All Weekend, Every Weekend. On C-SPAN3.

The Supreme Court & Native American Lands

Laguna Indian Reservation in New Mexico

Laguna Indian Reservation in New Mexico

Washington, DC
Sunday, February 3, 2013

UCLA Law School Professor Angela Riley examines the history of the Supreme Court and Native American lands.  The lecture, which took place in the Supreme Court chamber, was one in a series hosted by the Supreme Court Historical Society on the Constitution, the Supreme Court, and property rights. Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg introduces Professor Riley.

Updated: Tuesday, February 5, 2013 at 9:49am (ET)

Related Events

Lewis and Clark Through Native American Eyes
Saturday, October 9, 2010     

A panel Native American writers describe their views of the Lewis and Clark expedition. Participants at this event read from a book titled, “Lewis and Clark Through Indian Eyes: Nine Indian Writers on the Legacy of the Expedition.”

History of Native American Military Service
Saturday, January 21, 2012     

Native Americans have served in the military since the American Revolution. This discussion at the National Museum of the American Indian in Washington includes Native American veterans of World War II, Korea and Iraq.

Lectures in History: Native Americans & California Missions
Saturday, August 20, 2011     

Professor Willy Bauer specializes in the history of Native Americans and the American West at the University of Nevada-Las Vegas.  He himself is an enrolled member of the Round Valley Indian Tribe. 

History of Raleigh, North Carolina
Sunday     

C-SPAN’s Local Content Vehicles take American History TV on the road. Throughout the weekend of June 15-17 we feature the history of Raleigh, North Carolina.

James Weldon Johnson & the History of Harlem
Sunday     

Author and professor Jonathan Gill talks about his book “Harlem: The Four Hundred Year History from Dutch Village to Capital of Black America.” To illustrate the scope of the Harlem Renaissance, Professor Gill discusses James Weldon Johnson -- a poet, songwriter, author, educator, diplomat and civil rights activist. This event was hosted by the New York City Bar Association.

American Artifacts: Jackson's Flank Attack at Chancellorsville (Part 1)
Sunday     

The Civil War Battle of Chancellorsville was fought April 30 to May 6, 1863, in Spotsylvania County, Virginia. Many historians consider the battle to be Confederate General Robert E. Lee’s greatest victory. Facing a Union Army more than twice the size of his own, Lee divided his forces, sending 27,000 men under “Stonewall” Jackson on a 12-mile march to deliver a flank attack. In this program, we follow two National Park Service historians on a tour as they walk the same ground exactly 150 years after Jackson launched his attack.

New York City Cartmen
Saturday     

Author Graham Hodges looks at New York City’s cartmen, who hauled goods on one-horse carts and dominated the streets of the city from 1667 to 1850. He talks about how the cartmen developed deep relationships with the merchants and residents of New York City and came to be a part of the civic culture. The cartmen also came to hold political power and can be considered the forerunners of modern labor unions. The Gotham Center for New York City History hosted this event.

Lectures in History: End of Slavery to Segregation
Saturday     

University of Kansas professor Shawn Leigh Alexander teaches a class on the period following the end of slavery to the beginning of segregation. Professor Alexander discusses the failed Civil Rights Act of 1875, the Supreme Court ‘s 1896 “separate but equal” ruling in Plessy v. Ferguson, and African American journalist Ida B. Wells work to expose the horrors of lynching in the United States. The University of Kansas is in Lawrence.
 

Mary Todd Lincoln Reconsidered
Saturday     

Many historians disagree about Mary Todd Lincoln - some call her corrupt and mentally unstable, while others defend her as an intelligent and politically savvy woman who played a vital role in her husband’s presidency. Author and retired Rhode Island Supreme Court Justice Frank Williams details the controversies, the former first lady’s life and assesses how historians have remembered her. This talk took place at President Lincoln’s Cottage in Washington, DC.

Battle of Gettysburg - Days 2 & 3
Saturday     

Historians John Marszalek and James McPherson examine the Battle of Gettysburg, with a focus on the second and third days of the fighting. The three-day battle fought in Pennsylvania from July 1-3, 1863, was the bloodiest of the war -- resulting in an estimated 51,000 total casualties -- and many historians consider it to be the turning point of the Civil War. Harold Holzer, chairman of the Abraham Lincoln Bicentennial Foundation Chairman, moderates the discussion. This is the second in a two-part series on the battle hosted by the New-York Historical Society.
 

Share This Event Via Social Media
C-SPAN Radio (late 2012)
Questions? Comments? Email us at AmericanHistoryTV@c-span.org