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Detail, A topographical plan of that part of the Indian-country through which Colonel Bouquet marched in the year, 1764, by Thomas Hutchins, 1765. Courtesy of Richard H. Brown and Mary Jo Otsea

Bring your lunch and learn about Library Fellow Ryan P. Langton's research project, Negotiating the Endless Mountains: Networked Diplomacy along the Eighteenth-Century Trans-Appalachian Frontier. At the George Washington Presidential Library, Gordon is drawing upon the library's manuscript and map collections to chart the personal networks that shaped cross-cultural diplomacy around the Ohio Valley during and after the Seven Years' War.

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About the Presenter

Ryan P. Langton is a Ph.D. candidate in the History Department at Temple University. His dissertation traces how personal relationships — bonds of kinship, friendship, partnership, patronage, and alliance — informed the shifting process of cross-cultural diplomacy and the politics of empire along the Appalachian Mountains in the eighteenth century. Using geographic information system (GIS) software, his project centers Indigenous conceptions of diplomatic space and the interpersonal relationships that gave these spaces meaning to map the shifting networks connecting trans-Appalachian diplomats from Indigenous and European backgrounds, including men and women, traders and soldiers, elite politicians and enslaved people.