Showing posts with label history. Show all posts
Showing posts with label history. Show all posts

Monday, July 1, 2013

Event: Massachusetts Historical Society Graduate Student Reception

Massachusetts Historical Society
Graduate Student Reception
Thursday, September 19, 2013
6:00-8:00 p.m.

The Massachusetts Historical Society, a top-notch resource for American history scholars, is hosting an open house for graduate students of history, American Studies, and related fields. This is a great opportunity for graduate students to network with other students and faculty from other universities and learn about what MHS has to offer! 

For more information, contact Kate Viens or check MassHist.org for updates.

Wednesday, June 26, 2013

Frederick Douglass Events throughout Massachusetts in July


MassHumanities has put together a series of events commemorating the 150th anniversary of the Emancipation Proclamation. Their focus on Frederick Douglass is a bold choice, highlighting one of the great black orators who contributed to the changing of the tone in the North regarding slavery and ultimately forcing the United States government to take a stance against it. 

Remaining events include readings of "What to the Slave is the Fourth of July" on July 1 at City Hall Plaza, Worcester, MA, Reading Frederick Douglass and the Emancipation Proclamation on July 2 at the Massachusetts State House in Boston, MA, and The Third Annual Reading of Frederick Douglass' Speech at High Rock Tower at the Top of Circuit Ave. off High Rock St. in Lynn, MA on July 3. Information on all of these events can be found here.

The Boston event is particularly compelling, given its taking place in the midst of Harborfest, Boston's week-long Fourth of July celebration, which draws millions. Such a high profile location is sure to get this important history event a lot more attention than is customary. 

Tuesday, June 25, 2013

Discussion about Boston's Italian-American North End, June 26!

Capossela's book on Italian-American life.
The North End Historical Society is hosting an interview with Dom Capossela, a restauraneur, author, and native North End Italian-American. "The interview will cover Dom's love of the North End, Italian cooking, and how the neighborhood that was once a tight-knit community of Italian-Americans came to be known as the gem of the city of Boston," according to NEHS.

This is an excellent opportunity to listen hear about the cultural make-up of a Boston immigrant community first-hand, and to ask questions that might better help you understand Italian-American society in post-World War II Boston.

The discussion will be hosted at the Nazzaro Community Center, 30 North Bennet St., Boston, MA, 02113. This event is free and open to the public.

Tuesday, June 18, 2013

“Work! Save!! Win!!!”: Selling the Cost of World War I in America - Part 2: Four-Minute Men


Four-Minute Men
            Visuals weren’t the only approach the government used to sell Liberty Bonds. They had salesmen in the flesh, as well.  The so-called “Four-Minute Men” were a masterful collaboration between the Committee of Public Information and local volunteer groups.
A poster promoting the Four Minute Men.
Courtesy of Library of Congress.
            Initially proposed to Committee of Public Information (CPI) director George Creel by a stranger named Donald Ryerson, the idea was initially to have a respected member of the community speak during the four minutes it took to change silent movie reels at a movie theater. During that time, a slide explaining that the man would be speaking for four minutes was projected on the screen, and declared approved by the CPI.[1]
While the organization was not exclusively aimed to sell bonds, it did spend almost four of the program’s 17 active months during the war doing precisely that.[2] Like the posters advertising the Liberty Loans, the Four-Minute Men were generally positive and fact-based in the beginning, focusing on the impressive achievements of the American people and the needs of their allies. As time went on though, instructions from the CPI became more colored with negative depictions of Germans, and atrocity stories were greatly encouraged.[3]

Tuesday, June 4, 2013

A new focus: Cultural History of America!

The previous incarnation of this blog hoped to focus on the history of my home city of Boston. In that capacity, I ultimately wrote very little and had trouble maintaining my enthusiasm. After deciding to reconsider the Boston History Blog last year, the page went completely silent while I attended graduate school at University of Massachusetts-Boston, where I am pursuing my MA in History.

In this year of study, I've found that my interest in history lies rather firmly in cultural history. I've written a number of papers, done loads of research, and have discovered plenty of things about American culture that are of great interest to me, and I hope will be to you, as well. With this in mind, I am assembling a new collection of short articles, series' of articles, book reviews, etc. which I will be posting starting July 4 on this page. Posts will come twice a week, and will focus primarily on cultural history of the American home front during the World Wars. I will, from time to time, deviate from that period, but 20th century will be the page's primary focus.

What do I mean by "cultural history?" I've seen a lot of definitions. For my purposes, cultural history will deal with the social, political and cultural life of the American people at home. This means anything from the political motivations of bond drives to ethnic groups' support or opposition to the war at home to community efforts to grow food.

I'm very excited about this work, and hope to be able to share it with you.

I've also created a new twitter handle: @CulturalHistUSA. Please follow us and bookmark this page. I look forward to being part of the online dialogue about how Americans came to be Americans through collective cultural experience.

Best,
Matt Wilding

Sunday, March 11, 2012

See History Live: Boston History Events March 13-19, 2012


Tuesday, March 13, 2012

5:15-7:15 PM
Immigration and Urban History Seminar: Policing Migrants and Militants – In Defense of Nation and Empire in the U.S.-Canadian Borderlands
Kornel S. Chang of Rutgers University will discuss the Canadian-U.S. border in the late 19th- and early 20th-centuries through the lense of keeping Asiatic peoples out of self-proclaimed “white man’s countries.” Chang will argue that Asiatic exclusion was as much about defending and preserving the Anglophone empire as it was about keeping out undesirable and inassimilable foreigners. Free. RSVP required.
Massachusetts Historical Society, 1154 Boylston St., Boston

Wednesday, March 14, 2012

6:00-7:30 PM
Author Talk: Where We Worked – A Celebration of America’s Workers and the Nation They Built
Historian Jack Larkin of Clark University and Old SturbridgeVillage will discuss American work and life. Pre-talk reception at 5:30 PM. Free. RSVP requested. Call (617) 646-0560
Massachusetts Historical Society, 1154 Boylston St., Boston

6:00-7:30 PM
Bussey Bridge Train Disaster: 125th Anniversary Panel Discussion
Josef Porteleki will moderate a discussion with Cathy Slade (Roslindale Historical Society), writer Ed Sweeney, and writer Jeremy Fraine about the Bussey Bridge Train Disaster of 1887. Free.
Boston Public Library – Roslindale Branch, 4238 Washington St., Roslindale, MA

Thursday, March 15, 2012

12:15-1:15 PM
Boston Neighborhoods: Chinatown
Professor Wing-Kai To of the Chinese Historical Society ofNew England will discuss the history and growth of Boston’s Chinatown, the third largest community of its kind in the United States, from the 1870s settlement of Chinese laborers to the present day. $6; free for OSMH members.
Old South Meeting House, 310 Washington St., Boston
OldSouthMeetingHouse.org

6:00-7:30 PM
Washington's Artillery
J.L. Bell (Boston1775 Blog) will present an illustrated talk on the strengthening of Continental Artillery during the Revolutionary War. Free. Reservations suggested. (617) 876-4491
Longfellow House, 105 Brattle St., Cambridge, MA
NPS.gov

More events after the jump

Friday, March 9, 2012

James McPherson delivered at Lowell Lectures



Historian James McPherson (Princeton University) didn’t set out to be a Civil War expert. Presenting his talk “Why the Civil War Still Matters” at the Boston Public Library as part of the Lowell Lectures series, Prof. McPherson explained that upon entering graduate school at Johns Hopkins in the late 1950s, he had an interest in studying southern history, which as a Midwesterner, he found “exotic and mysterious.”

It was the Civil Rights movement of his era that brought him to study the Civil War and Reconstruction. In the midst of forced school desegregation, McPherson wanted to learn more about how the 13th-15th amendments that were called on came to be, and how they hadn’t been properly implemented for almost 100 years.

With this introduction, McPherson spoke for just over a half hour about the legacy and significance of the Civil War in the modern world. Citing the conflict as the most popular history subject among Americans due to its closeness to them, its drama and death toll, and its larger-than-life characters, he touched on a greater, more subtle significance: The Civil War was a fight over two different kinds of liberties.

Read more after the jump