Oregon Historical Quarterly

Papers
(The median citation count of Oregon Historical Quarterly is 0. The table below lists those papers that are above that threshold based on CrossRef citation counts [max. 250 papers]. The publications cover those that have been published in the past four years, i.e., from 2020-11-01 to 2024-11-01.)
ArticleCitations
The Rise and Fall of “No Special Rights”1
“Make the desert blossom like the rose”: Animal Acclimatization, Settler Colonialism, and the Construction of Oregon's Nature1
They Called Him … Buckaroo Sam: The Imagined Life of a Chinese Cowboy0
Language Methodology0
Chinese Mining <em>Kongsi</em> in Eastern Oregon: A Case Study of Cultural Amnesia0
Front Matter0
Women on the Bench in Oregon: Mark O. Hatfield Lecture Series Post-Lecture Discussion0
Contributors0
Oregon Historical Society0
White Supremacy in Oregon History: Mark O. Hatfield Lecture Series Post-Lecture Discussion0
Oregon Historical Society0
Front Matter0
Rediscovering Toy Kee's True Son: Chinese Immigration and Federal Bureaucracy Documented in Chinese Exclusion Act Case Files0
Editor's Note0
Longevity: The Archaeology of a Chinese Gift Store and Restaurant in Eugene, Oregon's, Market District0
The Buck Rock Tunnel Archaeological Site: Documenting Chinese Laborers and the Construction of the Oregon & California Railroad0
The United Foundation Trust and its Highest Honor, the Order of the Purple Girdle0
The West and Congressional Fights before the Civil War: Mark O. Hatfield Lecture Series Post-Lecture Discussion0
Oregonscape0
Front Matter0
抹杀和复原: 聚焦俄勒冈史上的离散华人群体0
Front Matter0
Index for Volume 1220
Claiming “What We Must Have”: How The Wold Sisters Helped Win Ratification of the Nineteenth Amendment0
OregonScape0
Book Notes0
OregonScape0
Oregon Historical Society0
Erasure and Reclamation: Centering Diasporic Chinese Populations in Oregon History0
Homeward Bound: The Battleship <em>Oregon</em> Pennant and Imperialism in Oregon0
Contributors0
“I think I am going to fly”: Chinese Pilots Trained in Portland During the 1930s0
Portland's Louie Chung (1876–1926)0
Maybe You've Heard of Her Husband? Finding Louisa Weinhard0
Contributors0
Searching for Salem's Early Chinese Community0
The <em>Village Database</em>: A Resource for Chinese American Genealogy Research0
Back Matter0
Oregon Historical Society0
Contents for Volume 1220
Contributors0
Stacked Rock Features: Archaeological Evidence of Chinese Miners on the Malheur National Forest0
James W. Garrett and Black-owned Property in Territorial Oregon, 1853–18580
“Bona Fide” Merchants: Negotiating Life, Labor, and Transnational Mobility in the Time of Chinese Exclusion0
Protected by Suijing Bo, the “Pacifying Duke”: Chinese Religion in John Day0
Oregon and Climate Change: The Age of Megafires in the American West0
Letters0
Finnish Evangelical Lutheran Church 1904 Confirmation Class0
Significant Events in Oregon's Chinese Diaspora: A Timeline Relating to the Winter 2021 Special Issue of the <em>Oregon Historical Quarterly</em>0
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