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Home » Authors » Jaimee Joroff
Jaimee Joroff

Jaimee Joroff

A Concord native, Jaimee Joroff is manager of the Barrow Bookstore in Concord Center, which specializes in Concord history, Transcendentalism, and literary figures. She has been an interpreter at most of Concord’s historic sites and is a licensed town guide.


Articles

ARTICLES

Stars

Go, Speed the Stars

March 15, 2024
Jaimee Joroff
No Comments

How do you remember heroic souls who have died? In the second century, Greek astronomer Ptolemy did so by taking the memories of those who (to paraphrase Ralph Waldo Emerson) had “shuffled off their corporeal jackets” and slipped them into the stars. Ptolemy named stars and connected them with invisible lines to form the storied constellations known to many in the past and today. 


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Concord’s Haunted Colonial Inn

September 15, 2023
Jaimee Joroff
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There are some tales that have so seeped into a place that it is best to leave them be or risk upsetting the spirits who dwell within. But sometimes, even if you mind your own realm, the spirits come out and find you.


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Hell Followed With Them

June 15, 2023
Jaimee Joroff
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They were the sons of Death and hell followed with them as they rushed from Sudbury to Concord, Massachusetts, in the lightening dawn of April 19, 1775. Beside them, armed with muskets, swords, pitchforks, and improvised weapons, came two companies of Sudbury minutemen and militia, and behind them (as legend says), on a white horse, a messenger galloped west towards Worcester carrying the alarm “Up! Up! The Regulars are as far as Concord!”


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The Dangerous Déjà vu

March 15, 2023
Jaimee Joroff
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Have you ever sensed that something bad was about to happen? You don’t know how or why, but it’s as though an ancestral memory is shouting, “Awake! Danger is coming!” So it may have been for three men on April 19, 1775.


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Barrow Bookstore Presents

Concord Trivia Vol 4 Issue 4

December 15, 2022
Jaimee Joroff
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Test your knowledge with Concord Trivia!


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Full Circle: Concord and King Charles

December 15, 2022
Jaimee Joroff
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Concord transcendentalist Ralph Waldo Emerson wrote about life being full of circles. And this year, with the passing of Queen Elizabeth II, Concord, Massachusetts, once again finds itself full circle back in a world tied to a King Charles; this time, King Charles III.


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The Old Hag, The Ice King, and the Artichoke: Concord’s Role in the Insane Ice Trade

December 15, 2022
Jaimee Joroff
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This is a story of insanity, and it begins in ancient Ireland, where legend says there once lived the powerful Tuatha de Danann. They were Kings, Queens, Druids, and those possessed with magic arts long since forgotten or explained away by modern science. Among them was Cailleach (translation, “Old Hag”), the Witch Queen of Winter.


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Barrow Bookstore Presents

Concord Trivia Vol 4 Issue 3

September 15, 2022
Jaimee Joroff
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Test your knowledge with Concord Trivia!


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John Jones: Concord’s First Minister and Witch Hunter

September 15, 2022
Jaimee Joroff
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Oral and written history records are like dust; grains disappear over time—burned, blown away, forgotten. In some cases, just enough original particles remain that, when swept together, give a foothold for stories like this one.

Stand in Concord Center, on Lexington Road, with your back to the Old Hill Burying Ground and your gaze fixed on the gold-domed First Parish building across the street. Here you are standing in the area of Concord’s first meeting house. Below your feet are grains of dust walked over centuries before by Concord residents such as Puritan John Jones, the first minister of Concord. And what happened when he left this spot became something New England history tried to bury.


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Concord Trivia Vol 4 Issue 2

June 22, 2022
Jaimee Joroff
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Test your knowledge with Concord Trivia!


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View All Articles by Jaimee Joroff

Featured Stories

  • Cover Fall25.jpg

    The Fall Issue is Here!

    The fall issue is here! Dive in and discover five definitive battles of the American Revolution that took place in the fall of 1775, how Concord's minutemen of 1861 responded to the Civil War, "Henry David Thoreau and the Crackbrained Troublemaker," where to find the best cider donuts, and so much more.
  • istock.com-sbossert.jpg

    Cider Donuts & Pumpkin Patches: Autumnal Rites of Passage in New England

    Autumn is a special time in New England. For my family, September means an excursion to a local orchard for apple picking, apple cider, and apple donuts. Then in October, it is off to the farm for pumpkin picking.
  • Minute-Man-National-Historical-Park,-along-Lexington-Road.jpg

    Painted Leaves

    “October is the month for painted leaves,” Henry Thoreau wrote in 1860. “Their rich glow now flashes round the world.” And while it’s true that other parts of the world experience autumnal tints every year, they seem to be brighter and more vivid in New England. 

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