AltWeeklies Wire

Recent Raids Shed Light on New Mexican Looting Syndicatenew

Using undercover sources, agents from the FBI and the US Bureau of Land Management spent more than two years infiltrating a tight-knit community of looters in New Mexico who dig up graves and pillage archaeological sites on public lands, then sell the items they find to dealers and collectors.
Santa Fe Reporter  |  Laura Paskus  |  08-20-2009  |  History

After 75 Years, the Mystery of Young Nature Writer Everett Ruess Has Likely Been Solvednew

Everett was last seen by a sheepherder near Escalante, Utah, on Nov. 19, 1934. Four months later, his burros were found southeast of Escalante in Davis Gulch, and in a nearby cave, where the wanderer made his last camp, searchers found his footprints and discarded food cans. But Everett himself had vanished. He was 20.
Tucson Weekly  |  Leo W. Banks  |  08-12-2009  |  History

An Odd Way to Honor Daniel Burnhamnew

The man behind the Plan of Chicago was a doer, a pragmatist, a builder of consensus. The folks behind the architectural component of his centennial tribute must've been thinking of someone else.
Chicago Reader  |  Lynn Becker  |  07-20-2009  |  History

The Strange Saga of Geronimo's Skullnew

Out there somewhere, lost for 146 years, there really is the head of a great Apache leader, taken in the most violent and ignominious means imaginable. With the exception of his family and a few historians, no one knows a thing about him.
Tucson Weekly  |  Leo W. Banks  |  06-11-2009  |  History

There's Nowhere in America Quite Like Detroit Right Nownew

The last few years have been really bad for Detroit. Odd as it may sound, this is why you should visit now. If and when money ever comes in, you can be sure much of its eerie beauty will be lost forever. Meanwhile, it's Beyond Thunderdome.
Chicago Reader  |  Jonathan Mahalak  |  05-18-2009  |  History

The Forces That Shaped Rogers Park and West Ridgenew

Time has made Rogers Avenue, an old treaty boundary, just another city street. But edges remain, perhaps most notably in the division between the residents who see their neighborhood going to hell and the residents who are grateful to have escaped someplace worse.
Chicago Reader  |  Bill Savage  |  02-09-2009  |  History

Proud and Unbowed: Chattanooga’s African American Historynew

African American history is American history. There is no excuse not to learn the history that paved the way for their existence.
The Pulse  |  Eric Foster  |  02-04-2009  |  History

Drexel Prof Has Some Concrete Answers About How the Pyramids Were Builtnew

Michel Barsoum says the theories that modern science have devised to explain the construction of Egypt's Great Pyramids are wrong. Barsoum's theory, naturally, has been treated as heresy in the world of Egyptology.
Philadelphia City Paper  |  Patrick Rapa  |  01-27-2009  |  History

Why Philly Needs to Appropriate the Legacy of Edgar Allan Poenew

Goodbye Ben Franklin, goodbye Rocky. It's time for a new figure to represent everything good and bad about our city. One in whom we can see both our dreams and nightmares. It's time for Philly to embrace its inner-Gothic self and celebrate Edgar Allan Poe.
Philadelphia City Paper  |  Edward Pettit  |  01-13-2009  |  History

How the Pagans Bested the Mobnew

A former member of the Pagans tells how an attack against the South Philly mob helped create a biker legend.
Philadelphia Weekly  |  John Hall  |  10-07-2008  |  History

A Glimmer of Hope for Sirhan Sirhannew

Orange County GOP congressman suspects conspiracy in RFK assassination while a high-profile lawyer for the convicted killer seeks a new trial.
Pasadena Weekly  |  Carl Kozlowski  |  09-29-2008  |  History

A Guide to Boston's Secret Trove of Peculiar Artifactsnew

There are peculiar piece of history tucked away in the nooks and crannies of Boston–area archives -- from death masks to a book bound in human skin.
Boston Phoenix  |  Jacqueline Houton  |  08-28-2008  |  History

1968: A Wild Time in Madisonnew

Like the rest of the nation, the Wisconsin capital was awash in chaos, confusion, confrontation and change.
Isthmus  |  Stuart Levitan  |  08-26-2008  |  History

The 'Forever Young' Generation Reflects on Life in Vermont's First Communesnew

A revival of Hair is giving audiences in New York's Central Park a vicarious contact high these days, but memories of the bygone Age of Aquarius in Vermont have sparked an upcoming commune reunion and a new book, Farm Friends: From the Late Sixties to the West Seventies and Beyond by Tom Fels.
Seven Days  |  Susan Green  |  08-25-2008  |  History

Springfield, Ill., Was an Important Station on the Underground Railroadnew

Part of the intrigue of the Underground Railroad is its mystery -- we'll never know the whole story. Its activists tried to keep their work secret, so they kept no official records; many African-American participants couldn't read or write, which prevented them from leaving records. What we know comes from oral histories, journals, and memoirs sometimes found by luck.
Illinois Times  |  Tara McClellan McAndrew  |  07-21-2008  |  History

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