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The year is 1854 and you are walking down Commercial Street in Bath, when you see a man in a bathrobe yelling aggressively about Catholics and how they are ruining the country. What do you do? You decide to go commit arson? Odd choice, but go off! Join B & Jackson as we dive into the political circumstances that led to Maine's other good old fashioned riot! Sources: Maine: A History Vol. 1 by Louis Clinton Hatch "The Riot at Bath, Maine—Church Burned in Open Daylight—Effects of Street Preaching—An Unmolested Mob of Fifteen Hundred" from The New York Times, July 11, 1854 The Catholic Church in the United States: Pages of Its History by Henry De Courcy Before the Burning of Old South Church in Bath, Maine from The Huntington The Burning of the Old South Church by Dennis Carr for The Huntington Third phase, burning of Old South Church, Bath, 1854 from the Maine Memory Network Know-Nothing Riots of Bath, 1854 by Meg Steele Barker for Embark Maine Tours Abraham Lincoln on the Know Nothing Party from Digital History The Know-Nothing Riot of July 6, 1854 by Bob Cram for The Patten Free Library Encyclopedia Britannica Wikipedia You can reach out to us via email at homegrownhorrorpod@gmail.com - send us stories, questions, Maine movie recommendations, or just say hi! Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/homegrownhorrorpod/ --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/hghpod/support
Episode No. 643 of The Modern Art Notes Podcast features curator and art historian John P. Bowles and artist Stacy Kranitz. Along with Dennis Carr and Jacqueline Francis, Bowles is the co-curator of "Sargent Claude Johnson," a survey of the artist's career at The Huntington Library, Art Museum, and Botanical Gardens in San Marino, Calif. through May 20. The exhibition features over 40 works Johnson, a major Harlem Renaissance-era sculptor who lived in Oakland, Calif., made between the Great Depression and the civil rights era. It is the first Johnson exhibition in over 25 years. The excellent exhibition catalogue was published by the Huntington. Amazon and Bookshop offer it for about $40. The second segment features photographer Stacy Kranitz. Earlier this month Pro Publica published "The year after a denied abortion," an extraordinary story and photo essay by Kranitz and Kavitha Surama. The piece follows Mayron Michelle Hollis as the state of Tennessee simultaneously questioned Hollis' fitness to care for her four children and forced her to continue a life-threatening pregnancy. Kranitz was featured on the program in September 2023 when “A Long Arc: Photography and the American South since 1845” debuted at the High Museum of Art, Atlanta. The exhibition opens at the Addison Gallery of American Art in Andover, Mass., this weekend. It will remain on view through July 31. The exhibition considers the South as a forger of American identity and examines how Southern photographers have contributed to both the advance of their medium, and the US project. “A Long Arc” was curated by Gregory J. Harris and Sarah Kennel. The catalogue was published by Aperture. Bookshop and Amazon offer it for about $70. Kranitz's work, primarily made in the southern Appalachian Mountains, presents the complexity and instability of a rugged region on which industry has preyed. Her work is in the collection of museums such as the Harvard Art Museums and the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston. Her 2022 book As it Was Give(n) to Me was published by Twin Palms and was shortlisted for a Paris Photo-Aperture First Photobook Award. Bookshop and Amazon offer it for about $75-80. For images of Kranitz's work discussed on the program presented by series or project, please see Episode No. 620 and: As it Was Give(n) to Me; From the Study on Post Pubescent Manhood; Fulcrum of Malice; and Target Unknown.
Dennis Carr is giving a Mt Hope Cemetery tour Saturday that will highlight Memorial Day.
It's easy to think of globalization as a new invention, but it really has its roots in the 16th century. Museum of Fine Arts Boston curator Dennis Carr talks to us about Asian influences on art in the colonial Americas thanks to this global trade. Learn more about your ad-choices at https://news.iheart.com/podcast-advertisers
Golden Gate Fields weekly podcast contains racing news, race analyses, interviews, racing history and more. Hosted by Sam Spear with Podcasters Jon Forbes and Liz Morey, Producer Merry Scalzo, Engineer Vince Jones, and IT Support Juan Leon. Golden Gate Fields, horse racing, thoroughbred horse racing, Kentucky Derby, Kentucky Oaks, CANTER, CARMA, Thoroughbred Aftercare, Cavonnier, Dennis Carr, Shared Belief, Cigar Bar VIP Party, Hat Contest, Bob Baffert
Golden Gate Fields weekly podcast contains racing news, race analyses, interviews, racing history and more. Hosted by Sam Spear with Podcasters Jon Forbes and Liz Morey, Producer Merry Scalzo, Engineer Vince Jones, and IT Support Juan Leon. Tags: Golden Gate Fields, horse racing, thoroughbred horse racing, San Francisco Mile, Campanile, Silky Sullivan, Alexander Paszkeicz, Dennis Carr, Dollar Days, Fiesta Hispana, Latin Music Festival, Kentucky Derby, Kentucky Oaks
Episode 6 Dennis Carr games.