127 episodes

Listen to recordings of lectures, book talks, panels, and other programs on Maine, New England, American history from Maine Historical Society. These podcasts allow everyone to enjoy, learn from, and reflect on history and its relevance today.

Maine Historical Society - Programs Podcast Maine Historical Society

    • Society & Culture

Listen to recordings of lectures, book talks, panels, and other programs on Maine, New England, American history from Maine Historical Society. These podcasts allow everyone to enjoy, learn from, and reflect on history and its relevance today.

    Historian's Forum: the Maine economy since 1973, Part III

    Historian's Forum: the Maine economy since 1973, Part III

    Michael Hillard, Cynthia Isenhour, Stefano Tijerina; Recorded July 15, 2023 - A major story in United States history over the past 50 years has been the decline of industrial jobs. The accompanying rise of a "post-industrial" economy has looked different for various communities and regions. The 2023 Historian's Forum featured an interdisciplinary look at economic and labor history in Maine since 1973. In Part 3, Stefano Tijerina, Maine Historical Society's P.D. Merrill Research Fellow, discusses the globalized economy and its impact on local economies. Ian Saxine, Assistant Professor of History at Bridgewater State University, leads the speakers of the Historian's Forum in a discussion on Maine economic and labor history.

    • 1 hr 46 min
    Historian's Forum: the Maine economy since 1973, Part II

    Historian's Forum: the Maine economy since 1973, Part II

    Michael Hillard, Cynthia Isenhour, Stefano Tijerina; Recorded July 15, 2023 - A major story in United States history over the past 50 years has been the decline of industrial jobs. The accompanying rise of a "post-industrial" economy has looked different for various communities and regions. The 2023 Historian’s Forum featured an interdisciplinary look at economic and labor history in Maine since 1973. In Part 2, Cynthia Isenhour, Professor of Anthropology and Climate Change at the University of Maine, discusses re-imaging what wealth and work will look like in the future. This is a three part recording.

    • 25 min
    Historian's Forum: the Maine economy since 1973, Part I

    Historian's Forum: the Maine economy since 1973, Part I

    Michael Hillard, Cynthia Isenhour, Stefano Tijerina; Recorded July 15, 2023 - A major story in United States history over the past 50 years has been the decline of industrial jobs. The accompanying rise of a "post-industrial" economy has looked different for various communities and regions. The 2023 Historian's Forum featured an interdisciplinary look at economic and labor history in Maine since 1973. In Part 1, Ian Saxine, Assistant Professor of History at Bridgewater State University, introduces the Historian's Forum, a look at economic and labor history in Maine since 1973. Michael Hillard, author of "Shredding Paper: Labor and The Rise and Fall of Maine's Mighty Paper Industry" discusses the paper industry in Maine.

    • 28 min
    Adapting to Sea Level Rise in Southern Maine’s Historic Waterfront Communities *CODE RED SERIES*

    Adapting to Sea Level Rise in Southern Maine’s Historic Waterfront Communities *CODE RED SERIES*

    Recorded October 11, 2023 - Rising seas and coastal flooding present a threat to cultural resources in historic coastal communities. Greater Portland is at considerable risk according to sea level rise projections and local communities are already experiencing recurrent flooding, erosion and increasingly intense storms—threats that are projected to increase as the Gulf of Maine warms and expands. The continued damage and destruction of local historic landmarks and sites could be detrimental to Greater Portland’s personality and sense of collective history. The panel of experts--Julie Larry, Dr. Dave Reidmiller, and Abbie Sherwin--discussed this threat, planning, the tough decisions preservationists face in this crisis, and how historic preservation can contribute to making our places more sustainable.

    • 55 min
    Tragic Betrayal: The Story of Robert Peary and Minik Wallace

    Tragic Betrayal: The Story of Robert Peary and Minik Wallace

    Genevieve LeMoine; Recorded November 16, 2023 - Robert Edwin Peary Sr. was an American explorer and officer in the United States Navy who made several expeditions to the Arctic in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. He is perhaps best known for, in April 1909, leading an expedition that claimed to be the first to have reached the geographic North Pole. Before his famous 1909 expedition, Peary sailed to Greenland in the summer of 1897 to bring an iron meteorite back to the United States. When he returned in the fall, he brought with him six Inughuit people invited to spend to winter in New York at the American Museum of Natural History. Tragically, many of the Inughuit soon fell ill, and by winter all but one man, Uisaakassak, and one child, Minik, had died of tuberculosis. Uisaakassak returned to Greenland in the spring, but a museum staff member adopted eight-year-old Minik and raised him with their children. Minik spent the next decade living the life of an American middle-class boy until a shocking discovery in 1907 would disrupt his life once again and find him crossing paths with Peary a second time. Genevieve LeMoine discussed this fascinating story and what it can teach us about the history of race relations, climate change, the Inughuit’s significant contributions to Arctic exploration, and the impact of Western expedition activity on the Inughuit community.

    • 52 min
    Spectulation Nation

    Spectulation Nation

    Michael Blaakman; Recorded October 4, 2023 - During the quarter-century after 1776, the new United States was swept by a wave of land speculation so unprecedented in intensity and scale that contemporaries and historians alike have dubbed it a "mania." From Maine to the Mississippi and Georgia to the Great Lakes, wily merchants, lawyers, planters, and financiers purchased claims to millions of acres of land—chasing fantastical visions of profit by investing in the United States' future expansion across Native American territories. Although such ambitious schemes drove many speculators into bankruptcy and debtors' prison, they also indelibly shaped the development of American capitalism and the U.S. "empire of liberty." In this talk, historian Michael Blaakman, author of Speculation Nation: Land Mania in the Revolutionary American Republic, discussed the revolutionary origins of this real-estate bonanza and what it means for our understanding of the American founding.

    • 57 min

You Might Also Like

Mainely History
Ian Saxine & Tiffany Link
This American Life
This American Life
Radiolab
WNYC Studios
The Bulwark Podcast
The Bulwark Podcast