Progressive Era in Tennessee comes to life in 2022 with MTSU virtual lecturers

Jan 18, 2022 at 02:43 pm by WGNS

Advocates for women’s suffrage on steps of Kirksey Old Main - MTSU campus in 1920

MURFREESBORO, Tenn. — MTSU scholars will continue their examination of a pivotal period in Tennessee history with several enlightening online presentations.

Antoinette van Zelm, assistant director of the Center for Historic Preservation, will speak about “The Woman’s Relief Corps and Patriotic Outreach in Tennessee, 1890-1913” in a webinar set to begin at 5 p.m. Central time, Tuesday, Jan. 18, at www.tennesseehistory.org/lectures.

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The lecture is the latest in the “Tennessee 101: Tennessee Women in the Progressive Era” webinar series presented by the Tennessee Historical Society. The series is funded in part by Humanities Tennessee, an independent affiliate of the National Endowment for the Humanities.

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Other upcoming lectures by members of the MTSU community include:

• “County Women in Rural Tennessee: The Suffrage Question,”
Aubrie McDaniel, MTSU alumna, Tuesday, Jan. 25;

• “Work of African American Women’s Associations in Tennessee,”
Leigh Ann Gardner, MTSU alumna, Tuesday, Jan.   25;

• “Transforming Space and Culture in Tennessee’s Town Squares:
The Ladies Rest Room Initiative, 1900-30,” Carroll Van West, director
of the Center for Historic Preservation and Tennessee State Historian,
Tuesday, Feb. 22;

• “Deference v. Defiance: Challenges to Patriarchy—and What We Still Want to
Know,” Mary Evins, research professor of history and coordinator of the
American Democracy Project, Tuesday, Feb. 22.

“In October 2020, with the support of Humanities Tennessee, we transitioned our lecture series to the online environment,” said Jennifer C. Core, executive director of the Tennessee Historical Society.

“Doing so has allowed people from all over the world — (including) Brazil, Australia and France — to learn about Tennessee’s fascinating history. We hope the audience who joins us for this free webinar series will gain an appreciation for Tennesseans’ participation in local, state and national events from 1896 to 1920.”

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