BACK ISSUES – FALL 2006

Fall 2006
VOLUME 4 / NUMBER 4

IN THIS ISSUE:  TURN UP THE HEAT

  Arson of Accident?  The Colt Armory Burns

 A Traitor Sets New London Aflame

  Bawdy and Brazen, Connecticut’s   First Lady of Showbiz

  The Great Quake Singes           Hartford’s Insurers

 A Blast from the Past in Kent

On the cover:

Abigal Hinman watches Benedict Arnold’s forces set fire to New London (detail).
Lyman Allyn Art Museum, New London, Connecticut.

Contents
pg 9 From the Publisher:
pg 10 Letters, etc.
pg 14 Sophie Tucker: Last of the Red Hot Mamas.
By Mary M. Donohue
pg 20 Benedict Arnold Turns and Burns New London.
By Edward Baker
pg 26 “A great outcry for bed clothes”: Quilts to Warm Body and Soul.
By Dawn C. Adiletta
pg 32 The Suspicious Colt Armory Fire.
By Herbert G. Houze
pg 38 The Great San Francisco Earthquake.
By Lisa Guernsey
pg 44 Re: Collections
The Kent Iron Furnace.
By Karin Peterson
pg 46 Shoebox Archives
Memories of the Hartford Circus Fire.
By Janice Mathews
pg 49 Destination
The Connecticut Fire Museum.
By Clarissa J. Ceglio
pg 50 Soapbox
A burning passion for uncovering Connecticut’s complicity in slavery.
By Anne Farrow
pg 52 Afterword
What’s new on the Connecticut history bookshelf and more.

 

WINTER 2006/2007

Federal Art Project in New Haven

Norwich’s Renaissance Man

Impressions of the Impressionists

FALL 2006

The Great San Francisco Earthquake

Benedict Arnold Turns and Burns New London

The Kent Iron Furnace

SUMMER 2006

Escape from New-Gate Prison

Written in Stone

Hammonasset Beach State Park Summers

SPRING 2006

Hebrew Tillers of the Soil

The First American Cookbook

What We Loved to Eat

WINTER 2005/2006

A Valley Flooded

Making a Success of Coltsville

In a Neighborhood, A Boy’s World

FALL 2005

The “Conference” State

Glimpses of Lincoln’s Brilliance

Stamping Out the Reds

SUMMER 2005

Making Their Presence Known

What’s a Puritan?

Enfield’s Shaker Legacy

Faith Congregational Church

SPRING 2005

The Horseless Era Arrives

Creative License, or Fundamental Fact?

The Sky’s the Limit

A Century of Connecticut Inventions

 

2004 NOV/DEC/JAN 2005

Daniel Wadsworth and the Hudson River School

The Enigma of Wallace Stevens

Lunch with Monet

AUG/SEP/OCT 2004

The Education of Ella Grasso

Ancient Burying Ground

Politics of Change: Mayor vs. Manager

MAY/JUN/JUL 2004

Miracle on Capital Avenue

Hartford Labor Militants Fight the Spanish Civil War

A Piece of Silk Tells of the Richly Textured Fabric of Mill Town Life

FEB/MAR/APR 2004

Hospital Rock

A Well-stocked Saddlebag for the Doctor on Horseback

2003 NOV/DEC/JAN 2004

A War Contested

“If You Don’t Need It, DON’T BUY IT”

Manufacturing for the War Effort

Fighting for Freedom

SUMMER 2003

An Art School Forged in the Gilded Age

Audacious Alliances

Sophia Woodhouse’s Grass Bonnets

SPRING 2003

Hartford’s Motion Picture Palaces

A Connecticut Yankee Doodle Dandy

The Hartford Dark Blues

 

WINTER 2003

A Tale of Two Cities: The Rise and Fall of Public Housing

The Last 18th-Century House on Main Street

Francis Goodwin II’s reflections on the wild and wooly three-day opening of the Bulkeley Bridge

FALL 2002

A River Runs Under It: A Hog River History

Tobacco Valley: Puerto Rican Farm Workers in Connecticut

A “Tomitude”