Schedule of Events

SUNDAY

5:30-6:00pm Registration at the Cassatt House
   
6:00pm Cassatt House, “Get Acquainted” Social

 

MONDAY:
Prologue to Revolution: Cultural Pressure & Conflict in Colonial Pennsylvania

9:00-9:30am Cassatt House, Program Overview and Orientation
   
9:30-10:45am Historical Society of Pennsylvania, “Wars for Independence: Pennsylvanians and Native Americans,” seminar led by Daniel K. Richter, Professor of History and Richard S. Dunn Director, McNeil Center for Early American Studies (MCEAS), University of Pennsylvania
   
10:45-11:00am Break
   
11:00-12:30pm Historical Society of Pennsylvania primary document workshop; participants use journals, deeds, and treaties to think critically about the cultural differences between Europeans and Native Americans, and how those differences shaped interaction and potential misunderstandings as they negotiated trade and diplomatic relationships in the immediate pre-Revolutionary period
   
12:30-1:30pm Lunch (on your own)
   
1:30-2:30pm Behind-the-scenes tour and orientation of the Historical Society of Pennsylvania
   
2:30-2:45pm Cassatt House, Coffee break
   
2:45-4:00pm Introducton to the Library Company of Philadelphia and orientation to its holdings; if time remains, participants can begin their own research

 

TUESDAY:
Revolutionary and Early Republic America’s Place in the Atlantic World

9:00-9:15am Atwater Kent Museum of Philadelphia, Introduction and Questions
   
9:15-10:45am Atwater Kent Museum of Philadelphia, “Revolutionary and Early Republic Philadelphia’s Place in the Atlantic World,” seminar led by Michelle Craig McDonald, Asst. Professor of History, Stockton College and R2RProject Co-Director
   
10:45-11:00am Break
   
11:00am-noon Tour of the Atwater Kent Museum and its exhibitions
   
12:15-1:00pm Lunch (on your own) is scheduled at the Philadelphia Bourse Building, the first commodities exchange in the United States
   
1:00-2:15pm American Philosophical Society and walking tour of Old City
   
2:30-4:00pm "Slavery in Philadelphia," tour of Historic Christ Church
   
4:15-5:00pm Tour of Elfreth’s Alley, one of the oldest continuously inhabited streets in America

 

WEDNESDAY:
Industrialization and Immigration in an Early Republic City

9:00-9:15am Cassatt House, Introduction and Questions
   
9:15-10:45am Cassatt House, “Philadelphia’s Nineteenth-Century Urban Landscape,” seminar led by C. Dallett Hemphill, Professor of History, Ursinus College
   
10:45-11:00am Break
   
11:00am-noon  Cassatt House, Starting with an early nineteenth-century law clerk’s journal, archivists assemble a variety of primary sources—including city histories, business directories, playbills, and advertisements—to reconstruct Philadelphia in the early nineteenth century and illustrate both the increasing ethnic diversity and shift from trade to manufacturing that occurred during the early national period
   
12:30-1:30pm Lunch (on your own) is scheduled at Reading Terminal Market, a farmers market in operation since the nineteenth century that features over eighty vendors and a variety of food choices and restaurants
   
1:30-5:00pm Independent research time in area archives (note: the Historical Society of Pennsylvania remains open until 8pm on Wednesday evening)
   
6:00-7:00pm Twilight tour of Eastern State Penitentiary (optional)

 

THURSDAY:
Capstone Seminar and Program

9:00-9:30am National Constitution Center, Welcome and Orientation to the National Constitution Center facility and resources
   
9:30-11:00am National Constitution Center, “How Revolutionary was the American Revolution, and How Republican the Early Republic?” seminar led by Michael Zuckerman, Professor of History, University of Pennsylvania
   
11:00-12:30pm National Constitution Center, Time to explore permanent and changing exhibitions
   
12:30-1:30pm Lunch included at the National Constitution Center
   
1:30-2:30pm Tour of Liberty Bell Center
   
2:45-4:00pm Guided tour of Independence Hall and Carpenter’s Hall
   
5:15-8:00pm McNeil Center for Early American Studies, University of Pennsylvania, MCEAS Summer Seminar and Dinner

 

FRIDAY:
Researching and Writing for Presentation and Publication

9:00-9:30am Cassatt House, Introduction and Questions
   
9:30-noon Cassatt House, Publishing workshop; this session is reserved for a discussion about writing for publication led by Roderick McDonald, Professor of History at Rider University and Editor Emeritus of SHEAR’s Journal of the Early Republic, and Tamara Gaskell, Director of Publications for the Historical Society of Pennsylvania and Editor of the HSP’s quarterly journal, the Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography.  Drs. McDonald and Gaskell provide hands-on advice for participants drafting essays and articles, including information about publishing standards, manuscript submission, and the review and editing process
   
Noon-1pm Lunch (on your own)
   
1:00-5:00pm Independent research time in area libraries and archives
   
7:00-9:00pm City Tavern, Publishing workshop (continued); Laura Keenan Spero, “From Archive to Printed Page: Reconstructing Rachel,” and dinner at the City Tavern, Philadelphia.  Originally constructed in 1772, the tavern was the meeting place of Philadelphia’s political, social, and economic leaders including John Dickinson, one of the city’s prominent attorneys and lawyer for Rachel Francisco, a mixed race defendant accused of infanticide whose case is documented in Keenan Spero’s article

 

SATURDAY:
Program Conclusion and Wrap-Up

9:00-11:00am Cassatt House, The workshop concludes with a half-day roundtable reuniting program staff and participants for a final program overview and wrap-up session

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