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    The Bonds, The Mitchells & The Dawn of Time: The Legacies of The Bonds and The Mitchells

    en-usJanuary 12, 2023

    About this Episode

    In this final episode of Season 4, we conclude our story with Maria Mitchell and Sarah Bond and how they navigated and overcame the expectations of their time. 

    Jascin and Jim talk about the lasting impact their careers had and contemplate what has changed and what has not.

    Credits:
    This has been a production of the Nantucket Atheneum

    Written, edited and narrated by Janet Forest 

    Special thanks to the Atheneum’s Reference Library Associate Jim Borzilleri and Historian and Deputy Director of the Maria Mitchell Association Jascin Leonardo Finger for their research and insights.

    If you want to know more about this topic, check our this very thorough list of resources that Jim has compiled: FURTHER READING

     

    The Nantucket Atheneum is located at 1 India Street in Nantucket, MA.

    You can visit us online at www.nantucketatheneum.org

    Recent Episodes from Nantucket Atheneum Podcast

    Tonight In Atheneum Hall: Henry Clapp, Jr.: Part III

    Tonight In Atheneum Hall: Henry Clapp, Jr.: Part III

    In this final episode of Season 5, James picks up where we left off in Henry Clapp Jr.'s story. He begins holding court at Pfaff's Beer Hall where aspiring arts and writers vie for a seat at his table. This period is short lived, but it will become a huge part of Clapp's legacy.

    Sources and references:

    CLICK HERE to read Henry Clapp Jr.’s Obituary as printed in the Inquirer & Mirror on April 17, 1875

    Notes on Henry Clapp's epitaph written by his friends and colleagues:
     - The first lines are from a poem by William Winter
    - “Figaro” refers to Clapp's pen name.

    This has been a production of the Nantucket Atheneum.

    It was hosted and edited by Janet Forest. Special thanks to Reference Library Associate James Greider for his knowledge and research. 

    If you have an idea for what we should talk about next, send us an email at jforest@nantucketatheneum.org

    The Nantucket Atheneum is located at 1 India Street in Nantucket, MA.
    www.NantucketAtheneum.org
    Facebook: @NantucketAtheneum
    Instagram: @NantucketAtheneum

    Tonight In Atheneum Hall: Henry Clapp, Jr.: Part II

    Tonight In Atheneum Hall: Henry Clapp, Jr.: Part II

    In this episode, James picks up where we left off with Henry Clapp's return to Paris where experience a person transformation that turns  his world view on its head. With his new found lifestyle, he goes back to the use and eventually finds his way to New York City and rubs elbows with artists and actors and even advocates for the "free love" movement.

    Sources and references:

    CLICK HERE to read the full announcement for Clapp’s “Paris As It Is” lecture series the Nantucket Weekly Mirror on March 25, 1854

    The episode image is by Frank Bellew is from the February 6, 1864 issue of Demorest's New York Illustrated News


    This has been a production of the Nantucket Atheneum.

    It was hosted and edited by Janet Forest. Special thanks to Reference Library Associate James Greider for his knowledge and research. Newspaper announcement voiced by Andrew Cromartie. 

    If you have an idea for what we should talk about next, send us an email at jforest@nantucketatheneum.org

    The Nantucket Atheneum is located at 1 India Street in Nantucket, MA.
    www.NantucketAtheneum.org
    Facebook: @NantucketAtheneum
    Instagram: @NantucketAtheneum 



    Tonight In Atheneum Hall: Henry Clapp, Jr.: Part I

    Tonight In Atheneum Hall: Henry Clapp, Jr.: Part I

    The last three episodes of this season are dedicated to Henry Clapp, Jr., who was a writer, publisher and activists that moved in circles with William Loyd Garrison, Walt Whitman and other historical figure. He lived large and made a big splash wherever he went but has been mostly lost to history...Until now.

    In part one, James explains Clapp's early life and his foray into political activism where impressed some and angered others.

    Sources and references:

    CLICK HERE to read the full review of “The True Aim of Life”, Inquirer & Mirror, Dec. 18, 1841” 

    CLICK HERE to see the map of Nantucket by William Coffin and published by Henry Clapp Sr. in 1834.

    This has been a production of the Nantucket Atheneum.

    It was hosted and edited by Janet Forest. Special thanks to Reference Library Associate James Greider for his knowledge and research. Newspaper announcement voiced by Andrew Cromartie. 

    If you have an idea for what we should talk about next, send us an email at jforest@nantucketatheneum.org

    The Nantucket Atheneum is located at 1 India Street in Nantucket, MA.
    www.NantucketAtheneum.org
    Facebook: @NantucketAtheneum
    Instagram: @NantucketAtheneum 

    Tonight In Atheneum Hall: Panoramas

    Tonight In Atheneum Hall: Panoramas

    In this episode, James describes the mid-19th century crazy of panoramas that tours the country and wowed audiences for a while before fading into the background, so to speak.

    Notes and References:

    Read the special notice for the Mammoth Panorama in the Inquired and Mirror on Monday, March 26, 1849 HERE.

    See photos and more information about the Gettysburg Cyclorama HERE.

    More on John Banvard from Atlas Obscura can be found HERE.

    In 1918, the New Bedford Whaling Museum acquired the Grand Panorama of a Whaling Voyage Round the World, created by artists Benjamin Russell and Caleb Purrington in 1848, and recently completed work on its preservation.
    Click here to watch a video of the panorama.

     

    This has been a production of the Nantucket Atheneum.

    It was hosted and edited by Janet Forest. Special thanks to Reference Library Associate James Greider for his knowledge and research. Newspaper announcement voiced by Andrew Cromartie. 

    If you have an idea for what we should talk about next, send us an email at jforest@nantucketatheneum.org

    The Nantucket Atheneum is located at 1 India Street in Nantucket, MA. 

    www.NantucketAtheneum.org
    Facebook: @NantucketAtheneum
    Instagram: @NantucketAtheneum 

    Tonight In Atheneum Hall: Impresarios of the Stage

    Tonight In Atheneum Hall: Impresarios of the Stage

    In this episode, James and Janet discuss the impresarios who performed in Atheneum Hall and introduced islanders to the world of magic and illusion.  

    Resources and additional information:

    Woodcut images from Yankee Hill's book Scenes from the Life of an Actor (1853).
    http://1.bp.blogspot.com/_Q6q8FgL3eAA/RrsXpR3WdxI/AAAAAAAAAG8/9TaIPNb2UOg/s1600-h/hiramdodgeyankeepeddler.gif

    http://2.bp.blogspot.com/_Q6q8FgL3eAA/RrsXph3WdyI/AAAAAAAAAHE/_83I2-tJdxY/s1600-h/jedidiahhomebredgreenmountainboy.gif

    http://2.bp.blogspot.com/_Q6q8FgL3eAA/RrsXph3WdzI/AAAAAAAAAHM/u_f83eUs4jM/s1600-h/nathantuckerwifeforaday.gif

    Woodcut images of Dr. Valentine’s Comic Metamorphoses
    Click here for photos.

    Portraits of Signor Blitz
    Click here for photos.
    Advertisement for Signor Blitz's performance at Atheneum Hall, which appeared in the April 14, 1840 issue of The Islander.
    Click here to see ad.

    Andrew MacAllister in his elaborate stage costumes.
    Click here for photos.

     

    This has been a production of the Nantucket Atheneum.

    It was hosted and edited by Janet Forest. Special thanks to Reference Library Associate James Greider for his knowledge and research. Newspaper announcement voiced by Andrew Cromartie.

    If you have an idea for what we should talk about next, send us an email at jforest@nantucketatheneum.org

    The Nantucket Atheneum is located at 1 India Street in Nantucket, MA.
    www.NantucketAtheneum.org
    Facebook: @NantucketAtheneum
    Instagram: @NantucketAtheneum 

    Tonight In Atheneum Hall: The Lyceum Movement

    Tonight In Atheneum Hall: The Lyceum Movement

    James talks about the Lyceum Movement that started with local speakers and then evolved into a speaking circuit that includes great orators including Mark Twain, Frederick Douglass and Ralph Waldo Emerson.

    Notes and References:
    Announcement for the Lyceum in the Nantucket Weekly Mirror on Saturday, April 17, 1852


    This has been a production of the Nantucket Atheneum.

    It was hosted and edited by Janet Forest. Special thanks to Reference Library Associate James Greider for his knowledge and research. Newspaper announcement voiced by Andrew Cromartie. 

    If you have an idea for what we should talk about next, send us an email at jforest@nantucketatheneum.org

    The Nantucket Atheneum is located at 1 India Street in Nantucket, MA. 

    www.NantucketAtheneum.org

    Facebook: @NantucketAtheneum

    Instagram: @NantucketAtheneum 

     

    Tonight In Atheneum Hall: Family Singing Groups

    Tonight In Atheneum Hall: Family Singing Groups

    James tells Janet about the family singing groups that dazzled the Atheneum audiences will their close harmonies and impressive musical talents. These 19th century "rock stars" toured the country sharing their music and their political messages. Find out what made them such an attraction and what were the values they were promoting through song.

    References and Resources:

    Videos of Harp Singing/Shape Singing

    "Sacred Harp Singing," the musical background for American music

    "The Old Granite State," anthem of the Hutchinsons

    Photo of the Hutchinson Family Singers. c. 1845

    Announcement for the Aeolians Performance, which appears in the Inquirer and Mirror on June 24, 1843


    Billed as the “Cumbrian (Welsh) Infants,” an engraving from the September 18, 1841 edition of the Inquirer and Mirror shows the three younger siblings playing violin, concertina, and harp. Margaret and John Arthur are standing on tables, while their older brother David Edward stands in the center looking directly at the viewer.

     

    Hutchinson Family founds Hutchinson, MN:

    Judson, John, and Asa continued touring as a trio after their sister married, venturing into the midwestern states. In November 1855, the three brothers founded the town of Hutchinson, MN. It forbade liquor, bowling alleys, and gambling of all types, and granted that women “shall enjoy equal rights with men and shall have the privilege of voting in all matters not restricted by law.”

    In 1942, muralist Elsa Jemne completed an egg tempera on plaster mural, The Hutchinson Singers, in the town's post office. Still there, post office murals were a thing and part of the New Deal. (That’s for another podcast…)

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_post_office_murals

     

    This has been a production of the Nantucket Atheneum.

    It was hosted and edited by Janet Forest. Special thanks to Reference Library Associate James Greider for his knowledge and research. Newspaper announcement voiced by Andrew Cromartie. 

    If you have an idea for what we should talk about next, send us an email at jforest@nantucketatheneum.org

    The Nantucket Atheneum is located at 1 India Street in Nantucket, MA. 

    www.NantucketAtheneum.org

    Facebook: @NantucketAtheneum

    Instagram: @NantucketAtheneum 

    Tonight In Atheneum Hall: The Trailer

    Tonight In Atheneum Hall: The Trailer

    The stage of the Great Hall has been a treasured feature of the Nantucket Atheneum since its founding nearly 200 years ago.

    In this season of the podcast, Reference Library Associate James Grieder introduces you to the lesser known performers, speakers and guests that took to the stage in "Atheneum Hall." Find out what drew them to the shores of Nantucket and how they were received by islanders.

    The Bonds, The Mitchells & The Dawn of Time: Digging Deeper into the Science

    The Bonds, The Mitchells & The Dawn of Time: Digging Deeper into the Science

    In this Bonus Episode, Jim and Janet take closer look on the themes that run through the story of the Bonds and the Mitchells and dive a little deeper into topics that were just touched upon in the regular season, such as the history of solar noon and why longitude was such a tough nut to crack.

    Credits:
    This has been a production of the Nantucket Atheneum

    Written, edited and narrated by Janet Forest 

    Special thanks to the Atheneum’s Reference Library Associate Jim Borzilleri

    If you want to know more about this topic, check our this very thorough list of resources that Jim has compiled:
    FURTHER READING

    More about Eraosthenes
    Two centuries after Aristotle, an Egyptian mathematician and astronomer, named Eraosthenes, (Aira-Tass-Ta-Knees), became head of the Library of Alexandra. This was a winning combination of skills: besides having access to the scientific works in the library, his training enabled him to identify key information as new material arrived. One day he received a letter from a colleague in Syene, a city directly to the south, and whose distance from Alexandria had been measured. The letter said that on a certain day of the year, at solar noon the sun not only on the east-west meridian, but also north-south meridian. It was directly overhead, and the shadows had no angle. (Mathematically the angle of the shadows was 0 degrees) 

    On the same date the following year, at solar noon, Eraosthenes measured the angle of the shadows cast at Alexandra and, using trigonometry and the information from the letter, calculated the earth’s circumstance. Even though some of his information was inaccurate, the calculation was only off by 15 per cent.

    With the size of the earth established, if you measured the angle of the sun at your location at solar noon, and you also knew the latitude where the sun was on the north-south meridian that day, you could determine your latitude even at sea. Experienced sailors had long done this to estimate their position on familiar routes, but now it could be precisely calculated in unfamiliar waters. 

    Eraosthenes is also credited with inventing a coordinate system – forerunner of the today’s latitude and longitude – to create a map of the known world, again using the Library’s resources, that was said to show the location of over 400 cities. 

    Over the centuries his techniques and coordinate systems were refined by many others, slowly increasing their precision. Latitude coordinates were eventually fixed, with the equator set to zero degrees, reaching to ninety degrees at the North and South poles. 

    Mathematicians and astronomers computed table of the sun’s latitude for every day of the year. Similar tables were computed for other celestial bodies. After completing the necessary angular observations, mariners used these tables to determine their latitude (knowledge of geometry and trig was also very helpful).

    The Bonds, The Mitchells & The Dawn of Time: The Legacies of The Bonds and The Mitchells

    The Bonds, The Mitchells & The Dawn of Time: The Legacies of The Bonds and The Mitchells

    In this final episode of Season 4, we conclude our story with Maria Mitchell and Sarah Bond and how they navigated and overcame the expectations of their time. 

    Jascin and Jim talk about the lasting impact their careers had and contemplate what has changed and what has not.

    Credits:
    This has been a production of the Nantucket Atheneum

    Written, edited and narrated by Janet Forest 

    Special thanks to the Atheneum’s Reference Library Associate Jim Borzilleri and Historian and Deputy Director of the Maria Mitchell Association Jascin Leonardo Finger for their research and insights.

    If you want to know more about this topic, check our this very thorough list of resources that Jim has compiled: FURTHER READING

     

    The Nantucket Atheneum is located at 1 India Street in Nantucket, MA.

    You can visit us online at www.nantucketatheneum.org