Date: Fri 18-Sep-1998
Date: Fri 18-Sep-1998
Publication: Ant
Author: CAROLL
Quick Words:
Deerfield
Full Text:
Historic Deerfield Features Pulitzer Prize Winning Historian As Keynote
Speaker At Flynt Center Opening
DEERFIELD, MASS. -- Laurel Thatcher Ulrich, James Duncan Phillips professor of
early American history and professor of women's studies at Harvard University,
will deliver the keynote address at the celebratory dedication of Historic
Deerfield's new Flynt Center of Early New England Life on September 26.
The 11 am program, on the grounds of the center behind the Dwight House museum
in the south end of the village of Deerfield, is open to the public. Following
the ceremony, the center will be open for touring from noon to 3 pm.
Ulrich was awarded the Pulitzer Prize for history in 1991 for her book A
Midwife's Tale: The Life of Martha Ballard Based on her Diary, 1785-1812. The
book was made into a highly acclaimed film in 1993. A graduate of the
University of Utah with a doctorate in history from the University of New
Hampshire, Ulrich was a member of the history faculty at UNH from 1980 until
her appointment to Harvard University in 1995.
A consultant to many museums and historical societies, Ulrich is the recipient
of two National Endowment for the Humanities Fellowships and of a MacArthur
Fellowship.
The dedication of the center will include remarks by the building's architect,
C. Anthony Junker, of the Philadelphia firm of Ueland Junker McCauley
Nicholson; Mary Maples Dunn, vice-president of the Historic Deerfield board of
trustees, former president of Smith College and now director of the
Schlesinger Library at Radcliffe College; and Donald R. Friary, executive
director and secretary of Historic Deerfield.
Henry N. Flynt, Jr, chairman of the board of trustees, and several members of
his family, will cut the ribbon officially opening the building that is named
for them and for Henry and Helen Flynt, founders and patrons of Historic
Deerfield.