
American Voices: Arturo Fernandez – a member of the Lynchburg community who shared his experiences emmigrating from Venezuela and working with the local Hispanic community.
American Seminar: watched New York: A Documentary Film, Episode Four: The Power and the People, 1898-1918. Students began reading Crabgrass Frontier for next week.
American Images: The Quilters: Women and Domestic Art, an Oral History By Patricia Cooper and Norma Bradley Allen
Remember, remember always, that all of us, and you and I especially, are descended from immigrations and revolutionists. - FDR
After having our eyes opened by our trip to Jamestown we begin to look at the Frontier and immigration in a different light.
The documentary on New York complimented last week’s book, Ellis Island to JFK, by providing striking visual imagery of immigration through Ellis Island. The film also foreshadowed topics to be covered later in the semester: the labor movement and transporation.
The Quilters looks at the lives of women in the nineteenth century and the quilts they made as they moved west.
“The women who speak through the book shared a vision, a strength, and a spirit that few of us will ever know or understand.”—Christian Science Monitor