Horseshoe Bend in Arizona, large red rock with a horseshoe-shaped body of water around it

Welcome to the Bill Lane Center for the American West

Dedicated to advancing scholarly and public understanding of the past, present, and future of western North America, the Center supports research, teaching, and reporting about western land and life

canyons and trees

What is the Bill Lane Center?

Learn more about the founding of the Bill Lane Center, Stanford University's academic hub for regional study of western land and life.

A map of the United States west of the 100th meridian

What is the West?

Our definition of the American West is expansive and takes into account the many dimensions of the region, from those rooted in geography to those rooted in the cultural and literary imagination. 

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Collage of headshots of the 2025 research assistants

Apply for a paid student research assistant position with the Bill Lane Center

The Bill Lane Center invites students to pursue self-designed or pre-organized projects during the summer of 2026. Research should explore some aspect of Western land and life, which may include explorations of the region's history, arts, and culture; its energy and environment; or Western governance and policy. 

A group of late-19th century miners in sepia tones

The Bill Lane Center and Stanford University Libraries have acquired the California Historical Society Collection

The archive contains over 600,000 items dating back to the 18th century, including original artifacts from the Gold Rush and 1906 San Francisco Earthquake and Fire. 

2025 in Review text imposed over a girl smelling a flyer

2025: The Year in Review

We look back on 2025, and on 20 years of sustaining the country's premier hub for teaching and scholarship on the American West. 

A river winding through tree-dotted mountains

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Twenty years of tackling the American West’s big questions

Since its founding two decades ago, the Bill Lane Center has become a thriving community of students and researchers who examine the American West in all its complexities.

Bruce Cain speaks with a student at a table during the 2014 Sophomore College course in Wyoming

Honoring his extraordinary contributions to the American West, the Bill Lane Center bids “happy trails” to its director, Bruce Cain

For over a decade, Cain has been both envisioning and implementing programming that has solidified the Lane Center’s place as the premier hub for Western scholarship in the country. Cain is not retiring, but he has stepped down as faculty director.

Headshot of Zephyr Frank

Zephyr Frank appointed new faculty director of the Bill Lane Center for the American West

A professor of history and environmental social sciences at Stanford, Frank will transition into his role at the Lane Center on September 1, 2025.


Recent News

University Libraries has digitized the papers of Kazuyuki Takahashi, who was a Stanford PhD student when President Franklin D. Roosevelt authorized what was to become the mass internment of Japanese Americans on the West Coast. Records of Takahashi's incarceration shed more light on the history of racial discrimination in the American West.
Under proposed EPA rules, human life has no economic value; Texas oil companies released millions of pounds of pollutants during icy weather; Northern Cheyenne Tribe to use solar power to help restore bison; a new lead on the sea-star wasting disease; and other environmental stories from the American West.
Widely distributed but hard to disentangle, exotic elements are vital to green energy and military applications. For decades, China has dominated the dirty business of mining and processing rare earth ores. Two Mojave desert mines, one operating and one planned, may change that picture.

Upcoming Events

February
11
Date
Wed February 11th 2026, 5:20pm - 7:00pm
Speaker: Dr. Melissa Lewis
March
4
Date
Wed March 4th 2026, 10:00am - 11:00am
Speaker: Bruce Cain , Chris Field
March
24
Date
Tue March 24th 2026, 8:30am - 6:15pm