Dr. Susan Reynolds of Alabama Heritage lectures on the Kilgore House. |
The students gather for a photo after Dr. Reynolds' lecture. |
Great class today. We visited the
former site of the Kilgore House and then headed back to tenHoor Hall to meet Dr. Susan Reynolds, Associate Editor of Alabama
Heritage magazine. She lectured on this deeply-missed historical
house. Before its demolition last year, the magazine was the house's final
tenants. We appreciate Dr. Reynolds for sharing her first-hand accounts of
completing her dissertation and later, working in this powder blue dwelling that helped introduce co-ed living to the University of Alabama.
On
the way to and from the Kilgore House, we made progress on gathering
footage for our music video, this year's class project. While last
year's class made a short film,
we will try our hand at unveiling our growing knowledge of American
urban living, nineteenth century style, in a video. We will see how it
all goes. By the way, we have a new student. I look forward to Caroline's
contributions to this course!
Next week, we will visit Gorgas House, which in some ways feels like a book end to today's campus tour. While the Kilgore House was constructed in 1890, the Gorgas House opened in 1829 while the University of Alabama was still being organized (the University opened in 1831).
Next week, we will visit Gorgas House, which in some ways feels like a book end to today's campus tour. While the Kilgore House was constructed in 1890, the Gorgas House opened in 1829 while the University of Alabama was still being organized (the University opened in 1831).
Stay tuned for more details about the Gorgas House
and how its opening coincided with the emergence of urban life in the United
States, according to Gunther Barth who looks at America's initial urban life
almost as an abstraction, bearing no real start date. While exploring the arrival of
apartment houses, metropolitan newspapers, department stores, baseball and
vaudeville houses, he is able to see it emerging between the 1830s and 1910
give or take a decade. He writes that unlike churches and schools, these institutions had a uniquely urban prong. Next week, we will return to Barth to understand his methods in making such a claim. Is it possible to insert higher education as seen, above all, in Tuscaloosa into his narrative?
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