
What we’re about
Tired of boring your friends with the historical analysis of every movie you see or article you read? Well not everyone thinks history is cool...but we do! The idea for this group is to discuss one topic in history every month or two (e.g. the world in 1914, Canadian history, 18th-century Britain, the American frontier, the 1950s). In preparation, you'll be given a list of books you can read (or skim) and movies and videos you can watch to give you background. We can also get together to see history-related movies, including documentaries. Will be cool to learn some new stuff based on the suggestions of different people in the group and just enjoy talking about history and how it relates to our lives/current events/etc.
Upcoming events (4+)
See all- HOMBRELink visible for attendees
A white man raised by Apaches (Paul Newman) accompanies a stagecoach and faces prejudice from the passengers--until they have to deal with outlaw Richard Boone!
Martin Ritt directed this tough-minded 1967 revisionist western from an Irving Ravetch-Harriet Frank Jr. script based on a 1961 novel by the great Elmore Leonard. Newman got to stretch his range and had another hit. (He said he had good luck with movies beginning with the letter H, including The Hustler, Hud and Harper...) The cast includes Frederic March and Diane Cilento.
A watch party for historical movies on Friday nights.
https://us02web.zoom.us/j/6710320312 - SUMMER OF SAMLink visible for attendees
New York City in the summer of 1977: the "Son of Sam" murder spree affects local lives, including a promiscuous hairdresser (John Leguizamo), his wife (Mira Sorvino) and his punk friend (Adrien Brody).
Spike Lee directed this 1999 production from a Michael Imperioli-Victor Colicchio script. Leonardo di Caprio was offered the Adrien Brody role but turned it down. The movie's many celebrity cameos include journalist Jimmy Breslin at the beginning and end.
A watch party for historical movies on Friday nights.
https://us02web.zoom.us/j/6710320312 - HawaiiLink visible for attendees
Polynesians arrived in the Hawaiian Islands in two waves: the first around 600 AD, then the Long Voyages from Tahiti after 1000. Their first known contact with Europeans came in the late 18th Century with the voyages of James Cook (killed in Hawaii) and George Vancouver. In 1795, with the help of European weapons, the legendary King Kamehameha the Great extended his rule from the southern "Big Island" north to Oahu, where he made his new capital in Honolulu. (The kingdom was completed with the annexation of the northern islands Kaua'i and Ni'ihau in 1810.)
19th-century Hawaii was transformed by the growing foreign presence, first whalers and merchants but then permanent settlers, Asian as well as European. A group of Congregationalist missionary families from New England promoted Christianity. But the foreigners also introduced contagious diseases like smallpox and leprosy--this was the time of Father Damien's mission--and the indigenous population, with little hereditary resistance due to their isolation, was halved.
The missionary families increasingly turned to business, making fortunes from planting sugar. The American government was a growing presence, leasing Pearl Harbor for a naval base. The 1875 Reciprocity Treaty led to a boom in sugar production, but the 1890 McKinley Act removed all foreign sugar tariffs, removing Hawaii's advantage and causing an economic and constitutional crisis. In 1893 a group of Westerners overthrew Lili'uokalani the songwriter queen, with the help of American military force.
Hawaii was annexed by the USA in 1898. In the 20th century pineapples and tourism became major elements in the Hawaiian economy. The military presence also grew after the 1941 Pearl Harbor raid brought America into World War II. In 1959 the territory achieved statehood. The indigenous population, which bottomed out around 1900, has since rebounded somewhat, and interest in indigenous music and culture has grown. Today Hawaii has a unique multiracial society that seems to anticipate mainland America's future.
For background reading, you can try Susanna Moore's Paradise of the Pacific: Approaching Hawaii.
A monthly online discussion on a historical subject.
https://us02web.zoom.us/j/6710320312