PRESENTS YOUR COMMUNITY CALENDAR
Spring lecture series offered at Museum of Work & Culture
WOONSOCKET – Valley Talks, a series of biweekly historical lectures by the Museum of Work & Culture, continues, Sunday, January 24. All events are free and take place at 1 p.m. on Zoom. This year’s series is presented as part of the Rhode Island Historical Society’s Taking a Stand in Rhode Island, a yearlong examination of how the people who have called this place home, from the 17th century to the recent past, have identified aspects of society that needed to shift and how they worked to change them.
January 24: Writer & professor Erik Chaput will present on the life of Thomas Wilson Dorr and the 1842 rebellion for constitutional reform in Rhode Island that bears his name.
February 7: Filmmaker Christian de Rezendes will screen a piece of the in-progress Slatersville: America’s First Mill Village, which will focus on the man who purchased the Slatersville mill and village in 1915.
February 21: Writers Rebecca Altman and Kerri Arsenault will explore their work about New England manufacturing and the environmental, political, and personal legacies it has left behind.
March 7: Writer and historical reenactor Paul Bourget will examine the Sentinelle Affair, the local underground movement that led to the excommunication of 61 congregants.
March 21: Author David Vermette will discuss how the U.S. mainstream perceived French-Canadians when they were an immigrant community in New England at the turn of the 20th century.