A monthly roundup of Gilded Age and Progressive Era news articles and blog posts from around the web.

Florence Lowenstein Marshall and the Jewish Gilded Age

Inside the newly renovated Frick Museum mansion, built as the home of industrialist Henry Clay Frick

Extraction, disaster, and the booms and busts of migration in Galveston

New exhibition featuring the art of Progressive-Era painter Susan Watkins

In 1916, the alarmist discourse over “filmitis” pathologized female film fandom

Winter style through historical fashion prints

The long history of birthmarks and myths of maternal responsibility

Centuries of data from the human hair trade

Examining the origins of modern policing in New York City through the lens of race

Fundraising for women’s suffrage with bake sales and cookbooks

Recipes as historical evidence in the Gilded Age Christmas Cookbook

The Elizabeth Sprague Coolidge Foundation Collection and 100 years of concerts from the Library of Congress

How a secret cipher helped enable the Klan to spread across the South

The history of the fur trade and conservation regulations in Alaska

Death by Lightning, the James A. Garfield miniseries, and its portrayal of Black Civil War veterans

Letters to Santa as seen through historical photographs

A history of envelope-related patents

Louisa May Alcott’s forgotten Christmas story

The assassination of James A. Garfield laid the groundwork for the American news cycle

Looking to history to find a way out of the New Gilded Age

A look back at cookbooks digitized by the Library of Congress in 2025

Portrayals of Scrooge in Library of Congress collections

Tracing the modern tradition of New Year’s resolutions to the early twentieth century

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Laura Crossley is Co-Editor-in-Chief of the SHGAPE Blog. She received her PhD in history from George Mason University, where she specialized in digital history and Indigenous histories. Her dissertation examines how political debates over land, statehood, and Native sovereignty in the American West played out at the 1904 Louisiana Purchase Exposition.

Andrew Varsanyi is a doctoral candidate in History at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln. His forthcoming dissertation explores transnational populism and agrarian political movements in North America, analyzing cross-border connections between U.S. and Canadian farmers. He has taught history at Mount Royal University and the University of Calgary.

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