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Richard J. Jensen

Richard Joseph Jensen (born October 24, 1941) is an American historian, who was professor of history at the University of Illinois, Chicago, from 1973 to 1996. He has worked on American political, social, military, and economic history as well as historiography and quantitative and computer methods. His work includes the Midwestern electoral history, The Winning of the Midwest and Historian's Guide to Statistics.

Richard J. Jensen
Jensen in 2012
Born
Richard Joseph Jensen

(1941-10-24) October 24, 1941 (age 81)
Academic background
Alma materUniversity of Notre Dame
Yale University
ThesisThe Winning of the Midwest: A Social History of Midwestern Elections, 1888–1896 (1966)
Doctoral advisorC. Vann Woodward
Academic work
DisciplineHistory
Institutions

Life and career

Born on October 24, 1941,[1] in South Bend, Indiana, Jensen obtained his BA in mathematics at the University of Notre Dame in 1962.[2][3] He then moved to Yale University, where he earned an MA in 1965 and a PhD in American studies in 1966.[2] His PhD dissertation, The Winning of the Midwest: A Social History of Midwestern Elections, 1888–1896, was supervised by C. Vann Woodward.[4]

After graduation, Jensen started as assistant professor at Washington University in St. Louis in 1966. In 1970 he moved to the University of Illinois at Chicago, where he became associate professor of history and was professor of history from 1973 to 1996.[4][5] In 2008 he became a research professor at Montana State University Billings.[6] He was a visiting professor at the University of Michigan in 1968, Harvard University in 1973, the Moscow State University in 1986, and West Point from 1989 to 1990.[7]

From 1971 to 1982 Jensen was also Director of The Family and Community History Center at the Newberry Library.[4][8] From 1977 to 1982 he was president of the Chicago Metro History Fair. From 1992 to 1997 he was executive director at H-Net.[9] Jensen served on the editorial boards of six scholarly journals, among them The Journal of American History and the American Journal of Sociology.[4]

Jensen was awarded a Woodrow Wilson Fellowship in 1962, a William Robertson Coe fellowship in American history in 1963, and a Boies fellowship in 1965.[1] He received the Rockefeller Foundation/Bellagio (1983), and was a University of Illinois senior scholar (1985–88), a Fulbright Fellow (to the USSR, 1986), and an ACLS senior fellow (1987–88).[10] He received the James Harvey Robinson Prize for teaching from the American Historical Association in 1997.[11]

Jensen was quoted in 2012 as stating that Wikipedia was nearly complete regarding major historical articles. His comments came in the Journal of Military History concerning the Wikipedia article on the War of 1812.[12]

Work

The Winning of the Midwest (1966/1971)

In The Winning of the Midwest Jensen tells a social history of elections in the Midwestern United States from 1888 to 1896. He analyzes the role religion played in political conflict, arguing that it had a major influence on party allegiances. Completed in 1966 as his PhD dissertation, the University of Chicago Press published it in 1971. Reviews in the Journal of the Illinois State Historical Society and The Journal of American History praised the work for its broad scope, prose style, and analysis.[13][14] A review in the Indiana Magazine of History criticised the work for attempting to tackle too broad a subject area and questioned Jensen's use of evidence to ascertain religious preferences.[15] It is his most widely cited work.[16]

Historian's Guide to Statistics (1971)

In 1971 Jensen co-authored the Historian's Guide to Statistics with Charles Dollar. The book became one of the most widely used guides to interpreting historical statistics.[17]

Illinois: A Bicentennial History (1978)

In 1978 Jensen's Illinois: A Bicentennial History was published by Norton, New York in its States and the Nation series. The work presents Illinois' history as that of a conflict between the state's original traditionalist settlers and later modernist immigrants. In a 1979 book review in the Indiana Magazine of History, Martin Ridge praised the work for having a higher level of academic rigor than the other books of the series. While recommending it as "in many ways [...] the best interpretative one-volume state history around," he claimed that its arguments are ultimately "unconvincing."[18] Writing in the Journal of the Illinois State Historical Society John Hoffman described the work as "a balanced account of the state, keeping Chicago in proportion to downstate, and the whole in alignment with American history—as 'a' microcosm of the Union, not 'the' microcosm...his Illinois is not Chicago writ large or America writ small. For state history, that is no mean achievement.[19]

H-Net

H-Net, short for "Humanities & Social Sciences Online", is an interdisciplinary forum for scholars in the humanities and social sciences. It began in 1992 as an initiative by Jensen at the History department at the University of Illinois at Chicago to assist historians "to easily communicate current research and teaching interests; to discuss new approaches, methods and tools of analysis; to share information on access to library catalogs and other electronic databases; and to test new ideas and share comments on current historiography."[20] The network grew rapidly, growing from approximately 6,000 subscribers in 1993 to more than 51,000 by 1997.[3]

In 1997 H-Net won the American Historical Association's James Harvey Robinson Prize, awarded for innovative methods of history teaching.[21] According to the historian Paul Turnbull, under Jensen's leadership—and with funding from the National Endowment for the Humanities—H-Net "rapidly became a forum attracting both historians with established expertise in computer-based quantitative research and younger colleagues interested in exploring the analytical possibilities of hypertext," and "greatly assisted the development of the technical expertise and intellectual ambitions of historians who undertook a remarkable number of Web-based projects through the second half of the 1990s."[17]

In 11994,H-Net began a move to Michigan State University, where historian Mark Kornbluh had secured institutional support.[22] In 1997, Kornbluh and Jensen competed against each other in a "bitterly contested" election for the position of H-Net's executive director, with Jensen arguing that H-Net should be decentralized while Kornbluh advocated consolidation the organization's operations at Michigan State.[23][24] Kornbluh ultimately won the support of the editors of H-Net's discussion lists.[24]

"No Irish Need Apply" (2002)

 
1909 newspaper article concerning "No Irish Need Apply" help-wanted advertisement

Jensen's article about anti-Irish sentiment, "No Irish Need Apply: A Myth of Victimization", was published in the Journal of Social History in December 2002 and argues that "No Irish Need Apply" (NINA) signs were mostly a myth and that there was "no significant discrimination against the Irish" in the job market.[25] In July 2015, the same journal published a rebuttal to Jensen's thesis written by Rebecca Fried, an eighth-grade student at Sidwell Friends School, Washington, DC.[26][27][28] Before submitting her article for publication, Fried consulted with the historian Kerby A. Miller, who had long disagreed with Jensen's thesis. Miller found her argument to be a worthy, scholarly rebuttal in need of little editing.[26] Fried's paper provided examples of "No Irish Need Apply" in newspaper archives, contesting Jensen's thesis that there was no evidence of the same.[27] The following month, Jensen wrote a rebuttal to her argument for the History News Network.[29]

Although Jensen wrote a rebuttal to Rebecca Fried's article, it is important to note that the rebuttal itself included a factual inaccuracy pointed out in a follow-up from Fried herself. Jensen wrote “I’m the PhD who wrote the original article. I’m delighted a high school student worked so hard and wrote so well. No, she did not claim to find a single window sign anywhere in the USA.” Fried replied “I do have to say that the article does in fact list a number of posted physical NINA signs, not just newspaper ads. Pages 6-7 catalogue a number of the signs.” Jensen's response seemed to diminish the importance of the signs rather than to acknowledge the factual inaccuracy. Fried answered with “Thanks again for the response. This discussion is really fun for me, and I appreciate the opportunity to have it. Let me make one last point and then I promise I will shut up and give you the last word if you want it. You began this conversation by stating that the article ‘did not claim to find a single window sign anywhere in the USA.’ I think we now agree at least that this is not correct.”[30]

Selected publications

Jensen has co-authored or edited 21 scholarly or popular books and written 45 scholarly articles. [16]

  • Jensen, Richard J. The Winning of the Midwest: Social and Political Conflict, 1888–1896. U of Chicago Press 1971.
  • Jensen, Richard J. Historian's Guide to Statistics: Quantitative Analysis and Historical Research. 1971.
  • Jensen, Richard J. Illinois: A Bicentennial History. Norton, 1978.
  • Jensen, Richard J.; Jon Thares Davidann; Yoneyuki Sugita (2003). Trans-Pacific Relations: America, Europe, and Asia in the Twentieth Century. Greenwood Publishing Group. ISBN 978-0-275-97714-6.
  • Smith, J. Douglas, and Richard J. Jensen. World War Two on the Web. 2nd edition, Rowman & Littlefield, World War Two on the Web.
  • Carter, Alice E., and Richard J. Jensen. The Civil War on the Web: A Guide to the Very Best Sites. Rowman & Littlefield, 2003.
  • Jensen, Richard (1980). "On Modernizing Frederick Jackson Turner: The Historiography of Regionalism". The Western Historical Quarterly. 11 (3): 307–322. doi:10.2307/967565. JSTOR 967565.
  • Jensen, Richard J. (1984). "Historiography of American Political History". In Greene, Jack (ed.). Encyclopedia of American Political History. Vol. 1. New York: Scribner's. pp. 1–25.
  • Jensen, Richard (July 1984). "Six Sciences of American Politics". Historical Methods: A Journal of Quantitative and Interdisciplinary History. 17 (3): 108–117. doi:10.1080/01615440.1984.10594126.
  • Jensen, Richard J (2002). "'No Irish Need Apply': A Myth of Victimization". Journal of Social History. 36 (2): 405–429. doi:10.1353/jsh.2003.0021. S2CID 145258998. Project MUSE 37817.
  • Jensen, Richard (2012). "Military History on the Electronic Frontier: Wikipedia Fights the War of 1812" (PDF). The Journal of Military History. 76 (4): 523–556.

References

  1. ^ a b American Political Science Association (1968) Biographical Directory. p. 263
  2. ^ a b "Richard J. Jensen." Contemporary Authors Online. Detroit: Gale, 2013. Biography in Context. Web. 24 May 2016.[verification needed]
  3. ^ a b Guernsey, Lisa (1997). "A Humanities Network Considers What Lies Beyond E-Mail". Chronicle of Higher Education. 43 (20): A23–A24. ERIC EJ539544.
  4. ^ a b c d Directory of American scholars. Bowker. 1978. pp. 341–342. OCLC 4431922.
  5. ^ American Historical Association, Institutional Services Program, Guide to Departments of History: 1996–97 (Washington, 1997) pp 137–81
  6. ^ Tim McNeese; Richard Jensen (2010). Revolutionary America, 1764–1789. Infobase Publishing. p. 128. ISBN 978-1-4381-2776-7.
  7. ^ Tim McNeese; Richard Jensen (2010). The Great Depression 1929–1938. Infobase Publishing. p. 136. ISBN 978-1-60413-357-8.
  8. ^ Seymour Martin Lipset (1981). Party Coalitions in the 1980s. Transaction Publishers. p. 461. ISBN 978-1-4128-3049-2.
  9. ^ Orville Vernon Burton (2002). Computing in the Social Sciences and Humanities. University of Illinois Press. p. 5. ISBN 9780252026850.
  10. ^ American Historical Association, Institutional Services Program, Guide to Departments of History: 1986–87 (Washington, 1987) pp 130–31
  11. ^ Perspectives: Newsletter of the American Historical Association. Vol. 25. The Association. 1997. p. 21.
  12. ^ Rosen, Rebecca J. (25 October 2012). "Surmounting the Insurmountable: Wikipedia Is Nearing Completion, in a Sense". The Atlantic.
  13. ^ Blodgett, Geoffrey (1972). "The Winning of the Midwest: Social and Political Conflict, 1888–1896 by Richard Jensen". Journal of the Illinois State Historical Society. 65 (3): 342–343. JSTOR 40191386.
  14. ^ Hammarberg, Melvyn (March 1973). "Reviewed Work: The Winning of the Midwest: Social and Political Conflict, 1888–1896 by Richard Jensen". The Journal of American History. 59 (4): 1025–1026. doi:10.2307/1918421. JSTOR 1918421.
  15. ^ Farrell, Richard T (June 1972). "Reviewed Work: The Winning of the Midwest: Social and Political Conflict, 1888–1896 by Richard Jensen". Indiana Magazine of History. 68 (2): 157–158. JSTOR 277898.
  16. ^ a b Richard Jensen Google Scholar profile.
  17. ^ a b Turnbull, Paul (June 2010). "Historians, Computing and the World-Wide-Web". Australian Historical Studies. 41 (2): 131–148. doi:10.1080/10314611003713629. S2CID 62144014.
  18. ^ Ridge, Martin (1979). "Review of Illinois: A Bicentennial History". Indiana Magazine of History. 75 (4): 359–360. JSTOR 27790396.
  19. ^ Hoffmann, John (1978). "Richard J. Jensen's 'Illinois: A Bicentennial History'". Journal of the Illinois State Historical Society. 71 (3): 225–231. JSTOR 40191512.
  20. ^ Richard Jensen, "H-Net announces 13 new scholarly lists in history", E-Mail of 24 Jun 1993; Thomas Zielke, "Official Introduction of The History Network " E-Mail on GRMNHIST – German History Forum, 23 Feb 93 2007-01-07 at the Wayback Machine
  21. ^ McCrank, Lawrence J. (2002). Historical information science: an emerging unidiscipline (1st print ed.). Medford, New Jersey: Information Today. p. 79. ISBN 1573870714.
  22. ^ "Its Past, Present, and Future". H-Net. Retrieved 2016-05-25.
  23. ^ Guernsey, Lisa (1997). "Election Campaign To Run H-Net, a Popular Network of E-Mail Lists, Turns Nasty". Chronicle of Higher Education. 43 (32): A25. ERIC EJ543108.
  24. ^ a b Guernsey, L. (1997). "H-NET's list editors elect new director". The Chronicle of Higher Education. 43 (35).[page needed]
  25. ^ Jensen, Richard J (2002). "'No Irish Need Apply': A Myth of Victimization". Journal of Social History. 36 (2): 405–429. doi:10.1353/jsh.2003.0021. S2CID 145258998. Project MUSE 37817.
  26. ^ a b Collins, Ben (2 August 2015). "The Teen Who Exposed a Professor's Myth". The Daily Beast.
  27. ^ a b Fried, Rebecca A. (June 2016). "No Irish Need Deny: Evidence for the Historicity of NINA Restrictions in Advertisements and Signs: Appendix". Journal of Social History. 49 (4): 829–854. doi:10.1093/jsh/shv066.
  28. ^ Patrick Young (19 July 2015). "High School Student Proves Professor Wrong When He Denied "No Irish Need Apply" Signs Existed". longislandwins.com. Retrieved 20 September 2015.
  29. ^ Jensen, Richard, "No Irish Need Apply?" HistoryNewsNetwork.org (11 August 2015) Retrieved 22 Aug. 2015.
  30. ^ The Daily Beast 8/1/2015

External links

  • Jensen's Web Guides

richard, jensen, richard, joseph, jensen, born, october, 1941, american, historian, professor, history, university, illinois, chicago, from, 1973, 1996, worked, american, political, social, military, economic, history, well, historiography, quantitative, compu. Richard Joseph Jensen born October 24 1941 is an American historian who was professor of history at the University of Illinois Chicago from 1973 to 1996 He has worked on American political social military and economic history as well as historiography and quantitative and computer methods His work includes the Midwestern electoral history The Winning of the Midwest and Historian s Guide to Statistics Richard J JensenJensen in 2012BornRichard Joseph Jensen 1941 10 24 October 24 1941 age 81 South Bend Indiana USAcademic backgroundAlma materUniversity of Notre DameYale UniversityThesisThe Winning of the Midwest A Social History of Midwestern Elections 1888 1896 1966 Doctoral advisorC Vann WoodwardAcademic workDisciplineHistoryInstitutionsWashington UniversityUniversity of Illinois at Chicago Contents 1 Life and career 2 Work 2 1 The Winning of the Midwest 1966 1971 2 2 Historian s Guide to Statistics 1971 2 3 Illinois A Bicentennial History 1978 2 4 H Net 2 5 No Irish Need Apply 2002 3 Selected publications 4 References 5 External linksLife and career EditBorn on October 24 1941 1 in South Bend Indiana Jensen obtained his BA in mathematics at the University of Notre Dame in 1962 2 3 He then moved to Yale University where he earned an MA in 1965 and a PhD in American studies in 1966 2 His PhD dissertation The Winning of the Midwest A Social History of Midwestern Elections 1888 1896 was supervised by C Vann Woodward 4 After graduation Jensen started as assistant professor at Washington University in St Louis in 1966 In 1970 he moved to the University of Illinois at Chicago where he became associate professor of history and was professor of history from 1973 to 1996 4 5 In 2008 he became a research professor at Montana State University Billings 6 He was a visiting professor at the University of Michigan in 1968 Harvard University in 1973 the Moscow State University in 1986 and West Point from 1989 to 1990 7 From 1971 to 1982 Jensen was also Director of The Family and Community History Center at the Newberry Library 4 8 From 1977 to 1982 he was president of the Chicago Metro History Fair From 1992 to 1997 he was executive director at H Net 9 Jensen served on the editorial boards of six scholarly journals among them The Journal of American History and the American Journal of Sociology 4 Jensen was awarded a Woodrow Wilson Fellowship in 1962 a William Robertson Coe fellowship in American history in 1963 and a Boies fellowship in 1965 1 He received the Rockefeller Foundation Bellagio 1983 and was a University of Illinois senior scholar 1985 88 a Fulbright Fellow to the USSR 1986 and an ACLS senior fellow 1987 88 10 He received the James Harvey Robinson Prize for teaching from the American Historical Association in 1997 11 Jensen was quoted in 2012 as stating that Wikipedia was nearly complete regarding major historical articles His comments came in the Journal of Military History concerning the Wikipedia article on the War of 1812 12 Work EditThe Winning of the Midwest 1966 1971 Edit In The Winning of the Midwest Jensen tells a social history of elections in the Midwestern United States from 1888 to 1896 He analyzes the role religion played in political conflict arguing that it had a major influence on party allegiances Completed in 1966 as his PhD dissertation the University of Chicago Press published it in 1971 Reviews in the Journal of the Illinois State Historical Society and The Journal of American History praised the work for its broad scope prose style and analysis 13 14 A review in the Indiana Magazine of History criticised the work for attempting to tackle too broad a subject area and questioned Jensen s use of evidence to ascertain religious preferences 15 It is his most widely cited work 16 Historian s Guide to Statistics 1971 Edit In 1971 Jensen co authored the Historian s Guide to Statistics with Charles Dollar The book became one of the most widely used guides to interpreting historical statistics 17 Illinois A Bicentennial History 1978 Edit In 1978 Jensen s Illinois A Bicentennial History was published by Norton New York in its States and the Nation series The work presents Illinois history as that of a conflict between the state s original traditionalist settlers and later modernist immigrants In a 1979 book review in the Indiana Magazine of History Martin Ridge praised the work for having a higher level of academic rigor than the other books of the series While recommending it as in many ways the best interpretative one volume state history around he claimed that its arguments are ultimately unconvincing 18 Writing in the Journal of the Illinois State Historical Society John Hoffman described the work as a balanced account of the state keeping Chicago in proportion to downstate and the whole in alignment with American history as a microcosm of the Union not the microcosm his Illinois is not Chicago writ large or America writ small For state history that is no mean achievement 19 H Net Edit H Net short for Humanities amp Social Sciences Online is an interdisciplinary forum for scholars in the humanities and social sciences It began in 1992 as an initiative by Jensen at the History department at the University of Illinois at Chicago to assist historians to easily communicate current research and teaching interests to discuss new approaches methods and tools of analysis to share information on access to library catalogs and other electronic databases and to test new ideas and share comments on current historiography 20 The network grew rapidly growing from approximately 6 000 subscribers in 1993 to more than 51 000 by 1997 3 In 1997 H Net won the American Historical Association s James Harvey Robinson Prize awarded for innovative methods of history teaching 21 According to the historian Paul Turnbull under Jensen s leadership and with funding from the National Endowment for the Humanities H Net rapidly became a forum attracting both historians with established expertise in computer based quantitative research and younger colleagues interested in exploring the analytical possibilities of hypertext and greatly assisted the development of the technical expertise and intellectual ambitions of historians who undertook a remarkable number of Web based projects through the second half of the 1990s 17 In 11994 H Net began a move to Michigan State University where historian Mark Kornbluh had secured institutional support 22 In 1997 Kornbluh and Jensen competed against each other in a bitterly contested election for the position of H Net s executive director with Jensen arguing that H Net should be decentralized while Kornbluh advocated consolidation the organization s operations at Michigan State 23 24 Kornbluh ultimately won the support of the editors of H Net s discussion lists 24 No Irish Need Apply 2002 Edit 1909 newspaper article concerning No Irish Need Apply help wanted advertisement Jensen s article about anti Irish sentiment No Irish Need Apply A Myth of Victimization was published in the Journal of Social History in December 2002 and argues that No Irish Need Apply NINA signs were mostly a myth and that there was no significant discrimination against the Irish in the job market 25 In July 2015 the same journal published a rebuttal to Jensen s thesis written by Rebecca Fried an eighth grade student at Sidwell Friends School Washington DC 26 27 28 Before submitting her article for publication Fried consulted with the historian Kerby A Miller who had long disagreed with Jensen s thesis Miller found her argument to be a worthy scholarly rebuttal in need of little editing 26 Fried s paper provided examples of No Irish Need Apply in newspaper archives contesting Jensen s thesis that there was no evidence of the same 27 The following month Jensen wrote a rebuttal to her argument for the History News Network 29 Although Jensen wrote a rebuttal to Rebecca Fried s article it is important to note that the rebuttal itself included a factual inaccuracy pointed out in a follow up from Fried herself Jensen wrote I m the PhD who wrote the original article I m delighted a high school student worked so hard and wrote so well No she did not claim to find a single window sign anywhere in the USA Fried replied I do have to say that the article does in fact list a number of posted physical NINA signs not just newspaper ads Pages 6 7 catalogue a number of the signs Jensen s response seemed to diminish the importance of the signs rather than to acknowledge the factual inaccuracy Fried answered with Thanks again for the response This discussion is really fun for me and I appreciate the opportunity to have it Let me make one last point and then I promise I will shut up and give you the last word if you want it You began this conversation by stating that the article did not claim to find a single window sign anywhere in the USA I think we now agree at least that this is not correct 30 Selected publications EditJensen has co authored or edited 21 scholarly or popular books and written 45 scholarly articles 16 Jensen Richard J The Winning of the Midwest Social and Political Conflict 1888 1896 U of Chicago Press 1971 Jensen Richard J Historian s Guide to Statistics Quantitative Analysis and Historical Research 1971 Jensen Richard J Illinois A Bicentennial History Norton 1978 Jensen Richard J Jon Thares Davidann Yoneyuki Sugita 2003 Trans Pacific Relations America Europe and Asia in the Twentieth Century Greenwood Publishing Group ISBN 978 0 275 97714 6 Smith J Douglas and Richard J Jensen World War Two on the Web 2nd edition Rowman amp Littlefield World War Two on the Web Carter Alice E and Richard J Jensen The Civil War on the Web A Guide to the Very Best Sites Rowman amp Littlefield 2003 Jensen Richard 1980 On Modernizing Frederick Jackson Turner The Historiography of Regionalism The Western Historical Quarterly 11 3 307 322 doi 10 2307 967565 JSTOR 967565 Jensen Richard J 1984 Historiography of American Political History In Greene Jack ed Encyclopedia of American Political History Vol 1 New York Scribner s pp 1 25 Jensen Richard July 1984 Six Sciences of American Politics Historical Methods A Journal of Quantitative and Interdisciplinary History 17 3 108 117 doi 10 1080 01615440 1984 10594126 Jensen Richard J 2002 No Irish Need Apply A Myth of Victimization Journal of Social History 36 2 405 429 doi 10 1353 jsh 2003 0021 S2CID 145258998 Project MUSE 37817 Jensen Richard 2012 Military History on the Electronic Frontier Wikipedia Fights the War of 1812 PDF The Journal of Military History 76 4 523 556 References Edit a b American Political Science Association 1968 Biographical Directory p 263 a b Richard J Jensen Contemporary Authors Online Detroit Gale 2013 Biography in Context Web 24 May 2016 verification needed a b Guernsey Lisa 1997 A Humanities Network Considers What Lies Beyond E Mail Chronicle of Higher Education 43 20 A23 A24 ERIC EJ539544 a b c d Directory of American scholars Bowker 1978 pp 341 342 OCLC 4431922 American Historical Association Institutional Services Program Guide to Departments of History 1996 97 Washington 1997 pp 137 81 Tim McNeese Richard Jensen 2010 Revolutionary America 1764 1789 Infobase Publishing p 128 ISBN 978 1 4381 2776 7 Tim McNeese Richard Jensen 2010 The Great Depression 1929 1938 Infobase Publishing p 136 ISBN 978 1 60413 357 8 Seymour Martin Lipset 1981 Party Coalitions in the 1980s Transaction Publishers p 461 ISBN 978 1 4128 3049 2 Orville Vernon Burton 2002 Computing in the Social Sciences and Humanities University of Illinois Press p 5 ISBN 9780252026850 American Historical Association Institutional Services Program Guide to Departments of History 1986 87 Washington 1987 pp 130 31 Perspectives Newsletter of the American Historical Association Vol 25 The Association 1997 p 21 Rosen Rebecca J 25 October 2012 Surmounting the Insurmountable Wikipedia Is Nearing Completion in a Sense The Atlantic Blodgett Geoffrey 1972 The Winning of the Midwest Social and Political Conflict 1888 1896 by Richard Jensen Journal of the Illinois State Historical Society 65 3 342 343 JSTOR 40191386 Hammarberg Melvyn March 1973 Reviewed Work The Winning of the Midwest Social and Political Conflict 1888 1896 by Richard Jensen The Journal of American History 59 4 1025 1026 doi 10 2307 1918421 JSTOR 1918421 Farrell Richard T June 1972 Reviewed Work The Winning of the Midwest Social and Political Conflict 1888 1896 by Richard Jensen Indiana Magazine of History 68 2 157 158 JSTOR 277898 a b Richard Jensen Google Scholar profile a b Turnbull Paul June 2010 Historians Computing and the World Wide Web Australian Historical Studies 41 2 131 148 doi 10 1080 10314611003713629 S2CID 62144014 Ridge Martin 1979 Review of Illinois A Bicentennial History Indiana Magazine of History 75 4 359 360 JSTOR 27790396 Hoffmann John 1978 Richard J Jensen s Illinois A Bicentennial History Journal of the Illinois State Historical Society 71 3 225 231 JSTOR 40191512 Richard Jensen H Net announces 13 new scholarly lists in history E Mail of 24 Jun 1993 Thomas Zielke Official Introduction of The History Network E Mail on GRMNHIST German History Forum 23 Feb 93 Archived 2007 01 07 at the Wayback Machine McCrank Lawrence J 2002 Historical information science an emerging unidiscipline 1st print ed Medford New Jersey Information Today p 79 ISBN 1573870714 Its Past Present and Future H Net Retrieved 2016 05 25 Guernsey Lisa 1997 Election Campaign To Run H Net a Popular Network of E Mail Lists Turns Nasty Chronicle of Higher Education 43 32 A25 ERIC EJ543108 a b Guernsey L 1997 H NET s list editors elect new director The Chronicle of Higher Education 43 35 page needed Jensen Richard J 2002 No Irish Need Apply A Myth of Victimization Journal of Social History 36 2 405 429 doi 10 1353 jsh 2003 0021 S2CID 145258998 Project MUSE 37817 a b Collins Ben 2 August 2015 The Teen Who Exposed a Professor s Myth The Daily Beast a b Fried Rebecca A June 2016 No Irish Need Deny Evidence for the Historicity of NINA Restrictions in Advertisements and Signs Appendix Journal of Social History 49 4 829 854 doi 10 1093 jsh shv066 Patrick Young 19 July 2015 High School Student Proves Professor Wrong When He Denied No Irish Need Apply Signs Existed longislandwins com Retrieved 20 September 2015 Jensen Richard No Irish Need Apply HistoryNewsNetwork org 11 August 2015 Retrieved 22 Aug 2015 The Daily Beast 8 1 2015External links EditJensen s Web Guides Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Richard J Jensen amp oldid 1127527295, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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