Archeology of Shipwrecks
Welcome Captain Laurel Seaborn and Dr. Calvin Mires, co-founders of the Seafaring Education and Maritime Archaeological Heritage Program, who will visit via Zoom to present the Archeology of Shipwrecks.
Welcome Captain Laurel Seaborn and Dr. Calvin Mires, co-founders of the Seafaring Education and Maritime Archaeological Heritage Program, who will visit via Zoom to present the Archeology of Shipwrecks.
Our presentor, Dr. Gauthier, is the Director of Global Education at The Derryfield School in New Hampshire and an adjunct professor of History at Fordham University in New York.
To close out the season, attendants of this month's book club are invited to bring a favorite book to share!
The library's Community Book Club is open to all; join our reference staff and your fellow residents each month for a lively discussion!
Covered wooden bridges have been a vital part of the NH transportation network, dating back to the early 1800s. Given NH's myriad streams, brooks, and rivers, it's unsurprising that 400 covered bridges have been documented. Often viewed as quaint relics of a simpler past, they were technological marvels of their day. It may be native ingenuity and NH's woodworking tradition that account for the fact that a number of nationally-noted covered bridge truss designers were NH natives.
This is an informal gathering where you can discuss what you're working on, what you're reading, where you're submitting your work, and more. Many of us have participated in November's National Novel Writing Month and would like to continue to improve our writing in a supportive environment.
This month's book is The Lions of Fifth Avenue by Fiona Davis, available in print at the library or digitally on OverDrive.
This month's book is The Lost Girls of Paris by Pam Jenoff, available in print at the library or digitally on OverDrive,