Big History is an academic discipline which examines history from the Big Bang to the present. Big History resists specialization, and searches for universal patterns or trends. It examines long time frames using a multidisciplinary approach based on combining numerous disciplines from science and the humanities, and explores human existence in the context of this bigger picture. It integrates studies of the cosmos, Earth, life, and humanity using empirical evidence to explore cause-and-effect relations, and is taught at universities and primary and secondary schools often using web-based interactive presentations.
Essays about history, stories, art, technology, living memory, science, material culture, architecture, gardens, molecular structures! Also, news about Rhode Island and New England history, reviews of books, lectures and more!
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Thursday, June 30, 2022
A Course in Rhode Island History #2: 1.1 RI Geography. Geology and Geographic Regions
Wednesday, June 29, 2022
A Course in Rhode Island History #1: Background and Rationale
In 2019, the RI General Assembly adopted new regulations for History and Social Studies standards, requiring that they “be designed to instill respect for the cultural, ethnic, and racial diversity of this state, and for the contributions made by diverse cultural, ethnic, and racial groups to the life of this state.” This resulted in the formation of the Rhode Island History and Social Studies Advisory Committee (RIHSSAC), which from 2020 to 2022 wrote a new set of standards that will be much shorter and more succinct than the current GSEs while including Culturally Responsive and Susteaining Education standards. These are presently in the final stages of approval -- I would say more about these but they are still in "draft" mode and are "confidential." Hopefully the final version will be coming out...soon?
Then in 2021, the RI Legislature codified this and further required that these new “standards shall include, but not be limited to, the history of the state of Rhode Island, representative government, the rights and duties of actively engaged citizenship, and the principles of democracy.” Also in 2021, the state passed legislation requiring that all "middle and high school students attending public schools, or any other schools managed and controlled by the state, shall demonstrate proficiency, as defined by the local school district, in civics education that shall also satisfy half credit or course requirement in history and social studies."
To that end, I am putting together a proposed one-semester course in Rhode Island History that will both meet the CRSE requirements of the new standards and teach civics through the lens of Rhode Island History. After running this idea past my department head and consulting with educators of RI History at the RIHS and URI, I began drafting a proposasl for the course. At first the proposal was just a brainstormy list of topics that kept getting longer and longer...my dept. chair suggested that I reorganize the list into subtopics that could become units of study, and I also decided each unit should have a set of guiding questions to also frame the investigation of each subtopic. My dept. chair liked this a lot better and after we went over each one he became increasingly enthused about the course. Then the two of us ran a one-unit breakdown of the propoasl by the assistant principal to see if she thought the course was viable and whether the organization was on the right track. She gave me a simialrly enthusiatic go-ahead to develop a full course proposal that could go through the approval process in the fall. I am heartened by the reception to the course I gotten so far, and my goal is to have the proposal fleshed out before the end of July.
Over the next month I will be exploring the various topics to be included in this course proposal. Below is the list of units and subtopics. In the days to come I will discuss the content, guiding questions and source materials for each unit. I am not married to the wording of any of these, and some of them will likely change as I continue to think and rethink about them.
I. Intro: Rhode Island Geography and Narragansett Bay
- Geology and Physical Geography
- Narragansett Bay and the Atlantic
- Political Borders
II. The Founding of Colonial RI and Roger Williams
- Roger WIlliams c. 1603 - 1636
- Roger Williams and Rhode Island’s Four First Towns
- Roger Williams and Freedom of Religion
- First Amendment: Establishment Clause and Free Exercise Clause
III. The Narragansett People
- First People: Archaeology and Algonquin Oral Histories, 12,000 BP to c. 1500 CE
- Effects of First Contact and European Interaction on Algonquin Lifeways, to 1636
- The Narragansett Before and After King Philip's War
- The Narragansett in Jim Crow Era Rhode Island
- Narragansett Tribal Recognition: 1975 to Present
IV. Slavery, Emancipation and Civil Rights for BIPOC Rhode Islanders
- The Colonial Slave Trade, Slavery, and Rhode Island’s Plantation System
- Gradual Emancipation and Black Rhode Islanders in the Antebellum Period
- African Americans and Asians in Jim Crow Era Rhode Island
- The Civil Rights Movement in Rhode Island
- Post-1960s Demographics and Immigration
V. Rhode Island’s Economy
- Intro (Colonial RI): The Land, The Bay, and the Atlantic Market, 1636-1790
- Rhode Island and the Industrial Revolution, 1790 - 1860
- Post-Civil War Industrialization: Peak and Decline of Rhode Island Manufacturing
- Rhode Island in the Cold War: the US Navy, Electric Boat, The Interstate, and the Rise of the Suburbs
- Rhode Island in the 21st Century
VI. Rhode Island Democracy: Demographics and Politics
- Rhode Island in the 17th Century: Patents and Charters, Boundaries and Wars
- Rhode Island in the 18th Century: New Towns and the Providence/Newport Rivalry
- Discontent and Revolution: The War for Independence in RI
- Anti-Federalism, The Country Party, and the US Constitution
- The Dorr Rebellion
- Rhode Islanders in the Civil War
- Gilded Age Rhode Island: Wealth, Immigration and Urbanization
- Political Machines and the Limits of Progressivism in Rhode Island
- The Women’s Suffrage Movement in Rhode Island
- Republicans vs Democrats and the Fight for the State House
- Rhode Islanders in WWII
- Reynolds v. Sims and redistricting (1964), the 1986 Constitutional Convention, and Separation of Powers (2004)
- Rhode Island in the 21st Century
Tuesday, June 28, 2022
A History Garden (Slight Return)
Priority One was to reformat my life after my last significant relationship ended. First and foremost I decided to spend as much time as possible with my daughter before she hit her teen years (she had just turned 6 when the split happened -- see image right). I can say that was the best decision I made; my daughter is now 14 (see image below) and she is fully engaged with devloping non dad-related teenage autonomy. But those years of us being thick-as-thieves established the bedrock that our current relationship firmly rests on. And I will never regret not having spent more time with her because I was busy blogging...
See that path in the blog header with the planters and paving stones and black and red mulch? It was the garden path leading to the front door of my house, which I still co-owned with my ex after we split up. The mortgage had been upside-down since '08 and it was unsellable when things ended, unless I wanted to foreclose and go bankrupt. The bank had made clear a short sale was not in the cards. It took years, but between the housing market slowly coming back from the subprime mortgage crash and budgeting my finances to pay down the mortgage, I was eventually able to sell the house and break even. Quick plug for my realtor Debbie Chennisi. If not for her relentless hard work, I never could have sold that hot mess without a foreclosure that would have bankrupted me.
From a distance it didn't look like a hot mess though. It is in a great location, a quiet cul-de-sac only 5 minutes from RT 95 one way and the Centre of New England shopping center the other. It's got Lake Tiogue in the back, a garden, chickens and a chicken coop and this nicely-mulched stone pathway leading to the front door... But because my priority had entirely been to pay down the mortgage the place had a LOT of deferred maintenance. It needed a new roof. New gutters. Trees that needed to be taken down before they fell on someone's house. And there were several other issues that structural engineers had signed off on. For instance, in 1965 the entire nieghborhood was built on a miles-wide sand deposit left by the last ice age. So that crack in the foundation? Most of the houses on my street had the same cracked foundation our house had, and it had stoppped settling long before we moved in in 2005. All the stuff wrong with the place was in the disclosure and home inspection. Still, I never thought it was going to sell at the break-even price. But the housing market went ballistic once the pandemic hit, so even with all these problems and going under contract with three different buyers, eventually it sold as-is for the price I was asking!
There was an immense sense of freedom and relief when I drove away from there for the last time...
Meanwhile as all this was happening I was also still teaching full-time, coordinating Model Legislature statewide, and was handed the keys to the RI Social Studies Association (which I took only with great reluctance -- more on that in a future post). Around the same time retired archivist Peter Bennett joined WRICHS, so I gladly handed the responsibility for the WRICHS Archive to him and took over the vacant position of WRICHS Historian. There was an opportunity there to kill two birds with one stone, and I began wrting articles for The Hinterlander about mill villages in the south-western corner of RI that I am also using as core drafts for chapters in my "Lost Mill Towns of South County" book project. In the winter of 2019 I also put together a related mill-preservation presentaion for HistoryCamp Boston for March 2020. Then as luck would have it, HistoryCamp 2020 was scheduled to take place the same weekend that the pandemic shut down the entire country. So much pandemic hiatus stuff... But now that things are opening back up, I'll be giving that postponed presentation for HistoryCamp 2022 this August.
So skip to the end, I have kept a small number of public history and service projects going while I mostly spent quality time with my daughter, paid down the mortgage and sold my house. Other irons in the fire, I either quit entirely or set them on hiatus. But now I have the time, so I am picking up my pen and keyboard and starting to blog again.
Shortly after I first started A History Garden I asked an online friend of mine, who has a very awesome blog to take a look at it for some feedback. This is what she said:
"I can unreservedly say that I love your blog. I love the Rhode Islandiness of it, the strong individual voice and sense of humor, your original photographs and the mixture of longer essay form with shorter entries and reviews. The only thing you have to do, as far as I'm concerned, is post more" [emphasis mine].I have thought much about these words of advice and encouragement fron Liv since she wrote them to me so many years ago. The number of views some of my articles have gotten, on a blog that has been for all intents and purposes moribund for years, surpasses the number of students I've had in over thirty years of teaching. This is really such an amazing medium as a public historian for reaching an audience. Therefore my goal, if I am really restarting my blog, is to post something every day. Even if all it is is very short or a quote from so-and-so, or something I wrote for some other purpose. My goal is to share ideas and history with whoever is interested. The pathway in the header is no longer my front yard, but my path forward here is clear nonetheless.
Gonna post more, Liv.
And in case all this wasn't enough for your slight return pleasure, here's another...