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HUB History - Our Favorite Stories from Boston History - Boston Pre- and Post-Roe

Boston Pre- and Post-Roe

12/29/24 • 52 min

HUB History - Our Favorite Stories from Boston History

Thirty years ago this week, Brookline became the site of the most deadly anti-abortion violence in American history, at least up to that point. Sadly, right wing extremists and religious terrorists have since eclipsed the bloodshed on Beacon Street on December 30, 1994. On that day, two women’s health clinics were targeted by a radical with a gun because, along with pap smears, birth control, and STD screenings, they provided abortion care. His shooting spree left two people dead, five wounded, and fit into a national pattern of violence against abortion providers. This week, we’ll review that heartbreaking case, then we’ll revisit a classic episode that warns us what could happen to pregnant women in Boston before Roe v. Wade legalized abortion in America through the tragic example of Jennie Clarke.

Full show notes: http://HUBhistory.com/317/

Support us: http://patreon.com/HUBhistory/

Trunk Tragedy in the City of Shoes

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Thirty years ago this week, Brookline became the site of the most deadly anti-abortion violence in American history, at least up to that point. Sadly, right wing extremists and religious terrorists have since eclipsed the bloodshed on Beacon Street on December 30, 1994. On that day, two women’s health clinics were targeted by a radical with a gun because, along with pap smears, birth control, and STD screenings, they provided abortion care. His shooting spree left two people dead, five wounded, and fit into a national pattern of violence against abortion providers. This week, we’ll review that heartbreaking case, then we’ll revisit a classic episode that warns us what could happen to pregnant women in Boston before Roe v. Wade legalized abortion in America through the tragic example of Jennie Clarke.

Full show notes: http://HUBhistory.com/317/

Support us: http://patreon.com/HUBhistory/

Trunk Tragedy in the City of Shoes

Previous Episode

undefined - Christmas 3: The Original War on Christmas

Christmas 3: The Original War on Christmas

For our third Christmas episode, we’re setting our clocks back to the year 1659. If you’d been alive in Boston back then, you would want to keep your Christmas celebration under wraps, because that was the year when Puritan Boston banned Christmas. Now, that may not fit with your mental image of the Puritans as a deeply religious group, but that’s exactly why they literally erased Christmas from their calendars and banned its celebration for decades. Puritans saw their road to salvation as paved with hard labor, careful study of scripture, and the denial of earthly pleasure, but at the time, Christmas was known as a season of misrule, mummery, mad mirth, and rude revelling. Original show notes: http://HUBhistory.com/212

Next Episode

undefined - Beastly Boston

Beastly Boston

Lions and tigers and bears, oh my! This week, we’re talking about Boston’s first encounters with exotic animals. I will be talking about the very first lion to make an appearance in Boston, but instead of tigers and bears, we’ll take a look at Boston’s experiences with elephants and alligators. Our story will span almost 200 years, with the first lion being imported in the early 1700s, the first elephant in the late 1700s, and the first alligators that most Bostonians got acquainted with were installed in the Public Garden in 1901. Can you imagine proper late-Victorian Bostonians crowding around a pool of alligators to watch them tear live animals limb from limb? I couldn’t either before digging into this week’s episode.

Full show notes: http://HUBhistory.com/318/

Support us: http://patreon.com/HUBhistory/

Beastly Boston

Image from the handbill advertising the first elephant in 1796 A newspaper ad to see the elephant Sally Gool Putnam’s sketch of elephants in 1860 Alligators at the Public Garden in 1901

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