Fired by Conscience

Readings in Wyoming History,  The Black 14: Williams v. Eaton

New History of Wyoming, Chap. 18: The 1960s

 

Tues., Nov. 17: Minerals Boom and Issues of Impact

New History of Wyoming, Chap. 19: The 1970s

Readings in Wyoming History, Project Wagon Wheel: A Nuclear Plowshare for Wyoming

Readings in Wyoming History, 'Mrs. Barriers' and the Crusade to Make Wyoming Public Buildings Accessible

 

Thurs., Nov. 19: Wyoming’s Second Great Depression, (1983-1998)

New History of Wyoming, Chap. 20: The End of the 20th Century

Readings in Wyoming History, Home on the Range No More

 

Tues., Nov. 24: Boom Again?: Wyoming from 1998 to Today

Readings in Wyoming History, The Virginian Meets Matt Shepard

Readings in Wyoming History, Reflecting Community: Case Studies of Three Wyoming Museums and the Impact of Each on the Community

                Buffalo Bones: Stories from Wyoming's Past: No Turkeys at the Post

            Also: Drawing for door prizes (you must be present to win) and a special guest speaker! Not a good day to miss class!

 

Thurs., Nov. 26: NO CLASS. THANKSGIVING VACATION.

 

Tues., Dec. 1: The 21st Century Boom and the Quest for Economic Diversification

 

Thurs., Dec. 3: Review for final exam and final remarks.

                      End of semester review session may be made possible, location and  exact time: TBA

 

Thursday, Dec. 10, 10:15 a.m., Final Exam, to be administered in our regular classroom.

          The final exam will be essay in style and you will have two hours to answer the questions (until 12:15 p.m.). Please bring an examination "blue-book" to class. No electronic devices are allowed today and students are reminded to keep cell phones turned off during the exam. The exam will be designed for completion in 80 minutes, but you will have two hours for this exam, consistent with university final exam policies.

            NOTE:  Throughout the semester, the lectures will be recorded and available on Wyocast. (See the link above).  These are intended to supplement your attendance in class, but not replace your own diligent attendance and note-taking. Students will be expected to attend and take notes, using the Wyocast lectues for general guidance on the main ideas presented and review.