Sunday, May 21, 2:00 pm, Monthly Program via Zoom.
“One Picture — Several Stories: The Petrograd Children’s Colony in Russia and America.”
A Presentation by Maria Sakovich
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A community of scholars based in
the San Francisco Bay Area
Sunday, May 21, 2:00 pm, Monthly Program via Zoom.
Fall 2020: Revealing San Francisco’s Hidden 19th-Century Black History: A Tour of California Historical Society Artifacts, lecture by Susan D. Anderson, SF History Days (video here)
Summer 2020: Harlem of the West: The Fillmore Jazz Era and Redevelopment, online lecture by Elizabeth Pepin Silva
Fall 2019: An event-filled two-day excursion to Sacramento
Fall 2019: Tour of Marin Civic Center and presentation by member Bonnie Portnoy on The Man Beneath the Paint: Tilden Daken
Summer 2019: Reading of Judith Offer's play, Scenes from the Life of Julia Morgan
Fall 2018: Public Program, "South Asians in the South Bay: The Privileged Immigrants"
Spring 2018: Excursion to Niles area of Fremont with historic train ride and silent film museum
Spring 2018: The California and the West study group initiated the two public programs on "The Future of the Past in the Digital Age" and Benjamin Madley's talk on An American Genocide: The United States and the California Indian Catastrophe, 1846–1873.
Fall 2017: Martinez Adobe Fandango; Public Program: “Siberia and California: Connections During the Russian Revolution and Civil War”
Fall 2016: Amador County
Summer 2016: San Francisco Presidio
Winter 2016: Berkeley History Center
Spring 2015: Sonoma Plaza
Winter 2015: San Francisco Public Library
Summer 2014: Red Oak Victory and World War II Homefront National Historic Park, Richmond
Spring 2014: Los Gatos History Museum, "American Bohemia: The Cats Estate in Los Gatos”
Winter 2014: Tour of California Historical Society exhibition on Juana Briones, January 25
Summer 2013: Green Gulch Farm Zen Center visit, August 15
Spring 2013: Visits to Vallejo Naval and Historical Museum and the McCune Collection at the Vallejo Public Library, April 13
In the abundance of caution recommended by health authorities, the group has decided to take a break from regular meetings.
Saturday, March 1, 10 am, via Zoom. Liz Thacker-Estrada will present.
Chris Webber will talk about his latest book, Black Doctor , the first full biography of James McCune Smith. Dr. Smith was born in slavery in New York City in 1805. Raised by a self-emancipated single mother in one of the worst neighborhoods in the city, he still managed to get an excellent elementary education in a school established by the Quakers for Black children. Beyond that, however, there was nothing open to a Black student. His pastor, Peter Williams, the second Black priest in the Episcopal Church and Rector of St. Philip's Church, Manhattan, therefore raised money to send Smith to the University of Glasgow in Scotland. In just five years, Smith earned an AB, MA, and MD with honors, and returned to New York City better qualified than most white doctors. Establishing himself as a doctor serving both Black and white patients, Smith also worked closely with Frederick Douglass, James W.C. Pennington and other leaders in the pre-Civil War abolition movement. He died in 1865, but he had lived to see the end of slavery.
Christopher L. Webber is a graduate of Princeton University, where he earned his degree from the School of Public and International Affairs, and the General Theological Seminary of the Episcopal Church in New York City, where he earned two degrees in theology and was awarded an honorary doctorate. He spent over forty years as a parish priest serving congregations in Brooklyn, N.Y., Tokyo, Japan, Bronxville N.Y., and Canaan, CT. After spending twenty years in retirement in Connecticut, he moved to San Francisco twelve years ago for family reasons. He continues to serve in local Episcopal Churches. His first publications were a Vestry Handbook , now in a fourth edition, and a New Metrical Psalter still widely used. After writing a number of books for Episcopalians and Christians more generally, Webber wrote the first biography of James W.C. Pennington, a fugitive slave who became the first Black American to study at Yale and to be granted an honorary doctorate by the University of Heidelberg. That biography, American to the Backbone , was very favorably reviewed by the Wall Street Journal . Webber then published the first sequels to the ancient Beowulf saga, The Beowulf Trilogy, and a modernized version of St. Paul's Epistles, Letters to American Churches. He has also recently published a hymnal, Songs of Justice, Peace, and Love.
The Institute for Historical Study is a community of researchers, writers, and artists. Our common bond is a devotion to history in its many forms. Through wide-ranging programs, we share research, ideas, and practical advice and provide a public forum for the discussion of history.
Members' Recent Activities:
Chris Webber’s latest book, Black Doctor, is the first full biography of James McCune Smith, who was born in slavery in New York City in 1805. Raised by a self-emancipated single mother in one of the worst neighborhoods in the city, he still managed to get an excellent elementary education in a school established by the Quakers for Black children. He wanted to be a doctor but no American college or medical school would accept him. His pastor, Peter Williams, the second Black priest in the Episcopal Church and Rector of St. Philip’s Church, Manhattan, therefore raised money to send Smith to the University of Glasgow in Scotland, where in five years he earned an AB, MA, and MD with honors and returned to New York City better qualified than most white doctors. He established a medical practice in New York City and contributed case studies to medical journals. Working closely with Frederick Douglass, Smith was a leading voice in the pre-Civil War abolition movement contributing regularly to “Frederick Douglass’ Paper” and editing it occasionally when Douglass wanted to travel. He died in 1865, but lived to see the end of slavery. John Stauffer of Harvard had written about Smith and published some of his writings but Webber is the first biographer of this important figure in American history. He will be speaking about Smith at the IHS monthly meeting via Zoom on March 15th. His book is now available from standard book sources and from the author.
Bonnie Portnoy recently published her lavishly illustrated biography of artist Tilden Daken: The
Man Beneath the Paint: California Impressionist Tilden Daken. IHS member Rose Marie Cleese performed the final edit. The book, filled with Daken’s paintings and numerous historic family
photographs, is the culmination of two decades of research on the grandfather she never knew. Daken
was described by historians as one of the most adventurous and prolific landscape painters of the American West in the early 1900s. Over the past year, she has given presentations to public and private venues throughout Northern California. She invites you to attend her upcoming talk and book signing at the Book Club of California, 47 Kearny Street, Suite 400, San Francisco, on February 24th (reception at 5:30 p.m.; talk and Q&A from 6:00 to 7:15 p.m.), offered both in person and virtually. Membership is not required to attend but both the in-person and Zoom choices of attendance require registration.
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Famous in his day and a close friend of writer Jack London, Tilden Daken (1876–1935) painted as many as 4,000 works in oil, from every California state park and national park in the West, to the redwood forests and High Sierra—and beneath the Pacific Ocean in a diving bell. To learn more about the artist, visit www.TildenDaken.com. The book is also available to order online through the Nevada Museum of Art.
Members: Please submit news of your history-related publications, lectures, awards, research finds, etc. to info@instituteforhistoricalstudy.org.
We welcome all men and women who have a commitment to historical study, which may be demonstrated in one or more of the following ways...
Institute for Historical Study
1399 Queens Road
Berkeley, CA 94708
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