Discover Concord Logo
Toggle Mobile MenuToggle Mobile Menu
Subscribe
  • Home
  • Current Issue
  • Back Issues
    • Winter 2025
    • 2024 Back Issues
    • 2023 Back Issues
    • 2022 Back Issues
    • 2021 Back Issues
    • 2020 Back Issues
    • 2019 Back Issues
  • Browse Topics
    • Abolitionism in Concord
    • American Revolution
    • Arts & Culture
    • Celebrity Profiles
    • Civil War
    • Concord History
    • Concord Writers
    • First Nations People of Concord
    • Historic Sites in Concord
    • Parks & Nature
    • Patriots of Color
    • Things to See & Do
    • Transcendentalism
    • Trivia
    • Untold Stories of Concord
  • Plan Your Visit
  • Subscriptions and Print Copies
  • Events
  • Discover the Battle Road
  • 250 Collectibles
  • Trading Cards
  • More
    • Subscribe/Login
    • Print Copies
    • About Us
    • Advertise
    • Contact Us
Toggle Mobile MenuToggle Mobile Menu
Home » Topics » Untold Stories of Concord

Untold Stories of Concord

Rabbi-Darby-Leigh-signing.jpg

Reaching New Heights with the ASL Choir at Kerem Shalom

September 15, 2023
Jody Weinberg Kotkin
No Comments

Living their values—community, joy, and respect for the dignity of every person—is what Kerem Shalom, a progressive synagogue in Concord, MA, is all about.


Read More
iStock-1328655725.jpg

A Musketaquid Love Story

June 15, 2023
Jim Sherblom
No Comments

Thirteen-year-old Tasun quietly slipped away from her father Tahattawan’s clan counsel to sit on the rocky prominence called Egg Rock at the confluence of the rivers to consider how her world was changing. 


Read More
Thoreau_Sophia_GRAY22AS-(2).jpg
Concord Free Public Library Stories From Special Collections

Sophia Thoreau – Henry David Thoreau’s First Curator

June 15, 2023
Anke Voss
No Comments

Henry David Thoreau’s younger sister, Sophia Elizabeth Thoreau (1819–1876), was a botanist, artist, editor, and abolitionist who worked as a teacher and managed the family’s pencil business. She significantly shaped her brother’s legacy to an extent that modern scholars argue was under-acknowledged by Thoreau’s early biographers. 


Read More
2016-59-1a_image05.jpg

“Intuition is the unerring truth” Sophia Peabody Hawthorne

December 15, 2022
Victor Curran
No Comments

When Sophia Peabody met Nathaniel Hawthorne at her home in Salem, Massachusetts, he had little to offer but his Byronic good looks. He had published two books, but they brought him neither fame nor fortune, and at age 33, he had run out of ideas and motivation. 


Read More
macone001.jpg
Stories From Special Collections

Concordians in Their Own Voices

December 15, 2022
Anke Voss
No Comments

The William Munroe Special Collection’s mission is to understand and appreciate Concord’s history and culture. One unique collection administered by Special Collections is the Renee Garrelick Oral History Program (also known as the Concord Oral History Program). Its recordings and transcripts add a unique voice to Concord’s storied past. 

Under the direction of Marjorie Garrard, in 1976, the Town of Concord’s Historical Commission established an oral history sub-committee “to coordinate and carry out a program for the collection of an oral history of the Town. A large number of residents of diverse backgrounds and interests will eventually be contacted and asked to respond to this program by recording their recollections of the Town as it was.” By 1977, local historian Renee Garrelick had already recorded 30 interviews, which the Commission reported, “are highly professional and the beginning of fulfilling a longtime goal of the Commission and other local historians.” 


Read More
Emerson_EllenT001.jpg

The Education of Ellen Emerson

September 15, 2022
Barbara Ellen Ewen
No Comments

Ellen Tucker Emerson was the second child and eldest daughter of Ralph Waldo Emerson and Lidian Jackson Emerson. Born on February 25, 1839, she was named after Emerson’s first wife, Ellen Tucker, who was deceased.

Emerson understood the importance of education for all and ensured that Ellen was well schooled by educators, including Elizabeth Cary Agassiz, wife of biologist Louis Agassiz and a dedicated teacher who became the first president of Radcliffe College; Franklin Sanborn, Concord educator and one of abolitionist John Brown’s “secret six;” and Elizabeth Sedgwick, who founded the Sedgwick School for Young Ladies in Lenox to enable girls to expand their knowledge. By the time Ellen’s formal schooling ended in 1858, she was able to speak and translate French and German, capabilities she was able to draw on for the rest of her life.


Read More
i9lrVmXVRgCOjAisHpDfNQ_thumb_4120.jpg

From Concord to California: Ellen Garrison and Her Fight for Freedom

September 15, 2022
Camille Johnson
No Comments

Concord has a reputation for producing people of radical ideas, justice, and bravery. From the minutemen of the American Revolution to transcendentalist writers like Henry David Thoreau and Ralph Waldo Emerson, the town of Concord has an ability to grow a sense of social justice in all its citizens. The story of Ellen Garrison Jackson Clark, an African American woman born and raised here in Concord who went on to fight for freedom at a national level, is a less well-known example—an injustice that The Robbins House and the Concord Museum are seeking to rectify.


Read More
IMG_2175.jpg

Preserving & Updating Concord’s Civil War Monument

September 15, 2022
Beth van Duzer
No Comments

The focal point of Concord’s historic Monument Square is the Civil War Monument. A bronze plaque on the obelisk honors the names of 48 local men who lost their lives in the Civil War; however, 49 Concord men paid the ultimate price. Private George Washington Dugan’s name is missing.


Read More
istock.com.jpg

Town Meeting: Concord’s Living Wonder

June 15, 2022
Sam Copeland
No Comments

Concord usually gets attention for its past. Even Louisa May Alcott worried that her town was “degenerating into a museum of revolutionary relics.” She, of course, belonged to an intellectual event that gave a second chapter to Concord’s celebrated history, but the Concordian of today is liable to feel that everything great belongs to the past.


Read More
IMG_1015-cropped-1.jpg

The Founding of Concord’s Robbins House and a Debt of Gratitude

June 15, 2022
Maria Madison
No Comments

In 1976, Concordians and school administrators Barbara Elliot and Janet Jones published the text Concord: Its Black History, 1636-1860 through the Concord Public Schools. The text included photos of Black and White children visiting places associated with 19th century [and earlier] Black residents. 


Read More
Previous 1 2 3 4 Next

Discover Concord eNewsletter

Sign up today and Discover Concord, Massachusetts!

Sign Up Now

Subscribe Now

Subscribe to get the print publication delivered to your home or office
Subscribe
©2025. All Rights Reserved. Content: Voyager Publishing LLC. Design, CMS, Hosting & Web Development: ePublishing
Facebook Instagram