When:
Saturday, Jul 27, 2024 3:00p -
4:30p

Where:
Parker Hill Branch of the Boston Public Library
1497 Tremont Street
Roxbury, MA 02120

EventScheduled OfflineEventAttendanceMode

Admission:
FREE

Hosted by:
alayton Amy Layton

Categories:
History, Lectures & Conferences

Event website:
https://bpl.bibliocommons.com/events/6626897e3849bf4100b43501

Raising a glass to toast someone at a wedding or birthday is a familiar and usually informal occurrence, but at one time it was a carefully orchestrated ritual. They were planned, revised, and given at an event, and then printed in newspapers.


During the tumultuous years of partisan fighting, toasts were used to spread or attack certain ideologies. The toasts became glimpses into what Americans honored at specific moments in the years from the beginning of the American Revolution to the end of the War of 1812.


"Huzza!" Toasting a New Nation, 1760-1815 is a history of the early American republic viewed through its many toasts, which were raised and published throughout the new nation. They offer a unique lens through which American history and early popular opinion can be viewed.


Timothy Symington was an educator in Massachusetts for two decades before he wrote this book, which was a happy result of his research for his master's degree in America History. Tim currently lives in Wilbraham, and is a frequent contributor to the Journal of the American Revolution. This is his first book.


Please register using the link above.

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07/27/2024 15:00:00 07/27/2024 16:30:00 America/New_York Author Talk: “Huzza!” Toasting a New Nation, 1760-1815 by Timothy Symington <p>Raising a glass to toast someone at a wedding or birthday is a familiar and usually informal occurrence, but at one time it was a carefully orchestrated ritual. They were planned, revised, and g... Parker Hill Branch of the Boston Public Library, Roxbury, MA 02120 false MM/DD/YYYY

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