History

  • Maps and Imagined Landscapes of Colonial North America

    Just as important as what maps show is what they don’t show. Any time we look at a map, we see a landscape as filtered through the mapmaker’s judgements, prejudices, and cultural context.

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  • Vampires and Revolutionary Boston

    The Boston Evening-Post that day ran a curious front-page story titled “The surprising account of those spectres called vampyres.” That’s right. Vampires.

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  • Epilogue: “… I’ll just put you up for the night.”

    This is the final installment in a multi-part series exploring the youth and adolescence of Robert Stanton, former Director of the National Park Service and the first director of color, and how the context of his early years informed his tenure atop the NPS.

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  • “… my peers.”

    “… my peers.”

    This is part IV in a multi-part series exploring the youth and adolescence of Robert Stanton, former Director of the National Park Service and the first director of color, and how the context of his early years informed his tenue atop the NPS.

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  • “… a devastating experience…”

    This is part III in a multi-part series exploring the youth and adolescence of Robert Stanton, former Director of the National Park Service and the first director of color, and how the context of his early years informed his tenure atop the NPS.

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  • “… a tense moment…”

    “… a tense moment…”

    This is part II in a multi-part series exploring the youth and adolescence of Robert Stanton, former Director of the National Park Service and the first director of color, and how the context of his early years informed his tenure atop the NPS.

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  • “… a segregated set of circumstances.”

    This is part I in a multi-part series exploring the youth and adolescence of Robert Stanton, former Director of the National Park Service and the first director of color, and how the context of his early years informed his tenure atop the NPS.

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  • Unpacking ‘Place’ and ‘Place Name’ in the Debate to Rename Faneuil Hall

    A place-based approach to the debate to rename Faneuil Hall in Boston, a popular historic site part of Boston National Historical Park, National Parks of Boston.

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  • Confronting Use of Native American Mascots in Mass. Means Questioning White Folklore

    My alma mater uses the name Masconomet to perpetuate a false narrative. Now is the opportune moment for it to reduce — by at least one — the list of Massachusetts high schools that misuse Native American imagery.

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  • Moving on from the Masconomet name

    The name on the school is a shameful reminder of how Native Americans were treated by colonists, forced to assimilate, and mocked for their traditions. Most shameful of all is the name Masconomet is used as a prop to uphold a false historical narrative by citizens who see it instead as a source of “profound…

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