Bidwell House Museum Presents 'Lawyering for Loyalists' Talk

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MONTEREY, Mass. — Bidwell House Museum presents its fourth history talk of the season with Western Michigan University history professor Sally Hadden, who will present "Lawyering for Loyalists."
 
The talk is available via Zoom on Saturday, July 29, at 11 a.m. 
 
In the wake of the American Revolution, recovering property lost (or confiscated) in the former colonies provided some lawyers with a new type of client. Individuals such as Christopher Gore and Harrison Gray Otis, John Lowell and William Tudor, lawyers of Boston, became adept at working with displaced loyalists and family members located in many parts of the Atlantic, assisting them in efforts to regain elements of their shattered fortunes. This talk describes the work of Gore and Otis as leading exemplars of this kind of legal activity, which required them to explain legal intricacies to individuals far away and often untutored in legal technicalities.
 
Hadden is a legal historian of early America and the antebellum United States. Her book "Slave Patrols: Law and Violence in Virginia and the Carolinas" described the white-on-black violence that pervaded America's slave society. She co-edited the Blackwell Companion to American Legal History (with Al Brophy) and "Signposts: New Directions in Southern Legal History" (with Patricia Minter). She is completing a study entitled "Cities of Lawyers: Lawyers in Boston, Philadelphia and Charleston" that examines the working lives of attorneys in three 18th-century seaports. With Maeva Marcus, she is also writing a study of the first Supreme Court and its forebears. 
 
Hadden is a past officer and board member of the American Society of Legal History and she serves on the editorial board of Law and History Review. She is a professor of history at Western Michigan University.
 
Registration is required here. Attendees will receive an email one or two days in advance of the talk with the link to access the Zoom presentation.
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Lee Represents Massachusetts in 50 in 50 Mural Project

By Sabrina DammsiBerkshires Staff

The mural features the town's history and beauty. Lee is representing the state in artist Cheyenne Renee's '50 in 50' project to paint a mural in one small town in each state. 
LEE, Mass. — Out of the 351 cities and towns in Massachusetts, Lee was selected to participate in the "50 in 50" Project. 
 
Artist Cheyenne Renee is working to paint a mural in a small town in all 50 states. As part of the project, there will also be a documentary that will incorporate interviews and footage from each town. 
 
Renee has already completed murals in towns in West Virginia, Wyoming, Idaho, and Iowa, among other places. 
 
Renee received close to 300 nominations but only has about 18 states accounted for, so she is still in need of more nominations for a state yet to be completed. More information here
 
When selecting a town, Renee looks at chamber of commerce websites and visitor center information to learn more about the area. 
 
Lee marks the 11th town she has completed and will now be moving on to Morristown, Vt., for her next project, which she will do with some schoolchildren.
 
The goal is to "highlight the community and small businesses within each town and really give people a reason to travel to all of the murals [and] get to know the area that they'd be going to," Renee said at Friday's celebration of the mural. 
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