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Acton 250th Events
A portion of the proceeds of all sales made at the Acton 250 Store will fund our Acton 250 programming. If you would like to contribute a donation to support the Acton250 Committee's programming, please make out a check payable to "Town of Acton" and drop-off at the Town Clerk's office with note attached as follows: "Donation from [name/organization] with the amount total that you are donating and define the purpose of your donation: "To support Acton 250 Committee programs and activities to be deposited in the Acton 250 Gift Fund."
Isaac Davis Plow Exhibit in Town Hall
Please stop by the Acton Town Hall to view the new Isaac Davis plow displayed in the lobby. This CPA-funded project was unveiled over the Patriots Day weekend. View this video to learn how it was made.
Acton 250 Committee Upcoming Events:
All events, unless noted, will be live broadcast on Acton TV or Acton TV - Youtube. Previously recorded events can be viewed at Acton TV On Demand Education Videos.
| "I Screamed with All My Might" - The Civilians Trapped Behind the Boston Siege Lines with Alexander Cain, JD Acton Town Hall, 472 Main Street, Room 204 | Alex Cain, JD will explore the aftermath of the Battles of Lexington and Concord in 1775 where Boston civilians found themselves caught between two armies. Regardless of their loyalty to the Crown or sympathy to the Patriot cause, these non-combatants faced a bleak and uncertain existence. Each day became a struggle for survival as they sought to obtain food and fuel, care for their families, and maintain their livelihoods amidst scarcity and escalating prices. Alexander Cain, JD, published several articles on the revolution along with two books: We Stood Our Ground: Lexington in the First Year of the American Revolution and I See Nothing but the Horrors of a Civil War: The Loyalists of McAlpin’s Corps of American Volunteers. He created the blog/podcast Historical Nerdery (historicalnerdery.com ). He is writing “For God’s Sake Fire!” - The Massachusetts Militia System on the Eve of the Battles of Lexington and Concord, which is anticipated to be released in 2027. |
"Henry Knox’s Trek from Ticonderoga: Myths, Realities, and Results for Boston” with J. L. Bell Thursday, February 26th 7:00 – 8:30 PMActon Town Hall, 472 Main Street, Room 204 | In early 1776, the young Continental Army colonel Henry Knox moved dozens of heavy cannons and mortars from Lake Champlain to the siege lines around Boston; one of the most famous stories from the Revolutionary War. And like many famous stories, it embodies a fair amount of legend and lore. This talk sorts out what we know, what we only think we know, and what we should know about how Knox brought this “noble train of artillery” that helped to make all of Massachusetts independent. J. L. Bell maintains the Boston1775.net website, offering daily helpings of history, analysis, and unabashed gossip about Revolutionary New England. He is the author of “The Road to Concord: How Four Stolen Cannon Ignited the Revolutionary War.” John is working on a new book about the difficult first year of the Continental artillery force. |
| More Upcoming Events... | With further details to follow as we get closer to the events. Friday, April 17, at 4:00 PM. Join the Acton 250 Committee, the Acton Minute Men and our friends at Dirigible Brewing Company, 24 Porter Rd, Littleton as we commemorate the 251st Anniversary of April 19th, 1775. Saturday, April 18th at 5:00 PM The annual Minute Men Robbins Ride with the Iron Work Farm. Sunday, April 19th at 5:30 AM. Join the Acton Minute Men on their annual Line of March in remembrance of April 19th, 1775 Battles of Lexington and Concord. Sunday, June 14th at 2:00 PM. “Declaring Independence Then & Now” in conjunction with Freedoms Way (https://freedomsway.org/). A community forum on the actions taken by Acton on this day in 1776. Wednesday July 1st 6:00 PM “Celebrating the Declaration of Independence” an evening of celebration. |
Previous 250 Committee Events:
| South Acton Tour with Amy Cole at Faulkner Homestead Saturday, October 25 1 PM - 3 PM Iron Work Farm, 128 Main St | Walking South Acton’s historic Mill Corner, you will learn about Acton’s earliest colonial settlement and its development into a hub of industry and commerce. You will learn about the people, places and practices that shaped the town’s history and our nation’s as well. | |
Acton Center Walk Tour with Amy Cole at the Acton Memorial Library Thursday, October 9th 1PM-3PM Acton Memorial Library, 476 Main St. | Professional tour leader Amy Cole grew up near Acton Center and has a wide ranging interest in Acton's unique history. Walking Acton's historic civic center, you will learn about the people, places and practices that shaped the town's history and our nation's as well. | |
South Acton Tour with Amy Cole at the Faulkner Homestead | Walking South Acton’s historic Mill Corner with Amy Cole, you will learn about Acton’s earliest colonial settlement and its development into a hub of industry and commerce. Amy will discuss people, places and practices that shaped the town’s history and our nation’s as well. | |
| “Beyond the Bridge” 7 p.m., Acton Town Hall, 472 Main St, Room 204 | In 2023, Professor Bob Allison inaugurated the Acton 250 Lectures Series with an account of the Boston Tea Party of 1773 and the pivotal events that sparked the American Revolution. He returned to explain the critical changes occurring in the year 1774 when the Crown’s response solidified the colonial opposition. We are thrilled to have Bob for his third visit to discuss the events after the start of the revolution. Professor Allison is renowned for his expertise in American colonial history, and the political, social, and economic factors that converged in the 18th century, leading to Massachusetts’ significant role in the creation of the American nation. He has taught history at Suffolk University since 1992 upon receiving his doctorate at Harvard University. He chairs Revolution 250, a consortium of organizations planning commemorations of the Revolution's 250th anniversary and is a life-trustee of the USS Constitution Museum. | |
Monday, June 23: Speaker Don N. Hagist, Managing editor of Journal of the American Revolution | Please join the Acton 250 Committee for its next speaking event featuring historian and author Don N. Hagist on Monday, June 23 from 7:00 – 8:30 PM in The Acton Memorial Library’s Meeting Room, 486 Main Street, Acton, MA. Don will share lesser-known narratives from the Revolutionary Era, including the lives of British soldiers who engaged the colonials on April 19, 1775 and maintained the Siege of Boston for the following year. Don is managing editor of Journal of the American Revolution (allthingsliberty.com). His historical studies focus on presenting an accurate picture of individual soldiers and their families, especially those of the British army who served in America. This research is done using exclusively primary sources, mostly from archives in North America and Europe. He is a consultant for the PBS documentary The American Revolution produced by Ken Burns, and has written several recent books including Noble Volunteers: the British Soldiers who fought the American Revolution (Westholme, 2020), The Revolution’s Last Men: The Soldiers behind the Photographs (Westholme, 2015) and These Distinguished Corps: British Grenadier and Light Infantry Battalions in the American Revolution (Helion, 2022). Don is an engineering consultant and technical editor, and also writes for several well-known syndicated cartoonists. A recording will be available at Acton TV https://actontv.org/ Generously supported by the Acton Lions Club. | |
Sat, May 10 - South Acton Tour with Amy Cole | Join tour guide Amy Cole to visit the Iron Work Farm sites and walk South Acton's historic Mill Corner. You will learn about Acton's earliest colonial settlement. Tour leader Amy Cole is an accomplished professional tour leader. She grew up near Acton Center and knows the town well. She has a wide- ranging interest in Acton’s unique history. This tour is sponsored by the Acton 250 Committee and the Iron Work Farm. | |
Sat, April 26 - South Acton Tour with Amy Cole | Join tour guide Amy Cole to visit the Iron Work Farm sites and walk South Acton's historic Mill Corner. You will learn about Acton's earliest colonial settlement. Tour leader Amy Cole is an accomplished professional tour leader. She grew up near Acton Center and knows the town well. She has a wide- ranging interest in Acton’s unique history. This tour is sponsored by the Acton 250 Committee and the Iron Work Farm. | |
Saturday, April 19 - Hosmer House Museum |
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Friday, April 18 - Acton Minutemen Activities - Davis March |
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Wednesday, April 16: Acton250 Committee's Remembrance of April 19, 1775 - A Celebration of the Acton Minutemen. | Event starts at 6 PM until 8:30 PM at the Discovery Museum, Acton. Sponsored by Middlesex Savings Bank and the Discvery Museum. A 21+ event celebrating Acton’s Minute Men. Featuring light apps courtesy of Roche Brothers and Acton 250 Committee’s Isaac Davis Brown Ale in collaboration with Dirigible Brewing Company, Littleton, MA. 6:45 Presentation 1, on Upper Floor: The Acton Minute Men Story, The Davis Minute Company on April 19, 1775 7:45 Presentation 2, on Upper Floor: Minute Men Muskets and Clothing, Boy Scout Line of March History | |
Mon, March 31 - "Spies and Military Intelligence" with John Bell Acton Town Hall, Room 204 from 7-8:30 PM View the video: https://link.edgepilot.com/s/3eb9122f/9gvx_52vQEiXxWul-FEEkw?u=https://youtu.be/6vj6LkMpv1E | ||
Tues, March 25 - Acton 250th Anniversary Themed Dinner: Colonial Dinner with DougActon Senior Center, 30R Sudbury Road, Acton at 5:00 PM | Open to all seniors 60+. Enjoy a delicious dinner featuring pot roast, potatoes and dessert with some of Acton's Minutemen! Dinner cost is $5 per person. Also available for purchase is the Acton250th Isaac Davis Brown Ale. Please register for dinner in advance: 978-929-6652. Cost is $5.00 per person. All meals are served at the Senior Center (no take-out). | |
Sat, March 22 - South Acton Walking Tour with Tour Guide Amy ColeFaulkner House, 5 High Street, Acton starting at 1 PM (Arrival time is 12:55 PM) | Join tour guide Amy Cole to visit the Iron Work Farm sites and walk South Acton’s historic Mill Corner. You will learn about Acton’s earliest colonial settlement. Important Details: Registration is required. Details on parking and where to meet will be sent via email closer to the walk date. Register at tinyurl.com/Acton250-March22 Tour leader Amy Cole is an accomplished professional tour leader. She grew up near Acton Center and knows the town well. She has a wide- ranging interest in Acton’s unique history. This tour is sponsored by the Acton 250 Committee and the Iron Work Farm. | |
Thurs, March 13 - Acton 250 Committee's Isaac Davis Brown Ale 2nd Big Release Party!Dirigible Brewing Company, 24 Porter Road, Littleton starting at 3PM until close. | Have you tried the Acton 250 Committee’s Isaac Davis Brown Ale? If not, or if you have and just want more, join us March 13th at Dirigible Brewing Company as they reintroduce our commemorative ale in time for the 250th celebration of the American Revolution. This ale is representative of one beer style available to the colonial patriots. Dirigible Brewing will have this on draft, in cans, and on cask. Twizted Pickle Food Truck will be on-site serving meals and sandwiches with the best local ingredients and a lot of attention to every detail. Come try our fine smoked and cured meat and veggie entrees and, of course, our unique spin on all things pickled. The Acton Minutemen will be on hand to demonstrate and are looking to fire off a cannon for this special occasion! | |
| Thurs, March 6 -"A Sculptor Speaks for Her Statues" with Meredith Bergmann Acton Town Hall, Room 204 from 7-8:30 PM View the video: https://www.youtube.com/live/Hx92Jpx26VE?si=Z9tUlBjz-k-kmkGX | Nationally renowned sculptor and Acton resident Meredith Bergmann produced inspiring monuments to many great Americans. Her artistic process includes learning about each figure as she creates the bronze statue. Phillis Wheatley (c. 1753 – December 5, 1784), whose bronze statue appears in the Boston Women’s Memorial in Boston, is one such monument. She is considered the first African American author of a published book of poetry. Come learn about Phillis and Meredith’s other subjects. | |
| Wed, February 26 - A Snapshot of Acton's Early Black Residents Acton Town Hall, Room 204 from 7-8:30 PM. View the video: https://www.youtube.com/results?search_query=acton+250 | Please join local historians Bob Pion, Bill Klauer, and Anne Forbes discussing recent learnings of Acton’s Black residents. Black citizens were among the residents here when Acton first became a town in 1735 and several fought in the Revolution at the Concord Bridge and other New England battles. | |
| January 29, 2025 “Dreadful Were the Vestiges of War: Bullet Strikes from the First Day of the American Revolution” with Joel Bohy View the video here or visit: https://tinyurl.com/Acton250Bohy | In 2015, Joel Bohy began a collaboration with conflict archaeologist Dr. Douglas Scott to understand more about the objects that were turning up during archaeological investigations on former battlegrounds. Joel Bohy is the historic arms & militaria specialist at Blackstone Valley Auctions and Estates. | |
| December 5, 2024 Native Americans in Southern New England and the Revolution with Daniel Mandell. View the video: https://tinyurl.com/Acton250Mandell | Over a 30- year career, Professor Daniel Mandell has produced a body of work that tells the story of New England Native Americans from the time of first European contact through the formation of the United States and its expansion. He will discuss their experiences during the upheavals of the American Revolutionary period. Co-sponsored by the Friends of Pine Hawk https://www.pinehawk.org | |
| November 12, 2024 “One for the Revolutionary Road: Taverns and the American Revolution” with Malcolm Purinton View the video: https://youtu.be/DKpbYeZaC-M | Northeastern University Professor Malcolm F. Purinton discusses the role of the tavern in local society as the colonies headed into the American Revolution. There were few places more important in colonial and revolutionary America than local community taverns that played witness to local, regional, and national events in American history. | |
| November 6, 2024 Hidden History of Black Boston with Joel Mackall This event was not recorded at the request of the speaker | Discover Boston’s rich 400-year African American history! Many vibrant Black communities flourished in Boston stretching back to early colonial times. | |
| November 9, 2024 Acton Walking Tours with Amy Cole | ||
| October 23, 2024 Acton and Concord’s Roads to Revolution with Robert Gross | | |
| October 6, 2024 Historic Homes Open Houses: The Jonathan Hosmer House 10/06 from 2:00 – 5:00 PM; | The Hosmer’s were an early Acton family, serving the town from its beginning. Come explore this historic home and its past occupants! | |
| October 1, 2024 "Colonial Books and Brews" | The Acton 250 Committee and the Acton Memorial Library for this 21+ after hours library event featuring the Acton 250's Isaac Davis Brown Ale from Dirigible Brewing, the Acton Minutemen, colonial music, the unveiling of the new Isaac Davis Plow mural, food and more! Free entry. Merch available for purchase. | |
| September 28th Acton 250 Committee presents: Acton Center Walking Tour with Amy Cole | Professional tour leader Amy Cole grew up near Acton Center and has a wide ranging-interest in Acton’s unique history. Walking Acton’s historic civic center, you will learn about the people, places and practices that shaped the town’s history and our nation’s as well. Topics include Native American history, the role of the church, the importance of Captain Isaac Davis and the Acton Minutemen, nearby historic buildings, memorials and more. | |
| September 25, 2024 Acton 250 lecture series for: Crown Resistance Day in Acton, 1774 with Historian Mary Fuhrer | Historian Mary Fuhrer returns to explore this critical point in Acton history in the next edition of the Acton 250 lecture series. What happened in Acton on that fateful day, and why was it considered so momentous? The talk delves into the character of the town and its leading citizens at this time, how and why they responded to the growing crisis with the Crown, and what brought them to the point of revolution. By zooming in to focus on the distinct character of Acton and the personalities of its leading citizens, we will see how important personal convictions and individual actions were in shaping history. Every town’s story was different, and Acton’s story was unique – and inspiring. Mary Fuhrer is an Acton resident and Ph.D. social historian. For the past 30 years, she has interpreted village life in colonial and early Republic Massachusetts. She has authored two books and numerous articles on daily life and change in small town Massachusetts, presented at history conferences and institutes, and served as a consulting historian to Freedom’s Way, Massachusetts Humanities, and the Massachusetts Historical Society, as well as serving as the co-author of MassMoments.org. She was awarded the Massachusetts History Commendation for her work in public history. Generously supported by the Acton Lions Club. | |
September 22, 2024 “4th Sunday” open houses at the Faulkner Homestead and Jones Tavern | The Iron Work Farm’s two Acton house museums will be open to the public Sunday afternoons, September 22 and October 27. Both buildings played important roles at the start of the Revolutionary War. https://www.ironworkfarm.org Jones Tavern, 128 Main Street, first built in 1732 and operated by Samuel Jones as a tavern by 1750, will be open from 1 to 3:00 PMjones2. The 1707 Jones-Faulkner Homestead, 5 High Street, will be open from 3 to 5:00 PM. Visitors can explore the restored rooms of this 1707 architectural gem, the oldest house in Acton. It was from this house that Acton’s West Militia marched to Concord on April 19, 1775 under Capt. Simon Hunt, while Capt. Francis Faulkner assumed the leadership (as Colonel) of the 3rd Middlesex Massachusetts Regiment. | |
| September 11, 2024 Acton 250 Committee's Isaac Brown Ale Release Party | Come join us in celebrating the 250th anniversary of the American Revolution! We can’t wait to share our new Colonial Style Brown Ale brewed with molasses in collaboration with Dirigible Brewing Company. Twizted Pickle featuring hand crafted sandwiches and pickle specialty food truck September 11th, 3 - 11 PM at Dirigible Brewing Company, 24 Porter Road, Littleton, MA A portion of ale receipts fund Acton 250's programming. | |
| September 8, 2024 and July 7, 2024 Hosmer House Open House | The Hosmer House, a saltbox style building, is something of a unique structure. The original portion built in 1760 has gunstock corner posts. By 1796, when the addition was constructed, they were no longer popular. The original 1760 fireplace has an interior beehive oven located on the left whereas the 1796 fireplace has an oven to the right, more appropriate for the times. There is another oven on the left also with a separate flue likely constructed at a later date. The whole fireplace rests on a massive foundation which extends to the front of the house. The Hosmer's were an early Acton family, serving the town from its beginning. Jonathan Hosmer (1712-1775) was a selectman and town clerk for many years as well as one of the first Deacons of Acton's church. Jonathan Hosmer (1734-1822), like his father, was a brick mason and farmer. Jonathan married Submit Hunt (1737-1812) in 1760 and built the Hosmer House. Seven children were born to the family of Jonathan and Submit Hosmer. Their eldest, Jonathan, died in service in Bennington in 1777. (His younger brother, Abner, was killed at the North Bridge in Concord, April 19, 1775.) In addition to the large family, from at least the time of the 1790 census, Quartus, a "Black man" according to his death record and a non-white free person according to census records, lived in the house until he died in 1827. | |
| June 10, 2024 Still Here: Houses of Our Patriots - the Nathaniel Edwards House, 328 Pope Road View Video | The second event in the Acton 250 series “Still Here: Houses of Our Patriots” will be a presentation about the Nathaniel Edwards House, 328 Pope Road, on Monday, June 10 at 7PM. at the Acton Memorial Library. The speaker will be the house’s co-owner, David Hardt, who has done extensive research on this mid-18th century center-chimney building. | |
| May 29, 2024 The Empire Strikes Back, and Resistance Becomes Revolution | Last September Professor Bob Allison inaugurated the Acton 250 Lectures Series with an account of the Boston Tea Party of 1773 and the pivotal events that sparked the American Revolution. He returns to explain the critical changes occurring in the year 1774 when the Crown’s response solidified the colonial opposition. This was the fifth lecture in the Acton 250 Series. Prof. Allison is renowned for his expertise in American colonial history, and the political, social, and economic factors that converged in the 18th century, leading to Massachusetts’ significant role in the creation of the American nation. He has taught history at Suffolk University since 1992 upon receiving his doctorate at Harvard University. He chairs Revolution 250, a consortium of organizations planning commemorations of the Revolution's 250th anniversary and is a life-trustee of the USS Constitution Museum. | |
| May 26, 2024 Still Here: Houses of Our Patriots – Jones Tavern and the Faulkner Homestead | The first in the three-part Acton 250th series about the surviving homes of Acton’s participants in the events of 1775 includes open-houses on May 26 at Jones Tavern, 128 Main Street (from 1 to 3 p.m.) and the Faulkner Homestead, 5 High Street from 3:00 to 5:00 PM. Both played important roles at the start of the Revolutionary War. Jones Tavern exemplifies the architecture of several eras, including the original 1732 center-chimney farmhouse and the 1750 lean-to taproom, an important Revolutionary meeting place. The 1707 Jones-Faulkner Homestead is the oldest building in Acton, and the only local example of a First Period “long” house of a distinct English plan. In 1775 it was the home of Francis Faulkner, who on April 19th was called to become Colonel of the 3rd Middlesex Regiment and where the militiamen’s families prepared food to take to the men after the battle at the Concord Bridge. | |
| May 24, 2024 Acton Center Walking Tour with Amy Cole - | Tour leader Amy Cole grew up near Acton Center and knows the Town well. She has a wide ranging-interest in Acton’s unique history. Walking Acton’s historic civic center, you will learn about the people, places and practices that shaped the town’s history and our nation’s as well. Topics include Native American history, the role of the church, the importance of Captain Isaac Davis and the Acton Minutemen, nearby historic buildings, memorials and more. The mile walk will take a little less than two hours. Sponsored by the Acton 250 Committee and the Acton Memorial Library. Generously supported by the Acton Lions Club. | |
| April 6th and April 12th 2024 Acton Center Walking Tours with Amy Cole | On April 6th and 12th Amy Cole led visitors on a tour of historic sites in Acton Center as part of the ongoing walking tour series. Walking Acton’s historic civic center, participants learned about the people, places and practices that shaped the town’s history and our nation’s as well. Topics included Native American history, the role of the church, the importance of Captain Isaac Davis and the Acton Minutemen, nearby historic buildings, memorials and more. | |
| April 2, 2024 The Gathering Storm with Historian J. L. Bell A recording of the event can be viewed here and the presentation viewed here. | On April 2, 2024 at 7 PM noted historian and author J. L. Bell presented the 1774 Boston Tea Party fallout and subsequent colonial militia activities. As 1774 begins, Massachusetts politicians worry about the royal government response to the Boston Tea Party. The force of that reaction became clear in the return of troops to Boston, the Coercive Acts, and the Massachusetts Government Act. In late summer the province’s people rebelled by shutting down government functions in rural counties, seizing weapons in ports, and electing their own legislature. The engine of that resistance was a little-understood institution: the colonial militia. By fall, it was clear that the new royal governor had no leverage outside Boston. This talk traces the end of British power in most of Massachusetts even before the war began. J. L. Bell has explored the end of British royal government in Massachusetts by following the contest for artillery pieces in his acclaimed book, The Road to Concord: How Four Stolen Cannon Ignited the Revolutionary War. He also maintains the Boston 1775, which offers daily helpings of history, analysis, and unabashed gossip about Revolutionary New England. | |
| January 31, 2024 A Revolution in the News with Historian Joseph Adelman A recording of the event can be viewed here and the presentation viewed here. | Professor Adelman told the story of the Revolutionary War’s forgotten instigators: newspaper printers and editors. Shrewdly gauging the political climate and interests of their communities and balancing them with their own commercial interests, eighteenth-century printers were instrumental in creating propaganda and rallying the public to the revolutionary cause. A noted speaker and author, he has published work in the Washington Post, Slate, and The Atlantic, is a regular contributor to the award-winning podcast, Ben Franklin’s World, and serves as an Associate Editor for The New England Quarterly | |
| December 10, 2023 Acton Center Walking Tour | Amy Cole is leading an ongoing series of walking tours in historic Acton Center. Walking Acton’s historic civic center, you will learn about the people, places and practices that shaped the town’s history and our nation’s as well. Topics will include Native American history, the role of the church, the importance of Captain Isaac Davis and the Acton Minutemen, nearby historic buildings, memorials and more. The mile walk will take a little less than two hours. | |
November 21, 2023 Acton Memorial Library Book Group Discussion |
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| November 13, 2023 Historian Mary Fuhrer Explores Daily Life in Colonial Acton for Acton 250 Lecture Series A recording of the event can be viewed here. The slides presented can be viewed here. | On November 13, 2023, the Acton 250 Committee focuses on the everyday people and daily life in Acton with Mary Fuhrer. This illustrated talk will explore family, households, farms, neighbors, and the fabric of village life to recover the world of the Minutemen. It was a world far different from our own; it is the world that laid the groundwork for revolution. | |
October 12, 2023 Tour of Acton Center Historic District | Amy Cole is leading an ongoing series of walking tours in historic Acton Center. Walking Acton’s historic civic center, you will learn about the people, places and practices that shaped the town’s history and our nation’s as well. Topics will include Native American history, the role of the church, the importance of Captain Isaac Davis and the Acton Minutemen, nearby historic buildings, memorials and more. The mile walk will take a little less than two hours. | |
| Sept. 21, 2023 From Crown Tensions to Tea Parties: The Role of Massachusetts in Shaping the Revolution A recording of the event can be viewed here | Noted Historian Prof. Robert Allison- From Crown Tensions to Tea Parties: The Role of Massachusetts in Shaping the Revolution Professor Robert Allison, who discussed the pivotal events that set the stage for the Boston Tea Party and sparked the American Revolution. Prof. Allison is renowned for his expertise in American colonial history, and the political, social, and economic factors that converged in the 18th century, leading to the climactic moment in Boston's history. He has taught history at Suffolk University since 1992, when he received his doctorate at Harvard. He is currently the Chair of Revolution 250, a consortium of organizations planning commemorations of the Revolution's 250th anniversary and a life-trustee of the USS Constitution Museum. |
Useful Links:
- MA Office of Travel & Tourism 250 Facebook
- MA Office of Travel and Tourism 250
- Revolution 250
- Samuel Adams: Instigator of a Tea Party & a Revolution
- Lexington Tourism
- Lexington 250 Town Site
- Concord Tourism
- Concord 250 Facebook
- Arlington 250 Facebook
- Arlington 250 Town Site
Acton established this committee to plan for the commemoration of the 250th anniversary of the commencement of the American Revolution. Events might include, but are not limited to, parades, reenactments, speaker series, and other educational events, and could also include physical reminders, such as plaques, statuary, exhibits, or other items of an enduring nature. The committee shall develop and administer programs, a budget, and grant applications, and may make a request for funding as part of the Town budget process. The committee shall cooperate and coordinate with local, regional, state, and federal groups, committees and agencies in producing the events.
To contact the committee:
- send an email to: acton250@actonma.gov
- or call 978-929-6611