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Eco-Map

The Wesleyan Eco-Map is a new project to create user-friendly maps of campus based on energy consumption data that will encourage good environmental citizenship in the Wesleyan community. The site is still a prototype, but its creators, led by Professor Mary Alice Haddad of the Government department, hope to have more sophisticated versions soon. You … Read more

134 Knowles

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7 Vine

This gable-to-street Queen Anne cottage, with open Victorian porch is to have been built around 1875. First record of house occupation indicate that this was the house for George Snipes who was a tailor in Middletown for more than 30 … Continue reading

Neglected, Vagrant, and Viciously Inclined

“Neglected, Vagrant, and Viciously Inclined: The Girls of the Connecticut Industrial School, 1867-1917” is an honors thesis in American Studies by Sarah A. Leavitt, advised by Professor Patricia Hill. The paper is an “account of the advocates and inmates of the Connecticut Industrial School for Girls.” See more details and download the full text from: … Read more

FDR visit

On October 22, 1936, accompanied by his wife Eleanor, who ordinarily shunned such trips, Franklin Roosevelt rode through Middletown’s Sicilian neighborhood; passed St. John’s Church, historic sanctuary of the Irish; slowed momentarily at St. Aloysius’ Hall, a temperance hall temporarily turned into headquarters for the Remington Rand machinists; and continued up flag-draped Main Street, accompanied … Read more

The Remington Rand strike: 1936

The spring flood was only the start of Middletown’s 1936 calamities. No sooner had East Side residents returned to their residences, thrown out spoiled belongings, and resumed work than the Remington Rand Corporation forced its 1,350 Middletown machinists to strike. —”Middletown’s Barons and the End of the WASP Ascendancy,” an unpublished essay by Ron Schatz

The flood of 1936

Measured by proportion to population, Middletown was hit harder by this flood than any other city in Connecticut. Some of the city’s poorest residents refused to leave their quarters despite the disaster. Instead, like many of the impoverished residents of New Orleans in the 2005 Katrina flood, they chose to carry their belongings to the … Read more

Middletown Materials: Magill site

Professor Sarah Croucher’s Middletown Materials project features research undertaken by students from 2010 onwards on the artifacts recovered from excavations that have taken place in Middletown Connecticut. Excavations took place in the 1970s in advance of redevelopment work of downtown Middletown. Several sites were excavated around the South End of Main Street. Professor Croucher will … Read more

Bill Barrows

Arielle Berrick, Wesleyan University Rachel Miller-Howard, Wesleyan University Abstract Bill Barrows is a professional antiques dealer. He was born and raised in Portland, CT, where he resides today….This recording captures the stories of a longstanding Portland resident. Bill describes his antiques business, his childhood, his relationship to the quarries, his family history, and Middletown and … Read more

Middletown on the Map

Wesleyan scholarship covers many areas of the globe (and beyond), but Middletown, Connecticut—as the home of Wesleyan—enjoys a privileged status. Wesleyan faculty and student research looks at the University’s hometown through a variety of disciplinary lenses—from anthropology to biology, from history to architecture—and incorporates Service Learning initiatives as well. This site attempts to organize some … Read more