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    John P. MacLean portrait

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    Photograph of Ohio author John P. MacLean (1848-1939). MacLean was born in Franklin, Ohio, and is remembered as a Universalist minister, historian and archaeologist. In addition to writings on Scottish history and the Shakers, his work included the books "A Manual of the Antiquity of Man" (1877), "The Mound Builders" (1879) and "Mastodon, Mammoth and Man" (1880)

    John P. MacLean portrait

    No full text
    Photograph of Ohio author John P. MacLean (1848-1939). MacLean was born in Franklin, Ohio, and is remembered as a Universalist minister, historian and archaeologist. In addition to writings on Scottish history and the Shakers, his work included the books "A Manual of the Antiquity of Man" (1877), "The Mound Builders" (1879) and "Mastodon, Mammoth and Man" (1880)

    Season 1, Episode 10: Maclean

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    Maclean. The name is synonymous with many things: great writing, fishing, and fire to name just a few. On this, the tenth and final episode of season one, author John Maclean joins the podcast, along with University of Montana researcher Brent Ruby and host Charlie Palmer to discuss South Canyon, the history of hotshots, and John’s current book project on the Yarnell Hill fire that killed nineteen Granite Mountain Hotshots.https://scholarworks.umt.edu/ontheline_podcasts/1009/thumbnail.jp

    The Maclean House on Nassau Street Princeton

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    In 1756, upon the completion of Nassau Hall, the College of New Jersey relocated from Newark to Princeton, at which time this historic Georgian-style home was built to serve as the residence of the president. Throughout its history, Maclean House was home to ten presidents (it is named after the University�s tenth president, John Maclean Jr., in office 1854�68) as well as seven deans of faculty, before it took on its present function as the home of the Alumni Association of Princeton University. Between 1756 and 1822 Maclean house was not only home to Princeton�s presidents but also home to enslaved people, the first nine presidents of Princeton were all slave owners at some point in their lives. Five of these presidents brought their slaves with them to Maclean House. It was Maclean himself who was the first president to live in the house without slaves. Maclean House was declared a National Historic Landmark in 1971

    Dr. M. MaClean to James C. Furman

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    A two page letter and envelope from Dr. M. MaClean to James C. Furma

    The Maclean House on Nassau Street Princeton

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    In 1756, upon the completion of Nassau Hall, the College of New Jersey relocated from Newark to Princeton, at which time this historic Georgian-style home was built to serve as the residence of the president. Throughout its history, Maclean House was home to ten presidents (it is named after the University�s tenth president, John Maclean Jr., in office 1854�68) as well as seven deans of faculty, before it took on its present function as the home of the Alumni Association of Princeton University. Between 1756 and 1822 Maclean house was not only home to Princeton�s presidents but also home to enslaved people, the first nine presidents of Princeton were all slave owners at some point in their lives. Five of these presidents brought their slaves with them to Maclean House. It was Maclean himself who was the first president to live in the house without slaves. Maclean House was declared a National Historic Landmark in 1971.Original file name Princeton Home on Nassau Street 04-04.jp

    The Maclean House on Nassau Street Princeton

    No full text
    In 1756, upon the completion of Nassau Hall, the College of New Jersey relocated from Newark to Princeton, at which time this historic Georgian-style home was built to serve as the residence of the president. Throughout its history, Maclean House was home to ten presidents (it is named after the University�s tenth president, John Maclean Jr., in office 1854�68) as well as seven deans of faculty, before it took on its present function as the home of the Alumni Association of Princeton University. Between 1756 and 1822 Maclean house was not only home to Princeton�s presidents but also home to enslaved people, the first nine presidents of Princeton were all slave owners at some point in their lives. Five of these presidents brought their slaves with them to Maclean House. It was Maclean himself who was the first president to live in the house without slaves. Maclean House was declared a National Historic Landmark in 1971.Original file name Princeton Home on Nassau Street 04-04.jp

    Jason MacLean: Manufacturing Consent to Climate Inaction

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    Professor Jason MacLean of the University of Saskatchewn joins Alexander Jessome from the Dalhousie Law Journal to discuss his upcoming paper “Manufacturing Consent to Climate Inaction: a Case Study of The Globe and Mail’s Pipeline Coverage” which will be published in this year’s Fall edition of the DLJ. Highlights include a discussion of fake news, conflicts of interest in the mainstream media, and the impact of Canada’s 2019 Federal election on the future of the country’s climate policy. Read Jason\u27s article here: Jason MacLean, Autonomy in the Anthropocene? Libertarianism, Liberalism and the Legal Theory of Environmental Regulation (2017) 40:1 Dal LJ 279
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