THE
NEW ENGLAND HISTORICAL ASSOCIATION
SATURDAY UNIVERSITY OF VERMONT
OCTOBER 17, 2009 BURLINGTON, VT
FALL CONFERENCE PROGRAM
Registration and
Continental Breakfast: 8:15 a.m. -- Waterman Building. Sessions will be in
the Waterman Building.
7:30-8:30 a.m.
Saturday Morning, Oct. 17 --
Early Bird Walking Tour:
“Dr. Dann’s Queen City
Magical Medicine Show and Promenade”
Long before becoming the birthplace of such magical elixirs as Ben
& Jerry's ice cream,
Magic Hat beer, and Phish's music, Burlington was the site of magical doings, both esoteric and exoteric. This
one-hour tour will begin on the waterfront, where we
will contemplate the workings of Abenaki mdawlinno (shamans), then amble up to the UVM
Green, stopping to catch glimpses of Freemasons, Spiritualists, Stage
Magicians, Patent Medicine Hucksters, Hermeticists,
and Astral Travelers.
Participants will meet either at
Memorial Lounge, Waterman Building, at 7:20 or at the ECHO Center on the waterfront at 7:30am. Registration
materials and a continental breakfast will be ready for you when you return to
Waterman at 8:30. Voluntary donations
of any amount directly to the Tour Docent are encouraged but not required.
8:15-8:45 REGISTRATION: Memorial Lounge, Waterman
Building.
First Morning Sessions
8:45-10:15:
8:45 Session
1: Roundtable on World History Room: 427A Waterman
Chair: Alfred Andrea, University of
Vermont/Vice-President, World History Association
·
Holly-Lynn
Busier, University of Vermont
·
Dane
Morrison, Salem State College
·
Anthony
Penna, Northeastern University
·
Malcolm
Purinton, Independent Scholar
Comment: The Audience
8:45 Session
2: Business and Politics Room:
455 Waterman
Chair and Comment: Aldo V. Garcia
Guevara, Worcester State College
·
Robert
Hodges, University of Maine, “Merchants & Consumers: Consumerism, Material
Goods, and Identity in Early Loyalist Saint John, 1784-1799”
·
Ronald
Angelo Johnson, Purdue University, “ ‘Our Minister to Toussaint’: Race and U.S.
Relations toward Revolutionary Saint-Domingue”
·
Yovanna Pineda, St.
Michael’s College, “The Foreign Business of Advertising Agricultural Machinery
in Argentina, 1880-1940”
8:45 Session
3: Redemption, Preservation, and
Celebration: The Impact of Civil War Memory on American Culture Room: 458
Waterman
Chair and Comment: Steven C. Eames,
Mount Ida College
·
Bethany
W. Jay, Salem State College, “Preservation and Reunion: Museums, the Civil War
and Slavery”
·
Erin
Powers, Salem State College, “Whatever Happened to Jefferson Davis? How the
Johnson Administration and the North
Helped Redeem a Confederate”
·
Jill
Messender, Salem State College, “Celebrations of the
‘Million Dead’: The Grand Army of the Republic and the Establishment of the
National Memorial Day, 1866-1869”
8:45 Session
4: American Foreign Policies Room: 456 Waterman
Chair: Andrew Buchanan, Ruthers University./University of
Vermont
·
David
Turpie, University of Maine, “ ‘Howling Upon the
Scent of Another Victim’: Senator Edward W. Carmack,
Southern Anti-Imperialism and the Uses of History”
·
Matthew
J. Clarcq, Niagara County Community College, “Scaffolding, Tarps and Mortar: Activities of
the Monuments Men in the Italian Theater, 1943-1946”
·
Darren
J. McDonald, Boston College, “ ‘Justice in a Sinful World’: Jimmy Carter,
Religion, and the Making of U.S. Foreign Policy”
Comment: Keith Olson, University of
Maryland/University of Vermont
8:45 Session
5: Creating History: Recollections and
Remembrance Room: 457
Waterman
Chair: Johnathan
Spiro, Castleton State College
Comment: Lisa Cline, Johnson State
College
·
Diana Hennessy-Curran, Boston College, "Remembering the Battle of the Boyne: History,
Traditions and Commemorations in Contemporary Northern Ireland"
·
Willard
Stanley, Bryant University, “Torn Between Two Societies: The
Vietnamese-American Immigration Experience”
·
Chris
Kostov, University of Ottowa,
“Balkan Ethnic Presence in Toronto and the Multicultural History Society of
Ontario Archives”
8:45 Session
6: National Questions and New England Politics Room: 400 Waterman
Chair: John Lund, Keene State College
·
Millington
William Bergeson-Lockwood, University of Michigan, “ ‘A Democrat within the true meaning of the word’: Edwin Garrison
Walker and African American Independent Politics in Boston, Massachusetts,
1867-1901”
·
Chris
Burns, University of Vermont, “Bogus Butter: the 1886 Congressional Debate over
Oleomargarine”
·
Philip
A. Grant, Jr., Pace University, “Northern New England and the Repeal of the
Prohibition Amendment, 1932-1933”
Comment: Karen Madden,
Johnson State College/University of Vermont
8:45 Session
7: The Great War and After Room: 401
Waterman
Chair: Douglas Slaybaugh,
St. Michael’s College
·
Jeff
Roquen, Western Illinois University, “The Seeds of
Intervention: White House Perceptions and Responses to World War I, 28 June –
28 August, 1914”
·
Steven
Haynes, Kent State University, “American Charity: Wilson, Harding, and World
Peace”
·
Timothy
R. Blake, St. Michael’s College, “The
Diplomatic Struggle of David Lloyd George and George Nathaniel Curzon: The Case
of Auckland Campbell Geddes”
Comment: Matthew Masur, St. Anselm College
Break for Book Exhibit & Refreshments: 10:15-10:45
Morning Session II: 10:45-12:15
10:45 Session
8: Digital History and the Classroom Room: 457 Waterman
Chair: Jeremy Dibbell,
Massachusetts Historical Society
·
Tona Hangen, Worcester State College, “Creating Digital History
as a Teaching Tool”
·
Hope
Greenberg, University of Vermont, “Digital
History/Digital Humanities: Where Are We?”
Comment: The Audience
10:45 Session
9: Spirits of Patriotism Room: 455 Waterman
Chair: Rebecca R. Noel, Plymouth State University
·
Woden Teachout, Union Institute & University, “The Fourth of
July and Other Tales from Charles Herbert’s Diary: American Sailors, British
Jails, and Nationalism in the Revolutionary Era”
·
Ann
M. Becker, SUNY Empire State College, “Joseph Plumb Martin, American
Revolutionary”
·
Sara
Georgini, Boston University, “God Pleading with
America: The Nexus of Providence, State, and Prayer in Antebellum Fast Day
Worship”
Comment: Stephen Berry, Simmons College
10:45 Session
10: States of Intellectual and Cultural Life Room: 458 Waterman
Chair and Comment: Martha Yoder,
Commonwealth Honors College, UMass, Amherst
·
Lisa
Pinley Covert, Yale University, “Containing
Foreignness: Gender, Youth and Nation in Provincial Mexico”
·
M.
Raisur Rahman, Wake Forest
University, “The Qasbah of Amroha:
Muslim Intellectual Life in Colonial South Asia”
·
Gayle
Veronica Fischer, Salem State College, “Witches, Devils, Fairies, and Richard
Nixon: Children’s Halloween Costumes and the State of the United States,
1950-2001”
10:45 Session 11:
Art, the Environment, and History Room: 401 Waterman
Chair: Mark Herlihy,
Endicott College
·
Maria
Bashshur Abunnasr,
University of Massachusetts, Amherst, “Imagining New England in Ras Beirut”
·
Peter
Clericuzio, University of Pennsylvania, “Art Nouveau
and the Revival of the Alsace-Lorraine Question, ca. 1900-1914”
·
Troy
Paddock, Southern Connecticut State University, “Thinking about History and the
Natural Environment: Viewing the Mosel”
Comment: Paul Monod,
Middlebury College
10:45 Session 12: Nationalisms Room: 456 Waterman
Chair and Comment: Trent E. Maxey, Amherst College
·
Andre
Fleche, Castleton State College, “ ‘This Rebellion is a World Event’: Secession
and the Creation of Northern Nationalism”
·
Paul
Braun, University of Florida, “ ‘Passage to War’: Jose Martí’s
Voyage to the Cuban Revolution of 1895”
·
Sean
Lent, University of Southern Maine, “Beauty and Patriotism: Yukio Mishima and the Rebirth of Nationalism in Japan after World
War II”
10:45 Session 13: Personal
and Political Responsibilities at Home and Abroad Room: 427A Waterman
Chair: Bruce Cohen, Worcester State College
·
Harvey
Strum, Sage College of Albany, “Famine Relief from the Children of the Auld
Scotia: American Aid to Scotland in 1847”
·
Benjamin
Feldman, Independent Scholar, “Sauce for the Goose: The Strange Breach of
Promise Case of George Barnard vs. Mary Power in Antebellum New York”
·
Jun
Kinoshita, Kokugakuin University, “Returning to Wachusett: The Sons of Vermont, Worcester, Massachusetts,
1870-1875”
Comment: Paul Searls, Lyndon State College
12:15 - 1:30 LUNCHEON &
BUSINESS MEETING -- Waterman Manor
PLENARY SESSION: 1:30-3:00 Room: 413 Waterman
“Museums and, the ‘Plugged-in
Culture’: What this Means to All of Us”
This plenary session will
begin with short presentations by public historians and then open up to a
discussion between the moderator, panelists, and audience.
Participants:
·
Ranger Chuck Arning,
National Park Service, John H. Chafee Blackstone River Valley National Heritage
Corridor
·
Seth Bongartz, Executive
Director, Hildene: The Lincoln Family Home
·
Jeremy Dibbell,
Massachusetts Historical Society
·
Stephan Jost, Director,
Shelburne Museum
RECEPTION: 3:00 – 4:00
Memorial Lounge
NEHA and its members thank the UVM Department of History,
Dean
Eleanor Miller, Provost Jane Knodell, and former
Provost John Hughes
for sponsoring and supporting this meeting.
4:00 Adjournment
NEHA
CONFERENCE
UNIVERSITY
OF VERMONT
Burlington, Vt.
October 17. 2009
THE
ANNUAL SPRING MEETING of the New England Historical Association will be held at the
University of Vermont, Waterman Building, South Prospect Street, Burlington, Vermont on
Saturday, October 17, 2009. The enclosed program was arranged by Vice President Melanie Gustafson with help from NEHA Association Officers
and its Executive Committee. Local
arrangements were planned by Melanie Gustafson, Paul Deslandes,
and their colleagues at the University of Vermont.
NEHA and its members thank
the UVM Department of History, Dean Eleanor Miller, Provost Jane Knodell, and former Provost John Hughes for sponsoring and
supporting this meeting.
PRE-REGISTRATION for this conference is
strongly recommended, although registration at the conference is possible,
luncheon seating is limited. Pre-registration GREATLY facilitates early
morning arrival, so please do consider both the cost saving and the time
saving afforded by pre-registering. The
pre-registration form enclosed herewith should be completed and mailed to the
executive secretary by
October 10.
Please do not mail registrations after October 8 as they may not arrive
in time for processing. On-site registration at a slightly increased
registration fee will be available.
Please feel free to photocopy this form when inviting colleagues,
graduate students and friends.
REGISTRATION is required for
members and non-members who attend the conference, including each panelist. Registration begins at 8:00 a.m. in Memorial
Lounge, Waterman Building. Members
are encouraged to
bring copies of their recent publications as well as other relevant
professional literature for display.
TRAVEL INFORMATION: From I-89: Take Exit 14W into Burlington. Head west on Williston Road up hill. Turn right onto South Prospect Street. Take first left onto College Street. Take first left into visitor parking lot. The Waterman Building is located across the street from the parking lot, at College and South Prospect streets.
From Route 7 North: Follow Shelburne Road/Route 7 into Burlington. At rotary, bear right onto South Willard Street/Route 7. At rotary, bear right onto South Willard Street/Route 7. Travel less than 1 mile to intersection with Main Street (Route 2). Continue on South Willard Street one more block to College Street; turn right onto College. Just past South Williams Street, take right into visitors' parking lot. The Waterman Building is located across the street from the parking lot, at College and South Prospect streets.
OVERNIGHT ACCOMMODATIONS: A block of rooms has been reserved at the
Burlington Sheraton, 870 Williston Road, Burlington (802-865-6600) for Friday
evening at the rate of $109. This is
“leaf-peeping” season in Vermont and hotels will be very busy and pricey, so
the $109 rate is a bargain. You MUST
identify as a NEHA member and you MUST make
your reservation NO LATER THAN September 11 to get this rate. There are other hotels and Inns near the UVM campus,
but rates will likely be considerably higher and availability will be
difficult. Note: As of 9/8/09, the Sheraton Burlington appears
to be fully booked. Reasonably priced
rooms (under $100) are reported available by ORBITZ in the nearby towns of
Colchester and Shelburne. ANOTHER
BLOCK OF ROOMS HAS OPENED UP (9/15/09) AT THE COURTYARD BY MARRIOTT IN
WILLISTON, VT. Call 802-879-0100,
identify yourself as attending the NEHA Conference and ask for the rate of $119
per night.
LUNCHEON will be in Warterman
Manor on the UVM campus. The NEHA Book Award will be presented at the luncheon. Lunch, including special accommodations,
will be available for pre-registrants HOWEVER
you are asked to reserve luncheon in advance since this facilitates meal planning. We will likely not be able to accommodate vegetarian
or other special diet requests on the day of the conference.
NEHA FALL MEETING PRE-REGISTRATION
NEHA CONFERENCE UNIVERSITY
OF VERMONT
Oct. 17, 2009 Burlington, Vt.
NAME
....................................................................................PHONE........................................
AFFILIATION
............................................................ FIELD....................................................
MAILING ADDRESS
....................................................................................................................
.....................................................................................................
ZIP CODE ............................
Please use this form to pay your 2009 dues, even if you
do not attend the meeting. NEHA does
not bill for dues. Membership is for the calendar year
E-MAIL ........................................... Please do not mail after Oct. 8,
as your mailing may not arrive
on time. Registration will be
available on the day of the conference.
[
] Pre-Registration
, Members $25.00 by mail $...................
[
] Pre-Registration,
Non-Members $35.00 $...................
[ ]
Luncheon $20
$...................
[
] 2009 Dues, $20 $..................
[ ] 2009 Dues (student, adjunct, etc.) $10 $..................
[
] Association Fund Donation
$.................. Make checks
payable in U. S. Funds.
RETURN BY OCT. 8 to:
James P. Hanlan,
NEHA Executive Secretary
WPI
100 Institute Road
Worcester, MA 01609
TOTAL (U.S.
Funds): $…………
Please
Note: If you prefer a vegetarian
luncheon, please so indicate.
In order to help us plan, please check here
If you plan to take the Early Morning Walking
Tour: