History is Not Boring discussion
How did you get into history?
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Melissa
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Feb 15, 2015 01:36PM

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I walked on the Acropolis, walked along Hadrian's wall, saw cornerstones dated in the 1600s in Europe. I promised myself that if I ever stopped flying, I would go back to school and learn about the history of all those places I saw.
I got my degree in History in 1977 at 36 years old! Now I'm a tour guide in a museum...

Good point. I never had a history teacher that made the subject interesting. They were all too bogged down in getting me to remember specific dates about little bits that it never came alive for me. There were no historical people, just caricatures of little interest. Lamb & Jakes made it real, even if it was fictionalized. They showed causes, effects, & trends.



I had a great 3rd grade teacher, but after that, I saw so many movies in junior high and high school.

Walt Disney's Wonderful World of Color had a lot of dramas based on history. One was Johnny Tremain. There was another about a drummer boy in the Civil War. I used to pretend I was that drummer boy.

I liked Molly too, although Felicity was my favorite.


My passion was not found until my late 20s when I began reading about a member of the Lewis and Clark expedition who was born in my hometown. From there the L&C obsession led to more and more history niches and I continue to follow the bunny trails that each new book introduces.

But now I hope to get more into it when I can (I have a book on Abraham Lincoln and another one that has random facts sometimes on world history that I pick up every so often)!


How wonderful! That was Pleasant Rowland's intention. I loved history before that but I joke that everything I need to know I learned from AG. I saw the first catalog and books + history + dolls = love! At that time, I wanted to be Laura Ingalls and so naturally I chose Kirsten to be my best beloved companion. I loved playing pioneer with her. I'm currently immersed in the Gilded Age with my Ruthie who went to live with Samantha in 1904.
I don't even remember how I got into loving history whether it was because I loved Little House on the Prairie (TV show first when I was too young to read) or whether I loved hearing family stories and developed a love of history from there. I do know that history has influenced everything I do.



How wonderful! That was Pleasant Rowland's intention. I loved history before that but I joke that eve..."
I think it worked for a generation of girls. Unfortunately, I think they've started phasing out the historical characters and storylines, since American Girl was bought by Mattel. Now, it's a little hard to find the books.


Actually they still sell the books but packaged as 3-in-one volumes plus a "choose your own ending" volume. They took away the illustrations which I think is dumb because the illustrations served to show unfamiliar terms from the story. They "archived" Kirsten, Felicity, Samantha, and then brought Samantha back and archived Cecile and Marie-Grace, and (best friends) Ivy and Ruthie instead.

Actually, it's a funny story of how I got into Jane Austen in the first place...it's because my aunt had a Pride and Prejudice board game. She and my mother always had a laugh playing that game, so I wanted to play too. My mom told me I had to read the book. I was only nine, so I read the kiddie version, but I was still hooked for life :)

I actually wrote to American Girl one time, suggesting they should make American Boys, each one a soldier highlighting a different war. The dolls would be more like larger action figures, with detachable limbs and fake bombs and things like that. And the books, of course, would tell the history of that war. I thought that might encourage more boys to look into history, but the company wrote back saying they wanted to focus on girls. Guess I'll just have to make my own company!


I guess I heard wrong, then.

I guess I heard wrong, then.
."
They no longer have the historical non-fiction books like the cookbooks, craftbooks, Welcome to... World books. They just rebranded the historical line "BeForever" and made it more "historically inspired" than historically accurate which is good for my bank account but makes me sad. You can catch up on all the news and talk about AG with other adult collectors at http://www.agplaythings.com

Several years ago I was at a library working on a research paper (high school at the time...and I use 'several years' quite loosely :), and stumbled on a book that was sitting near me on and adjacent desk. It was called 'The Discoverers' by Daniel Boorstein. I picked it up and perused it, and began reading the first section, which was about the history of time and the history of humans efforts of knowing what time it was. Even writing this post, it seems to be a little boring and dry topic, but I couldn't put the book down. I spent two hours trapped! Since then, I've finished very few books that weren't history, or at least historical fiction.
Like Lchamp in an earlier post, I too was in the Air Force and was able to spend a lot of time in Europe, which only added to my passion.
In my life's clique of people, I don't have many family or friends who share this love of history that I have, so thankfully, I can find some people here to discuss things with!

Several years ago I was at a library w..."
Glad to see you here.

http://shakervillageky.org/
A friend of ours is spending the weekend there & we're going to meet her for this morning's explorations. They have about 3000 acres to ride, hike, & bike on. We've been there riding a few times & always had a good time. There's rarely many people, lots of wild life to see, & beautiful scenery. Should be fun.
We've also toured the village several times. It's a great place to take out of town guests & learn some history. The village is where the farms came together to make all sorts of things the individual farms didn't & to trade with outsiders. This one has working weaving, spinning, cobbler, broom, & other shops. They've all been lovingly restored & are staffed by volunteers in period dress that know the subject.
The Shakers had some odd beliefs about sex (none ever) which led to their demise, but during the century or so they were around, they built some gorgeous communities & had some really neat gadgets. They lived in family units, but those were based on groups living on a particular farm, the groups being based on needed skills & other considerations. Traditional marriages were dissolved when a family joined the group & the members might be (were usually?) split up. Men & women both lived in the Shaker halls, but men lived on the right side, women on the left & contact was minimized as much as possible. This led to some interesting architecture like twin 3 story spiral stair cases in one building.
They embraced technology. For instance, the story is that they were the ones who introduced the circular saw to the US. (Some say invented, but I've read in more places that it was invented in England about 1820.) As a woodworker, I'm somewhat familiar with turning tree trunks into boards & the advantages of the circular saw were an incredible step forward.
We won't be riding through the village, but through the various fields & woods. Much has been let go or fostered into natural preserves. Last time we were there we were within 50' of a gorgeous White-tail buck who thought he was hidden from us in a thicket. There are wooden bridges & even a tunnel under a good sized road. It's a great place to teach the horses about different terrain.

http://shakervillageky.org/
A friend of ours is spending the weekend there & we're going to meet her for this morning's explo..."
This sounds very beautiful.

The ride was beautiful. I got some pictures, but nothing fantastic. I missed the bit of wildlife we saw - a deer & huge hawk. They've done a great job restoring the farms which are mostly bordered by dry-stacked rock walls with vertical tops (the stones are edge up at an angle). They have a tendency to fall down over time as the weather & trees push them over & take real skill to build properly. We saw repairs going on in several places.
Good company between Marg, Monica, & Nancy. All were on fairly green horses, so Chip led fairly often. He didn't shy at a single dead tree or limb, which surprised me. He usually thinks they're dragons laying in wait. He gave everyone a lead through the one stream we crossed. He wished it was bigger & thought the one splash he made was pitiful, but the others thought it was scary.
I was bushed by the time we got back. It's about 1.5 hours each way. Marg is pretty sore. Her hip was good for about 1.5 hours into the ride & then my suggested 'short extra loop' took longer than expected & did her hip in. Drat.



Same here! When I was fourteen I had read all of the Jane Austen novels but not a single Harry Potter book. Also I'm pretty sure I was the only one in my AP history class to actually read the textbook. History geeks unite! :)

Yes!! I have not read a single Harry Potter book either. It is not on my to read list, tbh.




It's the closest thing to a time machine.


I love old family photos! My favorites are the really old ones - 1910s or so - that really give me an insight into relatives that I never met. (For example, the girl with her arms around her sisters was probably motherly; the stoic boy in the back was probably very serious.)



Watching history documentaries.



Yes, exactly! That and living history museums. Sadly my nieces and nephews have declared "history is boring!" Schools are STILL teaching the names/dates/battles Great White Men version of history so I understood what they were saying and then forced them to do some fun, hands-on learning!

I liked a colleague staring at a woman in the crowd rather skimpily dressed for the 21st century let alone the 17th.... he roared at the "Naked Jezabel !!!.... cover yourself woman !.... before we arraign you before a magistrate !"
Books mentioned in this topic
Tomorrow to be Brave: A Memoir of the Only Woman Ever to Serve in the French Foreign Legion (other topics)Coming Apart: An Informal History of America in the 1960s (other topics)
Omar Khayyam (other topics)
Authors mentioned in this topic
Harold Lamb (other topics)John Jakes (other topics)