Archive for March 14th, 2011

March 14th, 2011

Hugh Cummiskey shot by rioters – 1833

by DickH

The following account of an 1833 Yankee v Irish riot in Lowell was recently forwarded to me by one of Lowell’s foremost historians. Because it includes details of Hugh Cummiskey being shot by the rioters and because this is Irish cultural week, I’ve reproduced the story below:

Riotous. On Friday night last, in consequence of the excitement produced by the ejectment mentioned in our last, mobs collected in Lowell street, and evinced symptoms of a turbulant nature. Windows were broken, and some black eyes and bloody noses were exchanged. One circumstance occurred which by separated the mob, had nearly produced results of a fatal tendency. During the tumult, a musket loaded with slugs, was fired from the window of a house upon the mob, and Mr. Cummiskey, a constable, who was laudably engaged in endeavoring to quell the disturbances, was wounded in the hand and arm; another person was also slightly wounded. A musket was immediately after fired by the Irish, but no person was injured. On Saturday evening, owing to the large collection of pople, much mischief was apprehended. Sundry preparatory measures were adopted by the Police to quell any disturbances that might arise — but we are happy to state that there were no alarming results.

March 14th, 2011

Secretary Clinton Calls on Some Sister Colleges

by Marie

Erica Noonan writes  from the Globe MetroDesk of  Secretary of State Hillary Clinton’s initiative with five women’s liberal arts colleges – Barnard, Bryn Mawr and the Massachusetts colleges – Mt. Holyoke, Smith and Wellesley – now known as “The Sisters.” The focus of this partnership is “to increase the participation of women around the globe, in public service and political leadership,”  Clinton, a 1969 Wellesley alumna, said on Friday. 

“Together we will seek to promote the next generation of women leaders who will invest in their countries and communities, provide leadership for their governments and societies, and help change the way global solutions are developed,” Clinton said.

Clinton made the announcement in New York City at the Women in the World Stories and Solutions conference, sponsored by Newsweek and the Daily Beast website.

Read the full article here at Boston.com.
March 14th, 2011

When Cotton Was King! Eli Whitney Patents the Cotton Gin

by Marie

MassMoments reminds us today that on this day – March 14, 1794 – Massachusetts native Eli Whitney applied for a patent on one of his many inventions – the cotton gin (engine). This machine was simple but it made separating the seeds from the field-grown cotton less time consuming and thus cotton became a profitable crop.

 Whitney turned his genius to other areas. Whitney wanted to enable unskilled laborers to make complex products. He managed this by designing products (his test case was rifles) with interchangeable parts.  This led to a mass production system - what became known as  the “American System”  – that allowed for an unprecedented boom in American industry, and eventually provided employment for thousands of workers who were unwilling or unable to acquire apprenticeships in skilled crafts.

On This Day...

      …in 1794, Westborough native Eli Whitney applied for a patent on the cotton gin. Raised on a farm in Massachusetts, he invented a machine that made growing cotton so profitable that the South became a “cotton kingdom” where millions of Africans toiled in slavery. After nearly a decade in the South, Whitney returned to New England and developed what became known as the “American System” of manufacture. He designed machines that turned out standardized, interchangeable parts. These machines made mass production possible and were critical to the coming Industrial Revolution. Eli Whitney’s innovations transformed the economy first of the American South and later of the North.
 
Read the full article here at MassMoments.com.
March 14th, 2011

Judging today’s college students by yesterday’s standards by Marjorie Arons-Barron

by Tony

The entry below is being cross posted from Marjorie Arons-Barron’s own blog.

Today’s college students are reading less and partying more. So says New York Times columnist Bob Herbert, based on a new book entitled “Academically Adrift: Limited Learning on College Campuses.”

Authors Richard Arum of New York University and Joseph Roksa of the University of Virginia surveyed 2300 students at 24 colleges over a two-year period and found that students are not improving their skills in critical thinking, complex reasoning, and writing. In fact, more than a third of the students hadn’t improved in those areas even after four years of college. According to the authors, students are spending just half as much time studying as students did in the 1960’s. This, after spending – in some cases – close to $200,000 on their education.

Most insulting of all perhaps is that their lack of academic focus doesn’t show up in their performance assessments. Thanks to grade inflation – after all, colleges and universities need to keep as many “customers” as possible enrolled and professors are afraid of poor student evaluations – they all have decent GPA’s and can assume, wrongly it turns out, that they’re doing just fine.

Okay, I admit that, after a freshman year of partying more than I should have, I settled down to become something of a grind. I got into it. And I was surrounded by students who were serious, for the most part, about their studies. And I do tend to be judgmental about the loosey-goosey attitudes of some college students I have observed.

I despair of the communication skills – or lack thereof – of some college students who interned with or near me, who don’t know what a semi-colon or a compound sentence is, who are swayed by glitz and propaganda, who are living in the moment and don’t “get it” about informed citizenship.

I find myself wondering if those who are indeed “academically adrift” are not in some arrested state of adolescence. They’ve been motivated in secondary school not by learning for its own sake but by the need to get into college. Once there, it’s time to reward themselves. The joke at Harvard used to be it was hard to get in, but even harder to flunk out.

But I also see students who are supremely committed, working 20 to even 40 hours a week to earn the money to go to college, who may already be supporting families, who are intensely focused on shaping a career path and who, I know, are going to make an impact on their communities and perhaps even on the world.

College education may not be for everyone. And four year colleges right out of high school may not be the appropriate model. Maybe lifelong learning in which after a two year boot camp, students join and leave higher education communities for varying lengths of time to further and refine skills and career choices and then return later to put their life experiences in new contexts. Perhaps we need a European approach to tracking, and identifying those who are better suited to technical/vocational education. Clearly we need a more thoughtful, non-ideologically driven, national discussion.

Please let me know your thoughts in the comments section below.

March 14th, 2011

Sunset in Tyngsborough

by DickH

Tony Sampas caught the sun setting over the Tyngsborough bridge last Friday evening.

March 14th, 2011

Saturday’s Tour of the Acre

by DickH

Paul Sweeney sent along some photos of St Patrick’s historian Dave McKean (above and below) leading his annual tour of the Acre this past Saturday as part of the city’s Irish Cultural Week activities. Besides Paul’s photos, Corey Sciuto wrote a blog post about St Patrick’s Church that included some photos taken by Mary Ann McNamara during Saturday’s tour.