|
Summer 2003
VOLUME 1 / NUMBER 4

Midwife Jennet Catlin Boardman
Politico María Sánchez
Cultural Entrepreneurs
Elizabeth Colt & Her Circle
Community-Builder
Mary Townsend Seymour
PLUS: Has Governor Rowland
Slammed the Door on Our State Heroine?
On the cover:
(clockwise from top left)
Prudence Crandall (Courtesy of Prudence
Crandall Museum)
Long Lane School Children, c.1870’s (Connecticut State Library)
Elizabeth Colt (illustration by Alan Carlstrom)
Mary Townsend Seymour (Connecticut State Library)
Caroline Penniman, Superintendent Long Lane School, c.1917 (Connecticut State Library)
Katherine Houghton Hepburn, c. 1917 (Connecticut State Library)
Long Lane School, c.1940 (Connecticut State Library)
(center)
María Sánchez (photo: Juan Fuentes)
| Contents |
| pg 7 |
Letter from the Publisher: |
| pg 9 |
Letters, etc. |
| pg 12 |
Remaking Wayward Girls |
| pg 20 |
An Art School Forged in the Gilded
Age (Sample Article) |
| pg 26 |
Audacious Alliances (Sample Article) |
| pg 32 |
Godmother of the Puerto Rican Community |
| pg 38 |
Shoebox Archives
An Early American Midwife’s Tale.
By Sharon Y. Steinberg |
| pg 40 |
re: collections:
Sophia Woodhouse’s Grass Bonnets (Sample Article)
By Melissa Sirick |
| pg 41 |
Destination: Architect, Executive, Laborer, Preservationist
Hill-Stead Museum
by Melanie Anderson BourbeauMartha Parsons House
by Elizabeth J. Normen
Windham Textile and History Museum
by Beverly York
Katharine Seymour Day House
by Dawn C. Adiletta |
| pg 44 |
Soapbox:
Cuts in state funding threaten the museum of our state heroine.
By Kazimiera Kozlowski |
SUMMER/2009
• History in a Dog-Eared Cookbook
• Oral History: What It Is & How To Do It
• The Collection of Alfred Atmore Pope at Hill-Stead Museum
SPRING/2009
• Cruising the Thimble Islands
• New London’s Indian Mariners
• Kate Moore, Keeper of Fayerweather Lighthouse
WINTER/2008-2009
• Making A Home for Orphans
• East Haven’s Wildest Irish Rose
• Flying the Banner for Temperance
FALL/2008
• What These Walls Have Heard!
• Charles Ives, Connecticut’s Compelling, Confounding Composer
• Ivoryton
SUMMER /2008
• Taking a Ride Down the Hog River–Reprint in PDF form available online!
• Quarry that Built Boston and New York City
• Weir Farm
SPRING /2008
• The Rise and Fall of Silas Brooks, Balloonist
• Destination: A Short History of Connecticut’s Racetracks
• Destination: Tracking Down Our Classic Roller Coasters
WINTER 2007/2008
• The Legend of The Charter Oak
• Nutmeg Adds Spice. But is it Nice?
• Weston Meteorite
FALL 2007
• The Fuller Brush Company
• Everyman’s Time: The Rise and Fall of Connecticut’s Clockmaking
• The Bright Lights of Willimantic
SUMMER 2007
• “Cast down on every side”: The Ill-Fated Campaign to Found an “ African College” in New Haven
• Educated in One Room
• West of Eden: Ohio Land Speculation Benefits Connecticut Public Schools
SPRING 2007
• Ninety Days that Sickened Connecticut
• Doctoring on the Field of Battle
• James Pharmacy
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”
|