Friday, April 21, 2023

 

Members of the History Club spend Saturday April 15 exploring Old Fort Niagara.  Students saw demonstrations by reenactors on bluing fabric and musket firing as well as presentations on espionage in the textile industry and the history of the fort.




Tuesday, April 11, 2023

Chris Dalton Presented at Cuba Circulating Library

Professor Chris Dalton presented "Early Rail Travel: How National Events Affect Local Life" at the Cuba Circulating Library on March 30. A crowd of 38 attended to hear about the work his students did on the local connection to a national disaster. Professor Dalton and his students enrolled in History 300: Historical Methods and Historiography worked with the Cuba Circulating Library and local historians. According to the Cuba Circulating Library web page: "Over the past few months, the St. Bonaventure University History Department and its students, in coordination with the Cuba Circulating Library and some of the community’s local historians, have pursued a project to understand how historic events on a national scale are able to reflect the life and times of people at more localized level."

The project originated with a tour of the Cuba Cemetery. Again, from the Cuba Circulating Library web page: "In the Cuba Cemetery stands an obelisk which memorializes the life and tragic death of Hiram Chamberlain, who perished in the Ashtabula Railway Disaster on a blizzardy evening on Dec. 29th, 1876. This calamity, now a distant memory of the hazards of early train travel, once occupied the attention of our entire nation. Even now, the collapse of the Ashtabula Bridge and the plummeting of the Lake Shore & Michigan passenger train to the bottom of the gulch remains one of the deadliest train accidents in American history."

The project made use of local historical newspapers that have been digitized, examining the impact of a distant tragedy on the nation but also on Cuba residents. Students could see the increased interconnection created by newspapers and railroads.

The project was funded by a Connections grant from the National Endowment for the Humanities. 




Tuesday, April 4, 2023

Phillip Payne on The American Tapestry Podcast

 Phillip Payne appeared on Andrew Roth's American Tapestry Podcast, the November 13, 2022 episode. The main topic was on becoming an historian, but the conversation was a wide ranging covering what it means to do history and the role of history in our society.