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 The independent nonprofit that saves, preserves, and shares New Hampshire history.

   NEWS FROM THE NEW HAMPSHIRE HISTORICAL SOCIETY

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE:
March 24, 2015

IMAGE AVAILABLE.

 

CONTACT:  Brenda French at 603-856-0607 or Stephanie Fortin at 603-856-0604

Winant portrait NEW HAMPSHIRE HISTORICAL SOCIETY OFFERS FIVE-PART HISTORY COURSE, JOHN GILBERT WINANT: CITIZEN OF CONCORD, CITIZEN OF THE WORLD
 

CONCORD, NH--The New Hampshire Historical Society is offering a five-part history course, John Gilbert Winant: Citizen of Concord, Citizen of the World. Classes will be held at the Society, 30 Park Street, on Thursdays from April 23 through May 21, 2015, at 5 p.m.

 

John Gilbert Winant was a state, national, and international leader during the 1930s and 40s and one of the most interesting figures to emerge from New Hampshire. Lynne Olson's book, Citizens of London, has helped to fuel renewed interest in this complex and fascinating man.
 

Educated at St. Paul's School, governor of New Hampshire during the Depression, a close ally of Franklin D. Roosevelt, first leader of the Social Security Administration, head of the International Labor Organization in Geneva, and ambassador to England during the height of the London Blitz, Winant's career was one of national and international accomplishment.
 

Class topics and speakers are:

Topic: Gil Winant: Patrician Pelican, an overview of Winant's biography with emphasis on his time at St. Paul's School, where the alumni are known as pelicans after the school mascot. 
Speaker: Berkley Latimer, Emeritus Faculty, St. Paul's School, Concord, New Hampshire.


Date/Time:
 Thursday, April 30, 5 p.m.

Topic: New Hampshire's Most Charismatic Governor
Speaker: R. Stuart Wallace, Professor of History at NHTI, Concord's Community College and former director of the New Hampshire Division of Historical Resources, the Christa McAuliffe Planetarium, and the New Hampshire Historical Society


Date/Time:
Thursday, May 7, 5 p.m.

Topic: Progressive Pioneer of Social Justice
Speaker: Robert Macsieski, Associate Professor of History, University of New Hampshire; author of Picturing Class: Lewis W. Hine Photographs of Child Labor in New England, to be released later this year.


Date/Time:
 Thursday, May 14, 5 p.m. 

Topic: The Yanks are Coming: John Winant, World War II Ambassador to the Court of St. James
Speaker: Richard Hesse, Professor Emeritus, University of New Hampshire School of Law


Date/Time:
 Thursday, May 21, 5 p.m.

Topic/Speakers: A Life of Consequence: Winant's Impact on the Nation and World, panel discussion with all previous course presenters.


T
he registration fee for the five-part history course, John Gilbert Winant: Citizen of Concord, Citizen of the Worldis $60 for New Hampshire Historical Society members and $75 for nonmembers. The registration form is available as a download at nhhistory.org/calendar.html or by calling Stephanie Fortin at 603-856-0604.

 

Image caption: John Gilbert Winant (1889-1947) by Samuel Johnson Woolf (1880-1948), charcoal and chalk on paper, published in Newsweek Magazine, October 10, 1936. Gift of Mr. and Mrs. Richard Thorner.

 

Founded in 1823, the New Hampshire Historical Society is the independent nonprofit that saves, preserves, and shares New Hampshire history. The Society serves thousands of children and adults each year through its museum and library, educational programs, publications, and outreach programs. The Society is not a state-funded agency. All its programs and services are made possible by membership dues and contributions. For more information about the Society and the benefits of membership, visit nhhistory.org or call 603-228-6688.

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