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Showing posts matching the search for "Old Slater Mill National Historic Site"

Review: 50 States 5000 Ideas from National Geographic

To generate new ideas for upcoming trips, I recently read the book 50 States 5000 Ideas written by Joe Yogerst , fact-checked Meg Weaver , and published by  National Geographic  in February 2017, and distributed by Simon & Schuster . The full-color paperback edition has 288 pages of facts and photographs and makes an excellent coffee table book for roadtrippers or a basic starting point for people who want to begin traveling but do not know where to begin. Since the book covers a lot of ground, and not always successfully, the author highlights major attractions and large cities, along with a few smaller towns, but does not give details on most location. I experienced several frustrations while reading the book. States and provinces appear in alphabetical order, rather than by region, meaning New Mexico is listed between New Jersey and New York, rather than with Utah, Arizona, and Nevada. The side bars and colored boxes with additional information interrupted the main

Parked at Home 2024 | #1: First State National Historical Park

The 2024 season of Parked at Home hosted by Blackstone River Valley National Historical Park (BRVNHP) returned last night — March 8, 2023 at 7:00 p.m. — with guest speaker and park ranger Samantha Baranski of First State National Historical Park (FSNHP) in Delaware.

Fish Passage Celebration @ Slater Mill | 2024

Last Sunday, March 19, I visited Old Slater Mill from 1:00 p.m. to 4:00 p.m. and joined a host of community groups advocating for the building of a fish passage. This is the third event I have attended to raise awareness around this issue, the first two being the Fish Passage Celebration in May 2023 , and Be the Voice of Kittacuck in October 2022 . Since the construction of dams in the 18th century to control water power on the Blackstone River and its tributaries, herring and other migratory fish have been unable to properly make their seasonal journeys. This has disrupted the ecosystem and badly affected fishers.

Parked at Home 2024 | #4: Gates of the Arctic National Park and Preserve

Last night — March 29, 2024 — I watched the latest installment of the 2024 season of Parked at Home hosted by the Blackstone River Valley National Historical Park (BRVNHP) . During this webinar, chief of interpretation Todd Smith joined us from Fairbanks, AK to discuss Gates of the Arctic National Park and Preserve (GAAR) . Park Ranger Mark Mello began by remarking how people tend to look down at phones and tablets instead of up at nature even when visiting a national park. Mello grew up in a relatively rural part of southeastern Massachusetts where he saw many stars at night. He first experienced severe light pollution as a teenager when he visited Boston and realized he could not see the stars. In contrast, while working at Arches National Park , he saw significantly more stars than at home and understood why the area was dedicated an International Dark Sky Place . The first people to inhabit the Blackstone River Valley had a close connection to the sky. The name Wampano

Attleboro Area Industrial Museum

This past Saturday — July 6, 2024 — I visited three stops in the Passport to History developed by Old Colony History Museum , along with one bonus stop. Attleboro Area Industrial Museum was the second stop on my trip. I had been meaning to visit this museum since learning about it at the Industrial History New England Lunch on Day 1 of NEMA Conference 2022 , so this visit checks off another item from my very long museum bucket list.

2023 Parked at Home | #2: Ellis Island National Museum of Immigration

On Thursday, March 9 at 7:00 p.m., I attended the second session of the 2023 Parked at Home series hosted via Zoom by Blackstone River Valley National Historic Park . This webinar was presented by park rangers Allison Horrocks of BRVNHP and Lauren D’Elia of Ellis Island National Museum of Immigration , part of Statue of Liberty National Monument . Horrocks began with an introduction to Ellis Island, describing as an “Island of Hope and Island of Tears” for immigrants coming to the United States. Prior to the opening of Ellis Island, immigrants experienced very different circumstances. English immigrant Samuel Slater, who built the first industrial textile mill in Pawtucket, RI, arrived in the winter of 1789 as a twenty-one year old who could not afford to pay the tax on his trunk. He did not have to pass through a checkpoint, as was the experience of later immigrants. “Slater’s experiment” was a turning point in the young United States, during the country into an industri