News & Events
THE STARR CENTER
Reimagining How and Why We Relate with Erika Doss
Mon., feb. 3, 2024 6:00 p.m. TBA
Feb. 3rd at 6:00 p.m. TBA Join Starr Center Deputy Director Jaelon T. Moaney for an insightful dialogue exploring collective memory and controversy forged through public monuments, public memorials, and public art in American culture with Erika Doss, Professor of Art History and the Edith O’Donnell Distinguished Chair in the Edith O’Donnell Institute of Art History at the University of Texas at Dallas.THE STARR CENTER
Reimagining How and Why We Reckon
Wed., dec. 4, 2024 at 5:30 P.M. et VirtuaL
Dec. 4th at 5:30 p.m. Join Starr Center Deputy Director Jaelon T. Moaney for an empowering dialogue exploring Chesapeake-based institutions of higher education with legacies of systemic racism and slavery centering local healing through art. In conversation with one another for an hour, each panelist will provide community members in Kent County and along the Eastern Shore with insights into their respective institutional commitments and journeys in honoring the African diaspora through public art on college campuses spanning the Chesapeake to further inform local ideation.
THE STARR CENTER
From Yorkshire to Maryland: The Calverts and Kiplin Hall
Wed., Dec. 4, 2024 at 12:00 P.M. et at Hynson Lounge
Dec. 4th at 12:00 p.m. Please join Alice Rose, Programming Curator at Kiplin Hall and Gardens, UK for Learn@Lunch with WC ALL.What do Yorkshire in England and Maryland have in common? The Calvert family! Discover more about the history of the Calverts in England and their home in Yorkshire in this talk from Alice Rose, Programming Curator at Kiplin Hall and Gardens, UK.
THE STARR CENTER
ART + COMMUNITY + HISTORY: Public Art Bus Tour to Philadelphia
SAT., Nov. 23, 2024 ALL DAY Bus Leaves at 9:30 a.m.Custom House, 101 S. Water St, Chestertown, MD
November 23rd at 9:30 a.m.Please join us on an all-day FREE bus tour to Philadelphia to see various monuments and public artworks. Starr Center and Chesapeake Heartland staff invite all voices to participate in collective reimagining and to join us on a one-day bus tour to Philadelphia. This tour will mirror the August Delmarva bus tour, but its context will instead center the early American capital's connections to Kent County where robust connections date back centuries and endure.
THE STARR CENTER
The Spilling of the Tea: The History of Tea and the American Revolution
Tues., Nov. 12, 2024 at 12:00 p.m. et at Hynson Lounge
November 12th at 12:00 p.m. Join Victoria Barnett-Woods for a WC ALL Learn@Lunch. The Boston Tea Party in December of 1773 launched a series of “tea parties” across the independence-seeking colonial ports of North America. This tea lecture and workshop will cover the fascinating interwoven narrative of tea and liberty, the role that the tea table played to American identity, and a sampling of teas (and historical baked goods) that were at the heart of this important historical moment.
THE STARR CENTER
Reimagining How and Why We Remember with Brent Leggs
Mon., Nov. 4, 2024 at 5:30 P.M. et at decker theater
Gibson Center for the Arts, Chestertown, MD
November 4th at 5:30 p.m. ET In conversation with Washington College's Starr Center Deputy Director Jaelon T. Moaney, Brent Leggs will engage community members and participants in exploring the role of public art as a vehicle for cultural stewardship in Kent County, on Maryland's Eastern Shore, and across America. Please join us for a reception in Underwood Lobby at 5:30 p.m. and a presentation in Decker Theater at 6:30 p.m.
THE STARR CENTER
250th Anniversary of the Chestertown Tea Party; Inaugural Event of the Maryland 250 Commission
Thur., May 23, 2024 at 5:30 P.M. et at the Custom House
101 S. Water Street, Chestertown, MD
May 23rd at 5:30 p.m. ET Please join us on the lawn of the Custom House, 101 S. Water Street, Chestertown, MD at 5:30 p.m. for a the 250th Anniversary Celebration of the Chestertown Tea Party and the Inaugural Event of the Maryland 250 Commission. Special musical guests The High and Wides will kick off the event and play during the post-event reception. Introduced by Washington College President Mike Sosulski, the celebration will include a talk by Adam Goodheart — the Starr Center’s director and a best-selling historian. The event will include remarks by state and local officials, including two members of the Maryland Governors’ Executive Council: Secretary of Planning Rebecca L. Flora and Secretary of Service & Civic Innovation D. Paul Montiero, Jr. Open to the public. Light reception of cookies and tea to follow.
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THE STARR CENTER
"Streaming History" with Dan Shotz
Thur., May 16, 2024 at 7:30 P.M. et -Zoom
May 16th at 7:30 p.m. ET Dan Shotz is currently the executive producer of the new adaptation of the popular book series "Percy Jackson & the Olympians" for Disney+. Shotz is also in production on the second season of the critically- acclaimed series “The Old Man” starring Jeff Bridges and John Lithgow for FX.
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THE STARR CENTER
"Streaming History" with Louis Baynard and Thomas Mallon
Thur., April 18, 2024 at 7:30 P.M. et - ZOOM
Thomas Mallon's eleven books of fiction include Henry and Clara, Fellow Travelers, Watergate (a Finalist for the PEN/Faulkner Award) and the forthcoming Up With the Sun.
THE STARR CENTER
"Streaming History" with Phaedra Michelle Scott '14
Thur., April 11, 2024 at 7:30 P.M. et - Zoom
Apr. 11th at 7:30 p.m. ET Phaedra Michelle Scott '14 is a writer and dramaturg based in New York City. She is a staff writer on the upcoming CBS/Showtime drama KING SHAKA.
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MCAAHC Public Meeting
mon., april 1, 2024 at 11:00 A.M. et - Bethel A.M.E Church
Apr. 1st at 11:00 a.m. ET Hosted by Commissioner Jaelon T. Moaney. Join us to learn about upcoming initiatives of the commission, and to hear from engaging speakers in the heritage and preservation community. Immediately following the Public meeting, attendees and participants are invited to an optional walking tour, led by Community Historian Airlee Ringgold Johnson and Scholar- Practitioner Darius Johnson, exploring the rich Black history and culture of Kent County. The tour spans centuries and is an evolving restorative effort.
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Bringing the Bay to Baltimore
Fri., march 22, 2024 at 5:30 P.M. et - kent cultural alliance
Mar. 22nd at 5:30 pm ET Please join us for a lecture and discussion about bringing curatorial representation of the Eastern Shore to the exhisting exhibits at the BMA with Brittany Luberda, the Anne Stone Associate Curator of Decorative Arts at the Baltimore Museum of Art where she is a specialist in 18th-century ceramics and silver.
THE STARR CENTER
"GET ON THE BUS!"
wed., February 14, 2024 at 6:00 P.M. et - decker theater
Feb. 14th at 6:00 pm ET - Please join us for the film premiere. Get on the Bus follows a 2022 civil rights journey through the American South. Local K-12 students,
community members, and Washington College students and alumni joined together in an
envoy to deliver historic materials from Chestertown, Maryland, to the Legacy Museum
in Montgomery, Alabama, where they will be. permanently housed. Along the way, participants visited the 16th Street Baptist Church in Birmingham, walked over the Edmund Pettus Bridge in Selma,
and toured Martin Luther King's Ebenezer Baptist Church in Atlanta. Capturing the
group's daily reflections and conversations, the documentary reveals a community working
together to develop both a deeper understanding of the past and a collective response
to present day racial injustices.
Sponsored by Minary's Dream Alliance, Sumner Hall, and the Starr Center for the Study of the American Experience.
THE STARR CENTER
A Public Conversation with Maurizio Valsania, Winner of the 2023 George Washington Prize
Mon., February 5, 2024 at 6:00 to 7:00 P.M. et - Litrenta Hall
February 5th, at 6:00 pm ET - Please join the Starr Center for a public a Public Conversation with Maurizio Valsania, Winner of the 2023 George Washington
Prize and author of First Among Men: George Washington and the Myth of American Masculinity. The George Washington Prize is one of the nation’s largest and most prestigious literary
awards and honors its namesake by recognizing the year’s best new books on the nation’s
founding era, especially those that engage a broad public audience.
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The Annual Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Breakfast
Mon., January 15, 2024 at 8:30 A.m. et - Fountain Park
Sponsored by Minary's Dream Alliance, NAACP, Chester Valley Ministers Association,
Washington College's Office of the President, and the Starr Center for the Study of
the American Experience.
- 8:30 AM: March and Reading at Fountain Park, Chestertown MD
- 9:00 AM: Breakfast (Tickets HERE), Hodson Hall Dining Hall, Washington College
- 10:00 AM: Free Banquet to follow Breakfast, Decker Theatre, Gibson Center for the
Arts, Washington College - Inclement Weather Date: January 20, 2024
THE STARR CENTER
Combating Erasure a lecture by Robell Awake
Mon., November 6, 2023 at 6:30 p.m. et - Litrenta Hall
THE STARR CENTER
Book Talk during Sultana Downrigging Festival
SAT., OcTOBER 28, 2023 at 2:30 p.m. et - Harwood Nature Center
October 28, 2023 at 2:30 p.m. ET - Please join the Starr Center and the Bookplate bookstore, at the newly opened Sultana Harwood Nature Center in the Lawrence Preserve, for a conversation between writer Fernanda Moore and Starr Center Director Adam Goodheart, where they will discuss his new book "The Last Island: Discovery, Defiance, and the Most Elusive Tribe on Earth".
The indigenous hunter-gatherers of North Sentinel Island, in the Bay of Bengal, have lived in virtual isolation from the rest of the world for centuries.
THE STARR CENTER
60 Years After the Kennedy Assassination: A Conversation
TUE., OcTOBER 10, 2023 at 5:00 p.m. et - Hyson Lounge, Hodson Hall
October 10, 2023 at 5:00 p.m. ET - Please join the Starr Center at the Hynson Lounge for a conversation between Starr
Center Deputy Director, Jason Patterson and author and Journalist, Jefferson Morley.
Jefferson Morley is a veteran Washington investigative journalist and former Washington
Post editor. He is a leading source on the circumstances and history of the Kennedy
assassination, and is the editor of the Substack blog JFK Facts.
THE STARR CENTER
A Lecture on Abolitionist Henry Highland Garnet
TUE., OcTOBER 3, 2023 at 6:00 p.m. et - sumner Hall
October 3, 2023 at 6:00 p.m. ET - Join the Starr Center at Sumner Hall (the last functioning Grand Army of the Republic
African American Civil War veteran meeting hall), for a lecture on Henry Highland
Garnet. Garnet was a prominent reverend, orator and abolitionist in the 19th century.
THE STARR CENTER
"Sold Down the River:" A Public Conversation with Edward Ball
MON., APRIL 24, 2023 at 5:30 p.m. et - Litrenta LECTURE HALL
April 24, 2023 at 5:30 p.m. ET - Award-winning author and historian Edward Ball will discuss his book in progress, a pathbreaking work on four Black families that survived enslavement and forced migration. Ball is the 2022-23 Patrick Henry History Fellow at Washington College’s Starr Center for the Study of the American Experience. Ball has spent the academic year in Chestertown researching his new book Sold Down the River, . . ."
THE STARR CENTER
A Century of Black Film with Wil Haygood
Wed., March 8, 2023 at 5:30 p.m. et - Litrenta LECTURE HALL
March 8, 2023 at 5:30 p.m. ET - Acclaimed journalist, bestselling author, and former Starr Center Fellow Wil Haygood will return to Washington College for this public program co-sponsored by the Starr Center and the Rose O'Neill Literary House. Haygood will discuss his recent book Colorization: 100 Years of Black Films in a White World, which examines the struggles and triumphs of Black actors. . ."
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Eastern Shore Opinion Poll Presentation
Wed., November 30, 2022 at 4:30 p.m. et - Litrenta LECTURE HALL
November 30, 2022 at 4:30 p.m. ET - The midterm elections might be over, but but there’s much more to learn from the results of Washington College’s inaugural Eastern Shore Opinion Poll. Miller Director Dr. Patrick Nugent, and Dr. Flavio Hickel and Dr. Christine Wade from Washington College’s Department of Political Science, will describe the poll’s launch and present key findings about the policy and civic engagement. . ."
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Five Score Later: Civil Rights & Historical Memory in Gettysburg
thurs., march 24, 2022 at 5 p.m. et - via zoom
March 24, 2022 at 5 p.m. ET - The role Gettysburg played in the American Civil War has been studied at length. But what about the role the town played in the American Civil Rights movement, 100 years later? And how did the town's historical memory impact the present? Join Starr Center Director Adam Goodheart for a Zoom conversation with Author and Historian Jill Ogline Titus as they discuss her new book. . . "
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Premiere of "Rooted Wisdom: Nature's Role in the Underground Railroad"
FRI., march 11, 2022 at 7 p.m. est - virtual event
March 11, 2022 at 7 p.m. EST - Join Starr Center Director Adam Goodheart for the virtual premiere of "Rooted Wisdom: Nature's Role in the Underground Railroad," a guided experience and short documentary film created by Adkins Arboretum and the Harriet Tubman Underground Railroad State Park. Goodheart will be moderating a panel discussion with historians and the filmmakers, following the premiere.
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The Heart of the Eastern Shore (a feature on Chesapeake Heartland Project)
JANUARY/FEBRUARY ISSUE FEBRUARY ISSUE
From Chesapeake Bay Magazine - Kim Briscoe Moody carries a map in her memory. “I was born and grew up on Prospect Street, in Chestertown. My mom grew up, was born on Calvert Street, and my father was also born on Prospect Street. I grew up in the Bethel AME Church [on the block in between], and I can remember playing on the back lot. It brings me joy, when I go home, to see. . ."
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Sophie Kerr Series Presents Sufiya Abdur-Rahman Presents Presents
WED., november 17 at 5:00 PM EsT via Zoom
November 17 at 5:00 p.m. EST - A non-fiction reading by Prof. Sufiya Abdur-Rahman, co-sponsored by the Rose O'Neill Literary House and the Starr Center for the Study of American History. Sufiya Abdur-Rahman’s writing investigates questions of family, identity, race, and religion and, often, how they intersect. Her essays, articles, and criticism have appeared in publications including...
THE STARR CENTER
Virtual preview for "ISAAC: A Musical Journey," a play by Marlon Saunders
sat., november 6 at 7:30 PM EsT via Zoom
November 6 at 7:30 p.m. EST - Written and composed by Marlon Saunders, "ISAAC" was commissioned by the Kent Cultural Alliance and the Chesapeake Heartland Project and is based on the memoirs of Isaac Mason, a formerly enslaved person, born in Kent County, Md., who escaped to freedom. This free preview will feature songs from the show and a conversation with Starr Center Director Adam Goodheart and Saunders.
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Thomas Jefferson and Race - A Zoom Conversation with Author & Scholar Mia Bay
Tues., October 12 at 5:00 PM EsT via Zoom
October 12 at 5 p.m. EST - Much has been written about Thomas Jefferson and his impact, but what did African Americans think about this founding father? Join us for a thought-provoking Zoom conversation with Mia Bay—leading scholar of African American history—about her current book project on Jefferson. This event occurred in the past, but you can still see the conversation here.
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Newark resident completes internship with the Smithsonian
THURS., SEPTember 9, 2021 SEPTember 9, 2021
From the Newark Post - Newark resident Ama Amponsah recently completed an internship with the National Museum of African American History and Culture, where she promoted the Smithsonian Anthology of Hip-Hop and Rap with a series of blog posts. 'My favorite thing about my internship was learning about the origins of hip-hop music and how it’s more than a music genre, it’s a culture that’s. . .
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An inside look at recently discovered two-hundred year old documents
TUES., AUGUST 31, 2021
From WBOC's Delmarvalife Program - Watch this seven-minute segment about The Commodore Collection, a unqiue archive of local African American history recently discovered in a house in Chestertown. These historic papers were saved from the auction house by historians from the Starr Center and the Chesapeake Heartland Project and local activists and are archived at Washington College's Miller Library.
THE STARR CENTER
Hip Hop Time Capsule: a summer program focusing on diversity
MON., AUGUST 23, 2021
From WBAL Radio - Hip Hop Time Capsule is a new collaboration between high school and college students in Kent County, Maryland, and musicians, college professors and museum professionals. As part of the program, a diverse group of 14 local teenagers, most with deep roots in the community, chronicled a musical heritage that stretches from work songs sung by the enslaved, through. . .
THE STARR CENTER
A Starr in the East (a feature article on The Starr Center at Washington College)
AUGUST 2021 Issue
From the August 2021 issue of "What's Up Eastern Shore" - After more than two decades since its inception, the Starr Center for the Study of the American Experience at Washington College has put Chestertown on the academic-history map. Political forces in the United States , especially over the past year, are being compelled to reckon with the way. . .
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Hogan Announces Funding for New Endowment Honoring Late Senator President Mike Miller
THURS., JULY 15, 2021
From the Office of Governor Larry Hogan - Governor Larry Hogan today announced that he will be providing $1 million to Washington College in his forthcoming Fiscal Year 2023 budget proposal to fund a new directorship within the Starr Center for the Study of the American Experience to honor the historic legacy of longtime Maryland Senate President. . .
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Thousands of pages documenting slavery found in attic of Eastern Shore house
FRI., JULY 2, 2021
From The Hill - Thousands of papers, some documenting the auction and sale of enslaved Black Americans, were headed for the auction block themselves before Black historians and community members stepped in to reclaim ownership over their past. 'It was important to the community because this will connect the dots for people and the younger generation, to let them. . .
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Maryland attic hid a priceless trove of Black history. Historians and activists saved it from auction.
MON., JUne 28, 2021
From The Washington Post - The 200-year-old document was torn and wrinkled. It had stains here and there. And it was sitting on a plastic table in the storeroom of an auction house near the Chester River hamlet of Crumpton, on Maryland’s Eastern Shore. Historian Adam Goodheart had seen it before, but only in a blurry website photo. Now, here it was in a simple framed box. . .