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Showing posts from December, 2016

Historical Profile: Curtis Guild, Jr.

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Boston, MA. - Born in Boston, Massachusetts, Curtis Guild, Jr. (1860-1915) was a diplomat, journalist, politician, and soldier.   Guild was educated at Harvard University.   As a student at Harvard he was classmates and friends with Theodore Roosevelt.   In 1891, Guild joined the Massachusetts Volunteer Militia.   Later, he volunteered to serve in the Spanish-American War.   In 1909, Guild retired as a Major General from the Massachusetts Volunteer Militia. Guild began his political career in 1881 serving as a member of the Massachusetts House of Representatives.   Later, Guild was elected as the 39 th Lieutenant Governor of Massachusetts (1903-1906) and the 43 rd Governor of Massachusetts (1906-1909).   After serving as Governor, Guild served as U.S. Ambassador to Russia for two years.   He also assisted with drafting a model income tax law for the National Tax Association. There is a monument dedicated to Curtis Guild, Jr. in the Massachusetts State House. Curtis Gui

Historical Profile: Deborah Sampson

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Sharon, MA. - Deborah Sampson (1760 – 1827) is most well known for her participation in the American Revolution as a Continental Army soldier.   What makes Sampson’s story unique is that she was a woman who disguised herself as man in order to be eligible to serve in the Continental Army.    Deborah Sampson sculpture by Lu Stubbs, Sharon, MA. Sampson was one of a small contingent of women who had military experience during the American Revolution.   Sampson served 17 months in the Continental Army under the name “Robert Shirtliffe.”   After the war, Sampson worked as a teacher and a weaver.   She died in Sharon, Massachusetts.   In 1989, sculptor Lu Stubbs created a statue in Sampson’s honor.   The statue is located in front of the Sharon, Massachusetts public library.

Book Review: The Abundant Community

The Abundant Community: Awakening the Power of Families and Neighborhoods (2012) by John McKnight and Peter Block is a book that addresses economic and social problems that exist in modern-day American society.   The authors address topics such as: materialism, health care costs, employment, over-consumption, affordable child care, management practices, and living a “system life.”   McKnight and Block suggest that Americans have been led to believe that they can buy their way to happiness and the “good life.”   The authors suggest this belief is fraudulent.   On pages 16-17, they write: “This belief that the good life depends on consumption is a unique worldview that is less than a century old.   It gained momentum in the 1920s and became ‘the gospel of consumption’ – the notion that people could be convinced that however much they had, it wasn’t enough.” The authors contend that our current socioeconomic system is devised to make people into compulsive consumers.   As c

Historical Profile: Massachusetts State House

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Boston, MA.- Built in 1798 the Massachusetts State House is one of the oldest State Capitol buildings in the United States.   The original building was designed by Charles Bulfinch – an American architect. The State House is the oldest building in the Beacon Hill section of Boston.   Charles Bulfinch also designed the original State House in Hartford, Connecticut and the State Capitol in Augusta, Maine. The building has numerous works of art, monuments, memorials, mosaic floors, stained glass work, and portraits of the past Governors of the state of Massachusetts.   The Governor of the Commonwealth, executive level government officials, and the state Representatives and state Senators have offices in the building.   The front lawn of the State House has statues of Anne Hutchinson, Daniel Webster, General Joseph Hooker, Henry Cabot Lodge, Mary Dyer, John F. Kennedy, Jr., and Horace Mann.   The second floor of the building has five ceremonial halls and function areas. In 1895,