Proceedings of the New York Historical Association [1906]

(12 User reviews)   3470
By Riley Zhang Posted on May 6, 2026
In Category - The Open Archive
New York State Historical Association. Meeting New York State Historical Association. Meeting
English
If you think old historical proceedings sound boring, think again. This 1906 meeting of the New York State Historical Association is like stumbling into a time machine. You'll eavesdrop on early American historians, lawyers, and politicians arguing about what history even is and why we should care. There are letters from dead people, forgotten wars, and big arguments about how to remember them. It's the 1900s’ version of a history podcast, full of blunt opinions, odd insights, and a surprising amount of personality. You might not finish it, but you’ll be smarter for having tried.
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1910 was a weird time to be a history nerd: there were no podcasts, no Netflix docs…unless you count dusty meeting minutes. 'Proceedings of the New York Historical Association [1906]' is that old-school meeting recapped: speeches, debates, reports – and somehow, it’s fascinating. It’s the pre-show to modern history books, and the historians are cranky and funny.

The Story

There’s no actual story. It’s the transcription of their annual conference. But here’s the trick: these weren’t boring academics. They discussed dirt roads vs. railroads as historic infrastructure, arguments about handling a Revolutionary-era letter collection (please don’t lose it!), a recap of the latest Native American history in New York – even a very stiff debate about flags and flags of other countries. They argued about how to pin down the start date of American history. Some wanted before Columbus hit North America. Others said real history needed settlers with guns, notably the Dutch down. It’s like they’re building the national story, a Wikipedia cliffhanger.

Why You Should Read It

First, raw history unvarnished. No narrator, no character arcs, no fancy metaphors. Just real smart people from 115 years ago bickering about historical authenticity and what ought to be saved. There’s this cozy feeling– it’s like watching your grandparent geek out at the dinner table. Second, you get a peek inside who was running the history show back then. Guess what? They were afraid no one read history; same fears feel today. But you also get gems like how they once discovered a yellowed letter describing – ugh – General Washington’s uniform change. It’s full-time fan service for colonial fans. Did I mention there’s a clear division about whether Indian treaties are “history” enough? Fight words, truly.

Final Verdict

Perfect for incurable history lovers who devour primary sources from before '1500s' you see everywhere. If you adored the HBO "Boardwalk Empire" but thought: “They skip too much dull actual transition from the Revolution.” Then pick this up. You need, absolutely need, to be entertained by slow digging–like early colonial. It absolutely isn't for a quick beach read. Reader to have patience with syntax and true conversational rudeness has its spicy satisfaction. A three-star as Page-turner- so solid four stars and a nod for actual reality.



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Charles Lee
6 months ago

A must-have for graduate-level students in this discipline.

Joseph Lee
8 months ago

Having read the author's previous works, the structural organization allows for quick referencing of key points. I'll be recommending this to my students and colleagues alike.

Karen Williams
4 months ago

I was skeptical about the depth of this book at first, but the quality of the diagrams and illustrations (if applicable) is top-notch. A trustworthy resource that I'll keep in my digital library.

Karen Harris
7 months ago

The digital formatting makes it very easy to navigate.

Ashley Perez
2 years ago

It’s refreshing to see such a high standard of digital publishing.

4.5
4.5 out of 5 (12 User reviews )

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