Maine Historical Society - Programs Podcast

Informações:

Sinopsis

Listen to recordings of lectures, book talks, panels, and other programs on Maine, New England, American history from Maine Historical Society. These podcasts allow everyone to enjoy, learn from, and reflect on history and its relevance today.

Episodios

  • Walking Through History: Portland, Maine on Foot Book Launch

    18/08/2016 Duración: 34min

    Paul Ledman, Author; Recorded August 11, 2016 - In Walking Through History: Portland, Maine on Foot , Paul Ledman brings the city’s history to life through photos and maps, appealing to city residents as well as its visitors. Enjoy this short talk by Ledman at the book launch for Walking Through History: Portland, Maine on Foot .

  • Book Talk: Maine Nursing: Interviews and History on Caring and Competence

    19/07/2016 Duración: 59min

    Recorded June 23, 2016 - Through historical anecdotes and fascinating oral histories, Maine Nursing: Interviews and History on Caring and Competence explores the remarkable sacrifices and achievements of Maine's nurses who have served tirelessly as caregivers and partners in healing at home and abroad, from hospitals to battlefields. Authors Susan Henderson and Juliana L'Heureux talk about their book.

  • The Great Portland Fire: Panel Discussion Featuring Earle G. Shettleworth, Jr.

    12/07/2016 Duración: 52min

    Recorded July 6, 2016 - In companion to Images of Destruction: Remembering the Great Portland Fire of 1866 --our exhibit examining the city's devastating fire of July 4, 1866--enjoy the fascinating look at the history behind this infamous event. On this sesquicentennial anniversary of the fire, former State Representative Herb Adams lead a discussion with Maine State Historian Earle G. Shettleworth, Jr., and authors Allan Levinsky and Michael Daicy on the reason for the fire, its impact on the city of Portland, how the city rose from the ashes to rebuild, and the ephemera and memory of this important event on generations of Portland families. Watch the Video Images of Destruction: Remembering the Great Portland Fire of 1866 and related programs are supported by Luminato Condos : Building inspiration for a city on the rise.

  • Book Talk: The Phantom Punch

    05/06/2016 Duración: 47min

    Rob Sneddon, journalist and sports historian; Recorded May 25, 2016 - Journalist and sports historian Rob Sneddon discussed the infamous Muhammad Ali-Sonny Liston fight of May 25, 1965, which ended in chaos at a high school hockey rink in Lewiston, Maine. Sneddon dug deep into the fight's background and delivered new perspective on boxing promotion in the 1960s; on Ali's rapid rise and Liston's sudden fall; on how the bout ended up in Lewiston--and, of course, on Ali's phantom punch. That single lightning-quick blow triggered a complex chain reaction of events that few people understood, either then or now. The following clip was shown at the lecture: Muhammad Ali Vs Sonny Liston II | Full Match 1965.

  • Artist Talk: Pigeon's Mainer Project: street art meets history

    22/03/2016 Duración: 01h02min

    Recorded March 10, 2016 - Orson Horchler, aka Pigeon, discusses the exhibition Pigeon's Mainer Project: street art meets history , his process, and inspiration behind his work. He leads a discussion about immigration, questioning and debunking the notion of who gets to call themselves a "Mainer."

  • Book Event: French and Indian Wars in Maine

    10/11/2015 Duración: 01h09min

    Speaker: Michael Dekker; Recorded October 20, 2015 - For eight decades, an epic power struggle raged across a frontier that would become Maine. Between 1675 and 1759, British, French and Native Americans clashed in six distinct wars to stake and defend their land claims. Author Michael Dekker, a former trustee on the Lincoln County Historical Society board of directors and a member of the Boothbay Region Historical Society, shares his extensive research on the wars.

  • Book Event: Henry Wadsworth Longfellow in Portland, The Fireside Poet of Maine

    03/11/2015 Duración: 43min

    Speaker: John Babin, MHS Visitor Services Manager; Recorded October 27, 2015 - Maine Historical Society Visitor Services Manager John Babin—who has led tours in the Wadsworth-Longfellow House for more than a decade—talks about his new book on Longfellow. You'll feel as though you've stepped back in time to the poet's early days and landed in 19th century Portland—the bustling seaport town that so heavily influenced his life and work. Other speakers include Kathy Amoroso, Maine Memory Network; Alan Levinsky, co-author; and Herb Adams.

  • Post Mortem Mourning Practices in Eighteenth and Nineteenth Century New England

    16/06/2015 Duración: 01h10min

    Speaker: Libby Bischof, Associate Professor of History, USM; Recorded January 31, 2015 - In addition to wearing only black apparel for up to a year, mourners in 18th and 19th century New England abided by fashions and customs that demonstrated intense grief. Libby Bischof, Associate Professor of History at the University of Southern Maine and a board member of Spirits Alive, the friend's group of Portland's historic Eastern Cemetery, explored these practices, utilizing examples from Maine Historical Society's collections.

  • The Emergence of Portland: Early Homes and Early Maps

    09/06/2015 Duración: 59min

    Speaker: Matthew Edney, Osher Professor in the History of Cartography, University of Southern Maine; Recorded January 22, 2015 - Matthew Edney, Osher Professor in the History of Cartography at the University of Southern Maine, uses the collections of the Maine Historical Society and USM’s Osher Map Library and Smith Center for Cartographic Education to analyze urban maps as cultural documents and interpret Portland’s spatial history from the colonial era through the nineteenth century. Early maps of Portland manifest the duality of Portland, as a conventional city and a port city. View Slides (PDF) as you listen to podcast .

  • A Storm of Witchcraft: The Salem Trials and the American Experience

    02/06/2015 Duración: 01h08min

    Speaker: Emerson "Tad" Baker; Recorded January 8, 2015 - Author Emerson "Tad" Baker explores the catalog of explanations that have been put forward over the years to solve the mystery of what happened during the Salem Witch Trials in 1692. Behind the events in Salem and surrounding towns was a unique convergence of conditions, including a new charter and government, a grim and bloody frontier war in Maine, and sectarian and political power-struggles. Baker is a professor of history at Salem State University and the award-winning author of many works on the history of early Maine and New England.

  • Reflections on Editing the Historical Atlas of Maine : A Scholarly Epic

    26/05/2015 Duración: 44min

    Speaker: Richard Judd, Professor of History, University of Maine; Recorded December 9, 2014 - After more than a decade of extensive research, the Historical Atlas of Maine presents in cartographic form--maps, paintings, graphs, and text--the historical geography of Maine from the end of the last ice age to the year 2000. Organized in four chronological sections, the Atlas tells the principal stories of the many people who have lived in Maine over the past 13,000 years. Dr. Richard Judd, professor of history at the University of Maine, spoke about co-editing the Atlas with Stephen J. Hornsby.

  • Portland's Irish in the Civil War

    19/05/2015 Duración: 48min

    Speaker: Matthew Jude Barker; Recorded December 2, 2014 - Did you know that the second-youngest recipient ever of the Medal of Honor was 14-year old John Anglin, son of Irish emigrants who grew up near Gorham's Corner? Or that Colonel Patrick R. Guiney, leader of Boston's Fighting Irish Ninth, also hailed from Portland? Hundreds of Irishmen and boys from Portland fought in the war, and more than 90 were killed or died from their wounds or disease. Fascinating facts like these are being unearthed by historian and genealogist Matthew Jude Barker as he works on his second book.

  • Maine During the Civil War

    12/05/2015 Duración: 59min

    Speaker: Lee Webb; Recorded November 18, 2014 - A PhD candidate in the Department of History at the University of Maine, Webb has been researching and writing extensively about Maine politics and culture during the war. He shared his research in this talk relating to the traveling exhibition, Lincoln: The Constitution & the Civil War , which was on display in the Brown Library from November 12 to December 20.

  • Free and Responsible Government: The Long Shadow of Lincoln's Gettysburg Address

    28/04/2015 Duración: 01h01min

    Speaker: Jared Peatman; Recorded November 14, 2014 - Historian Jared Peatman, author of The Long Shadow of Lincoln’s Gettysburg Address (2013), spoke at the opening reception of the traveling exhibition, Lincoln: The Constitution & the Civil War . His talk revealed the interconnected history between the United States Constitution, the Gettysburg Address, and constitutional theory around the world.

  • Annual Maine History Maker Award: Honoring Vincent Veroneau, President and CEO of J.B. Brown & Sons

    21/04/2015 Duración: 41min

    Earle Shettleworth, Vin Verioneau; Recorded September 30, 2014 - Each year MHS recognizes an individual in Maine who has made significant contributions to the community through the Maine History Maker Award . This award honors contemporary citizens who are shaping Maine today. In 2014 we honored Vin Veroneau of J.B. Brown & Sons. Listen to the presentation and the history of the Brown family in Portland presented by Earle Shettleworth.

  • Hold On: The Privilege of Keeping Old Things Safe

    18/04/2015 Duración: 01h06min

    Speaker: Nicholson Baker, Author; Recorded March 15, 2012 - In 2001, writer Nicholson Baker published Double Fold , a book about libraries, paper science, and lost history. In it he documented his efforts to save a large collection of beautiful and exceptionally rare newspaper volumes, which were being scrapped in favor of microfilmed replacements. Baker's forceful case served as a seeming coda to the era of print, and presaged issues and arguments that organizations like MHS face in the digital age. Why, we are asked, do we need to keep all this ephemeral stuff now that it can be digitized? Baker revisits the intellectual underpinnings of his newspaper crusade, shares tales of research recently done in the MHS library, and reminds us of the essentialness of real, physical things.

  • An Empire on the Edge: How Britain Came to Fight America

    05/04/2015 Duración: 01h12min

    Speaker: Nicholas Bunker; Recorded October 2, 2014 - Written from a strikingly fresh perspective, this account of the Boston Tea Party and the origins of the American Revolution shows how a lethal blend of politics, personalities, and economics led to a war that few people welcomed but nobody could prevent. Publishers Weekly says, “A nuanced global analysis of Britain’s failure to hold onto its American colonies. . . riveting. . . With a sharp eye for economic realities, Bunker persuasively demonstrates why the American Revolution had to happen.” Nick Bunker is the author of Making Haste from Babylon . He was a journalist for the Liverpool Echo and the Financial Times, and then an investment banker. He lives in Lincolnshire, England.

  • What's Laundry Got to do With it?: Caring for the Body in the 19th Century United States

    31/03/2015 Duración: 01h04min

    Speaker: Kathleen M. Brown, Professor of History, University of Pennsylvania; Recorded September 18, 2014 - The author of Foul Bodies: Cleanliness in Early America imagined what body care and hygiene may have been like in the Wadsworth-Longfellow House. Nineteenth century Americans were not the first people to read the body for telltale signs of virtue or moral weakness, but they came to these judgments in the context of new standards and practices of body care. Kathleen Brown is a historian of gender and race in early America and the Atlantic World. She is also the author of Good Wives, Nasty Wenches, and Anxious Patriarchs: Gender, Race, and Power in Colonial Virginia (Chapel Hill, 1996), which won the Dunning Prize of the American Historical Association for best book by a junior scholar.

  • Ed Muskie: Made in Maine, 1914-1960

    24/03/2015 Duración: 41min

    Speaker: James Witherell; Recorded September 16, 2014 - The arc of Edmund "Ed" Muskie's life from modest beginnings 100 hundred years ago to future greatness was singular and unpredictable-an American story that looks plausible only in hindsight. Author James L. Witherell's biography of Muskie traces the son of an immigrant tailor through his two terms as Maine's governor. Witherell is also the author of Bicycle History (2010), L.L. Bean: The Man and His Company (2011), and When Heroes Were Giants: 100 Tours de France (2013).

  • A Special Evening with Anna Eleanor Roosevelt

    17/03/2015 Duración: 01h02min

    Speaker: Anna Eleanor Roosevelt; Recorded September 4, 2014 - During this Special Evening with Anna Eleanor Roosevelt, the granddaughter of Franklin D. and Eleanor Roosevelt shared anecdotes, talked about Ken Burns's PBS series "The Roosevelts," and discussed family legacy.

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