History
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April 18, 2022
Heritage Project — Earth Day eve
For a few days in March 1970, U-M hosted what may have been the most important single event in its history, an event that pushed on the wheel of history and launched the modern movement to save the planet from environmental disaster.
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April 11, 2022
Correction: Faculty work to decolonize Philippines collections
The Record’s April 11 email incorrectly listed the U-M college affiliation for Deirdre de la Cruz, one of two faculty members leading a project to address and repair various issues related to the university’s collection of artifacts from the Philippines. She is an associate professor of history and of Asian languages and cultures in LSA.
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April 11, 2022
Faculty members work to decolonize U-M Philippines collections
Faculty members from the School of Information and LSA are leading a project to address and repair various issues related U-M’s large and wide-ranging collection of historical artifacts from the Philippines.
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April 11, 2022
Heritage Project — Blinded by science
When Professor Edward Campbell lost his sight in an 1892 laboratory accident, only a tiny minority of blind adults in the nation was self-supporting.
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April 4, 2022
Heritage Project — Carpenter in the Dream Factory
Avery Hopwood was a gay Midwesterner with a superb sense of humor who, in the span of a few months in 1905, wrote his first play, graduated from U-M and sold the play to a Broadway production company.
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March 28, 2022
Bentley launches African American Student Project
The Bentley Historical Library has launched a long-term project dedicated to highlighting the history of African Americans at U-M. The centerpiece is a database lof every African American student enrolled between 1853-1956.
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March 28, 2022
Heritage Project — Death of a president
On a Friday morning on the U-M campus in February 1925, eight young men made their way into the President’s House to accept a solemn invitation.
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March 21, 2022
Heritage Project — River rat
U-M scientist Elzada Clover and her graduate assistant, Lois Jotter, made history in 1938 by becoming the first known women to navigate the Colorado River.
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March 14, 2022
Heritage Project — Women apart
Where women students had once fended for themselves and mixed freely with men, by 1920 they lived in a segregated, regulated and tightly supervised sphere marked “Women Only.”
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March 7, 2022
Heritage Project — Madelon’s world
Madelon Stockwell stepped onto the Ann Arbor campus on a Wednesday, the second day of February 1870. Her arrival from Kalamazoo disrupted a world that had been wholly male since the fall of 1817.