Air pollution, the role of women, and concerns about immigration are not
only contemporary issues, but have been a part of Grand Rapids' local
history for more than 100 years. They are also among the many topics for
panel discussions during the upcoming Great Lakes History Conference,
sponsored by Grand Valley State University, the Ryerson Foundation of
the Grand Rapids Public Library, Grand Rapids Historical Commission,
Grand Rapids Historical Society, and Greater Grand Rapids Women's
History Council.
The popular conference, now in its 32nd year, is open to the public and
includes an evening keynote speaker on Friday, October 26, another
keynote speaker on Saturday, along with a full day of panel discussions.
The conference headquarters is at Grand Valley's Eberhard Center, 301 W.
Fulton, on the Pew Grand Rapids Campus. Media are invited to attend. A
fee of $20 for general public and $15 for members of sponsoring
organizations includes a continental breakfast and lunch on Saturday, a
reception at the end of the day, and snacks in between. Registration and
the full program are available at http://www.gvsu.edu/history
, or by calling (616) 331-3298.
The conference provides an opportunity for a wide range of audiences to
hear about many aspects of history from local historians, area
academics, and national experts. Last year each address was attended by
more than 200 people, some coming from as far as Europe and Asia. This
year's theme is "The History of Racism, Slavery and its Aftermath:
Recognizing the 200th Anniversary of the Abolition of the Trans-Atlantic
Slave Trade."
"A window into the familiar," is how Matthew Daley describes
history in general and the conference in particular. A member of the
history faculty at Grand Valley, Daley, and independent scholar JoEllyn
Clarey, have arranged special panels focusing on local history.
"History is not just about an elite group of people or famous
events," said Daley, "but also the experiences of everyday
citizens in both their public and private lives." He is among the
large group of presenters who aim not only to share history by making it
interesting and exciting to general audiences, but also to make
historical records and data more accessible to teachers and the
community at large.
Daley's work focuses on how people in Grand Rapids responded to events
during the Jazz Age, particularly the rise of the KKK, differently than
people in other parts of the country. Other presenters look at the local
history of education and community reform, the architectural legacy of
the Ladies Literary Club, and much more.
Another speaker, Diana Barrett from the Grand Rapids Historical
Commission, was recently recognized with a prestigious award from the
Historical Society of Michigan for creation of a virtual archive that
locates, preserves and makes digitally available photos and documents
illustrating community history. Most of the materials are scanned from
the personal holdings of local families, the archives of public and
private institutions, and other local sources that reveal the ways Grand
Rapids people worked, traveled, educated and enjoyed themselves from the
mid-19th into the 20th centuries. The photo essays, which range from
fighting air pollution in Grand Rapids a hundred years ago, to a history
of opera in Grand Rapids, can be viewed at
http://www.historygrandrapids.org.
Daniel Garcia, from Calvin College, relates his experience with oral
history as a means to encounter the African-American community in Grand
Rapids. He has traced one African American neighborhood in downtown
Grand Rapids that has remained particularly cohesive because many
families still living there originally migrated from the same three
towns in Mississippi.
Candace Chivis from the Grand Rapids Historical Commission became
interested in local history during work on her family's genealogy and
the discovery of ancestors who served in the first Michigan Colored
Infantry during the Civil War.
Conference co-directors Jason Crouthamel and Craig Benjamin, from Grand
Valley's Department of History, have included national experts on topics
that will appeal to academics, public historians and independent scholars.
Keynote Speakers:
Wilma King, from the University of Missouri, will speak at 7 p.m. on
Friday, October 26, in Loosemore Auditorium, DeVos Center, 401 W.
Fulton, on the Pew Grand Rapids Campus. Professor King is an
award-winning historian specializing in African-American women, youth
and childhood. Her writings appeal to a broad audience including her
books "Stolen Childhood: Slave Youth in Nineteenth Century
America" and "African-American Childhoods in Historical
Perspective."
David Blight from Yale University will provide a keynote address at noon
on Saturday, October 27, in the Eberhard Center, 301 W. Fulton.
Professor Blight is one of the nation's foremost authorities on the
Civil War and its legacy. He has written some of the most definitive
work on the topic, including "Race and Reunion: The Civil War in
American Memory," which earned a number of awards, including the
Frederick Douglass Prize, the Lincoln Prize, three awards from the
Organization of American Historians, and the Bancroft Prize.
For more information contact Jason Crouthamel at (616) 331-2931, or
Matthew Daley at (616) 331-8701.
Great Lakes History Conference gives local and national perspectives
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