War of 1812 lecture to be held Sept. 27
Monday August 27, 2012 | By:Rikki Cason | News
The Niagara County History Center is pleased to announce a program sponsored by New York state Speakers in the Humanities Program to commemorate the bicentennial of the War of 1812 entitled “American Antiquities are So Rare: Commemorating the War of 1812 on the Niagara Frontier.”
This free public program will be presented by area scholar, Thomas Chambers at 7 p.m. Sept. 27, at the History Center, 215 Niagara St.
Perhaps no other part of the United States saw more battles during the War of 1812 than the Niagara River borderland in Western New York state. In later years its decaying fortifications and overgrown battlefields provided reminders of the struggle's bloodshed and indecisive conclusion. Tourists traveling to Niagara Falls visited nearby Fort Niagara, Queenston Heights or Lundy's Lane, constructing the war's memory in the process. As one visitor wrote during an 1821 trip to Niagara, "This beautiful country stimulates my patriotism."
Battlefields and monuments on both sides of the U.S./Canadian border became sites where Americans, and especially New Yorkers, came to understand why the War of 1812 mattered, and how they could remember its fallen heroes. Their emotional responses to place and history at Niagara's battlefields both honored veterans and neglected the war's causes. Memories of 1812 envisioned a peaceful border between two nations that had once shed each other's blood.
Chambers is Associate Professor of History and Department Chair at Niagara University in western New York. He took his Ph.D. and M.A. at the College of William and Mary, and earned his B.A. at Middlebury College. He currently serves as Chairman of the Niagara Falls National Heritage Area Commission, and has been active in the 1812 Legacy Council. His book on battlefield commemoration is forthcoming from Cornell University Press.
For more information contact the History Center at 434-7433.
This free public program will be presented by area scholar, Thomas Chambers at 7 p.m. Sept. 27, at the History Center, 215 Niagara St.
Perhaps no other part of the United States saw more battles during the War of 1812 than the Niagara River borderland in Western New York state. In later years its decaying fortifications and overgrown battlefields provided reminders of the struggle's bloodshed and indecisive conclusion. Tourists traveling to Niagara Falls visited nearby Fort Niagara, Queenston Heights or Lundy's Lane, constructing the war's memory in the process. As one visitor wrote during an 1821 trip to Niagara, "This beautiful country stimulates my patriotism."
Battlefields and monuments on both sides of the U.S./Canadian border became sites where Americans, and especially New Yorkers, came to understand why the War of 1812 mattered, and how they could remember its fallen heroes. Their emotional responses to place and history at Niagara's battlefields both honored veterans and neglected the war's causes. Memories of 1812 envisioned a peaceful border between two nations that had once shed each other's blood.
Chambers is Associate Professor of History and Department Chair at Niagara University in western New York. He took his Ph.D. and M.A. at the College of William and Mary, and earned his B.A. at Middlebury College. He currently serves as Chairman of the Niagara Falls National Heritage Area Commission, and has been active in the 1812 Legacy Council. His book on battlefield commemoration is forthcoming from Cornell University Press.
For more information contact the History Center at 434-7433.
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