Susan Curtis
Susan Curtis is professor emerita of history and American studies at Purdue University.
Susan Curtis is professor emerita of history and American studies at Purdue University.
Born in Lexington, Kentucky, on December 14, 1792, Lilburn W. Boggs became one of the most important and controversial politicians in Missouri in the antebellum era.
Civil war raged along the Kansas-Missouri border for nearly a decade in the mid-nineteenth century. The struggle over the fate of slavery in Kansas Territory erupted into partisan bloodshed in 1856.
Jeremy Neely is an associate professor of history at Missouri State University in Springfield.
William Clark, the celebrated explorer who joined Meriwether Lewis in leading an overland expedition to the Pacific from 1804 to 1806, looms large in the history of America’s westward expansion.
Gert Goebel came to Missouri in 1834 as an eighteen-year-old German immigrant, settling in Franklin County, where he remained a resident for most of his life.
John Hardeman, best remembered for the botanical showplace he created on the banks of the Missouri River in the 1820s, was born in Virginia’s Dan River region, not far from the North Carolina border, in 1776.
William E. Foley is professor emeritus of history at the University of Central Missouri.
Jean Harlow was born Harlean Carpenter in Kansas City, Missouri, on March 3, 1911. Her father, Mont Clair Carpenter, was a successful dentist who first worked out of the home, and then later had an office downtown.
Vivian Richardson retired as the archivist and assistant director of the Arthur F. McClure II Archives and University Museum at the University of Central Missouri.