Weather or Not: How Early Americans Recorded Their Climate in Almanacs

27jul5:30 pm6:30 pmWeather or Not: How Early Americans Recorded Their Climate in Almanacs

Event Details

Tuesday, July 27 | 5:30 pm

As we begin to consider climate change as an everyday problem, it’s valuable to know how people did that in the past. With support from the Library Company and the Guggenheim Foundation, Joyce Chaplin is compiling and analyzing a database of manuscript notes about weather in early American almanacs, 1646- 1821, out of 10,578 almanacs. Her talk focuses on how people recorded the weather in numbers (including degrees Fahrenheit) and in words, from “dull” to “elegant!” These notations are significant as records of a period of climate change, the Little Ice Age, and as records of how people understood and coped with that climatic disruption.

Joyce E. Chaplin is the James Duncan Phillips Professor of Early American History at Harvard University. A former Fulbright Scholar and Library Company Fellow, she’s taught at six universities on two continents, an island, and a peninsula, and in a maritime studies program on the Atlantic Ocean.

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Time

(Tuesday) 5:30 pm - 6:30 pm(GMT-04:00)