Sconyers on Boston’s Street Lamps, 18 Mar.
Old North Illuminated is living up to its name by hosting an online presentation by Jake Sconyers on the topic “They Burnt Tolerable Well: The Tea Party & Boston’s First Street Lamps” on Tuesday, 18 March.
The event description says:
Jake Sconyers is the host of the HUB History podcast, formerly cohosted by Nikki Stewart, executive director of Old North. The podcast has discussed these lamps, but I don’t recall it addressing all these details.
Register for this online event with a donation of any amount to Old North Illuminated through this webpage.
The event description says:
In the 1770s, Boston was in a state of transformation and upheaval. While we mostly think of the American Revolution as the driver of this whirlwind of change, a technological revolution was happening at the same time. The introduction of street lamps in Boston had a profound effect on how people behaved at night.Not to mention how the events of April 1775 might have been different if Boston’s main streets had been lit up at night.
The political revolution and the technological revolution were intertwined, with the effects of one impacting the other—including at pivotal moments like the Boston Massacre and the Boston Tea Party.
Sconyers will touch on these “burning” questions:
- How did Boston’s very first street lamps survive a shipwreck and the Boston Tea Party?
- Why did Boston decide to buy English oil lamps for the streets but fuel them with American whale oil?
- Why did Boston vote to let its new street lamps sit dark after just a few months of illumination?
- How did the Boston Port Act affect the cost of street lighting?
Jake Sconyers is the host of the HUB History podcast, formerly cohosted by Nikki Stewart, executive director of Old North. The podcast has discussed these lamps, but I don’t recall it addressing all these details.
Register for this online event with a donation of any amount to Old North Illuminated through this webpage.
No comments:
Post a Comment