HEROES AND VILLAINS OF THE
GILDED AGE
Flagler Museum Whitehall Lecture Series 2006
In its 21st year, the Whitehall Lecture Series is dedicated
to offering lectures of the highest quality. The Flagler
Museum is host to speakers from prominent museums and universities
around the country, and experts in architecture, history,
fine arts, decorative arts, and historic house museums.
The Whitehall Lecture Series provides a detailed look at
America’s Gilded Age and its influence on history
and culture. What better place to rediscover America’s
Gilded Age than at the home of Henry Flagler, Standard Oil
founding partner and the man responsible for establishing
agriculture and tourism as Florida’s leading industries
and Palm Beach as one of the world’s great winter
resorts.
The lectures are presented on six consecutive Sundays in
February and March. A reception with the speaker immediately
follows each lecture. General admission is $15 per lecture
or $85 for the series. The series price includes a bound
copy of the Whitehall Lecture Series Essays. The Whitehall
Lecture Series is sponsored by The Palm Beach Post. To purchase
tickets, please call the Museum at (561) 655-2833.
| |
|
|
 |
CHRISTOPHER
COLUMBUS, by Martin Dugard
February 5, 3 p.m.
For Gilded Age America the most heroic explorer in history
was Christopher Columbus. Columbus’ discovery
of the “New World” held such meaning and
power in the American psyche at that time that the most
ambitious World Fair ever undertaken in this country
was dedicated to the 400th anniversary of his discovery
of the New World. In fact, the World’s Columbian
Exposition of 1893 is still considered by many historians
the third most important event in American history.
Christopher Columbus’s discovery is still celebrated
annually as a federal holiday in America. Yet, by the
500th anniversary of Columbus’ “discovery,”
some Americans saw the holiday as celebration of conquest
and genocide and as a result no great celebration was
organized to mark the occasion.
Martin Dugard, author of The Last Voyage of Columbus
will discuss why Columbus was an American hero during
the Gilded Age and how he was transformed into a villain,
in the eyes of some Americans, by the late 20th century.
Click here to purchase this book.
|
 |
| |
|
|
|


|
GEORGE
WASHINGTON, by Laura Dove & Lisa Guernsey
February 12, 3 p.m.
For Gilded Age Americans there was no greater hero than
George Washington. Commander of the Continental Army
during the American War of Independence, first President
of the United States, and author of “Rules of
Civility & Decent Behaviour in Company and Conversation,”
by the late 19th century, George Washington had become
the ultimate commander, leader, and example for Americans
to emulate. His likeness seemed to appear across America,
in sculptures, paintings, and everyday objects. In fact,
the occasion for the first great social event in Palm
Beach, which launched began the tradition of the Palm
Beach Season, was the Bal Poudré, a celebration
of George Washington’s birthday.
Laura Dove and Lisa Guernsey will discuss what they
learned while doing graduate work in American Studies
at the University of Virginia, where they published
an essay they co-authored, titled The Apotheosis
of George Washington.
|
|
| |
|
|
 |
JACK
THE RIPPER, by Paul Begg
February 19, 3 p.m.
More than a century later, Jack the Ripper remains one
of the most well known and compelling villains of any
age, and certainly the most well known of the Gilded
Age. Just who Jack the Ripper was has become the most
enduring murder mystery in the world. In the 1880s London’s
East End was a world of slums, destitution, immorality,
and hopelessness. Jack the Ripper’s emergence
in this world not only represented evil and horror,
but everything that was wrong with the East End and
society as a whole. Ironically, the Whitechapel murders
were the catalyst that brought about much needed changes
and reforms.
Paul Begg is one of the world’s foremost experts
on the Whitechapel murders. Based on the research
documented in his book Jack the Ripper: The Definitive
History, Paul Begg will discuss the environment
of London’s East End and the events that gave
rise to the most infamous murders of the Gilded Age. Click here to purchase this book. |
 |
| |
|
|
 |
THOMAS
EDISON, by Dr. Paul Israel
February 26, 3 p.m. With only a few months
of formal education Thomas Edison, the “Wizard
of Menlo Park” became the greatest inventor
of the Gilded Age, creating the model for the modern
corporate research laboratory. His numerous inventions,
dramatically changed the daily lives of Americans
making him a heroic American figure for generations
to come.
Paul Israel is the Director of the Thomas A. Edison
Papers Project at Rutgers University, where since
1978 a team of scholars has been editing five million
pages of documents that chronicle the extraordinary
life and achievements of Thomas Alva Edison. Paul
Israel’s book, Edison: A life of Invention,
is the definitive Edison biography. Click here to purchase this book. |
 |
| |
|
|
 |
WILLIAM
F. "BUFFALO BILL" CODY, by Dr. Paul Fees
March 5, 3 p.m.
Hero of more than 1,700 dime novels, Buffalo Bill was
arguably the most famous American of the late 19th century
and the first real media hero. Even his white horse,
Isham, and his trusted rifle, “Lucretia Borgia”
were made famous as he entertained everyone from average
citizens to royalty during the worldwide tours of his
Buffalo Bill’s Wild West show. In fact, even today,
Buffalo Bill’s Wild West remains one of the most
popular shows at Euro Disney, in France -- ironically
a country known for its antipathy toward Americans.
Dr. Paul Fees, Senior Curator and Curator of History
for two decades at the Buffalo Bill Historical Center,
will discuss the amazing life of William Cody and
how he became America’s first real media hero. Click here to purchase this book. |
 |
| |
|
|
 |
ANDREW CARNEGIE, by Les Standiford
March 12, 3 p.m.
One of millions of immigrants that flooded into America
during the 19th century, Andrew Carnegie managed to
overcome his poverty to become the wealthiest man
of his time. His contribution of 135 million dollars
to form the Carnegie Corporation remained the largest
private contribution ever made for more than a century.
And today, more than a century after it was established,
the Carnegie Corporation continues to grant more than
650 million dollars annually to thousands of charitable
causes. At a time when very few public libraries existed,
Carnegie donated the funds to build more than 2,500
free public libraries worldwide. Upon making a five-million-dollar
contribution establishing the Carnegie Hero Fund,
Andrew Carnegie noted, “We live in a heroic
age.” During his lifetime, Andrew Carnegie gave
away more than 350 million dollars to charitable causes
-- an amount roughly equivalent to seven billion dollars
in today’s dollars.
But Andrew Carnegie’s image as a philanthropist
hero has not been universally embraced. Author Les
Standiford will discuss Carnegie’s complex and
varied relationship with his partner Henry Clay Frick
and Carnegie’s role in the Homestead labor strike
of 1892, based on the research he did for his new
book Meet You in Hell. Click here to purchase this book. |
 |
| |
|
|
Sponsored By
View past and current seasons of the Museum's
Lecture Series:
2001 | 2002 | 2003 | 2004 | 2005 | 2006
|