City of Worcester to be Featured on C-SPAN This Weekend
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Sunday, December 20, 2015
GoLocalWorcester Lifestyle Team
The City of Worcester will be in the national spot light this weekend when C-SPAN features Worcester as part of their 2015 Cities tour.
See the Slideshow Below for a Complete List of Featured items.
Back in October, C-SPAN was in Worcester from October 19-22nd highlighting the literary and historic sites in Worcester, as well as talking to many authors and city officials.
This weekend, those feature stories are set to air as it is "Worcester Weekend."
Featured on This Weekend's Episodes:
First National Women’s Rights Convention
The convention was held in Worcester in 1850 and was organized by Abby Kelly Foster. Worcester was a big part of the radical abolitionist activity.
Robert Goddard – Father of Modern Rocketry
Robert Goddard was born in Worcester and attended WPI and Clark University. Goddard invented the liquid fueled rocket that he launched in 1926.
In Their Shirtsleeves
The exhibit is featured at the Worcester Historical Museum and tells the story of the innovators, workers, and investors who made industry the story of Worcester.
Smiley Face
Smiley face is now an international icon and an emoji. The smiley face was born in Worcester in 1963 under the hands of Harvey Ball.
Worcester Revolution of 1774
The American Revolution started in Worcester just seven months before Lexington and Concord on September 6, 1774.
Where to find the shows
– Book TV on C-SPAN2,
– Charter Communications channel 85 / 836 HD and history channel American History TV on C-SPAN3,
– Charter Communications channel 86 / 837 HD on December 19-20, 2015.
– C-SPAN is available in Worcester on Charter Communications channel 16 / 835 HD.
See the Slideshow Below for What Else You will see Featured.
Related Slideshow: Featured Stories on C-SPAN’s Worcester Documentary
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Stories Featured
First National Women’s Rights Convention
First National Women’s Rights Convention was held in Worcester in 1850 organized by Abby Kelley Foster (pictured). Worcester played a major role at the center of radical abolitionist activity and social reform.
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Robert Goddard – Father of Modern Rocketry
Born in Worcester, MA, Robert Goddard attended WPI and Clark University. Goddard invented the liquid fueled rocket that he launched in 1926 in a field in Auburn. Dr. Laurie Leshin, a rocket scientist and former NASA official, worked in a building named in Goddard’s honor, is WPI’s current president.
Dr. Laurie Leshin, President, Worcester Polytechnic Institute will talk about how Goddard’s experiments and vision impacts space exploration today. Dr. Leshin served as the deputy director of NASA’s Exploration Systems Mission Directorate, where she was responsible for oversight of NASA’s future human spaceflight programs and activities. Leshin also worked as the director of science and exploration at NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center.
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In Their Shirtsleeves
The exhibit at Worcester Historical Museum, In Their Shirtsleeves, tells the ongoing story of the innovators, workers, and investors who made industry the story of Worcester. More than one hundred years of diversity and invention have been the hallmarks of Worcester industry since the beginning of the industrial revolution in the early nineteenth century.
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Smiley Face
The international icon, and now emoji, Smiley Face was born in 1963 in Worcester at the talented hands of Harvey Ball. Smiley is everywhere. From Forrest Gump, to major retailers, to hundreds of thousands of novelty items, Smiley has made an impact worldwide and now has a “World Smile Day.”
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Worcester Revolution of 1774
The American Revolution actually started in Worcester, seven months before Lexington and Concord, on Sept. 6, 1774 when more than 4,000 militia men from Worcester County gathered on Main Street to force the British magistrates from county government in a non-violent act.
Photo courtesy of sean/flickr
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Authors Interviewed
Robert Smith, Author of Keeping the Republic: Ideology and Early American Diplomacy
Robert Smith, Author and Assistant Professor in History and Political Science at Worcester State University
How did the ideology that inspired the American Revolution and the U.S. Constitution translate into foreign policy?
John Adams, Thomas Jefferson, James Madison, and Alexander Hamilton each struggled with this question as they encountered foreign powers.
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Jim Dempsey, Author of The Tortured Life of Scofield Thayer
Jim Dempsey, Author and Professor at Worcester Polytechnic Institute and writer-in-residence at Bancroft School in Worcester.
Scofield Thayer was gatekeeper and guide for the literary modernism movement. His editorial curation introduced the ideas of literary modernism to America and gave American artists a new audience in Europe. Thayer suffered from schizophrenia and faded from public life.
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Ousmane Power-Greene, Author of Against Wind and Tide: The African American Struggle Against the Colonization Movement
Ousmane Power-Greene is an Author and Associate Professor of History at Clark University
Against Wind and Tide tells the story of African Americans’ battle against the American Colonization Society (ACS), founded in 1816 with the intention to return free blacks to its colony Liberia. Although ACS members considered free black colonization in Africa a benevolent enterprise, most black leaders rejected the ACS, fearing that the organization sought forced removal.
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Edward O'Donnell, Author of Henry George and the Crisis of Inequality: Progress and Poverty in the Gilded Age
Edward O’Donnell, Department of History at the College of the Holy Cross
America’s remarkable explosion of industrial output and national wealth at the end of the nineteenth century was matched by a troubling rise in poverty and worker unrest. Edward T. O’Donnell’s exploration of George’s life and times merges labor, ethnic, intellectual, and political history to illuminate the early militant labor movement in New York during the Gilded Age.
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Janette Greenwod, Author of First Fruits of Freedom: The Migration of Former Slaves and Their Search for Equality in Worcester, Massachusetts, 1862-1900
Janette T. Greenwood, Author and Professor of History at Clark University
A narrative that offers a rare glimpse into the lives of African American men, women, and children on the cusp of freedom, First Fruits of Freedom chronicles one of the first collective migrations of blacks from the South to the North during and after the Civil War. Even in the North, white sympathy did not continue after the Civil War.
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