By Walter Lunt
“It’s not just learning history facts; it’s learning while having fun doing
activities.” Sophie Villanueva
Grasping wood burning pens and leaning intently over their work on a creative
map project, junior historians at Windham Middle School plot and mark places of
historic interest on small sheets of pine board.
Such is an almost typical day, after school, in the middle school library where
the History Club meets each Tuesday, masked and socially distanced. Seventh
graders Delia Tomkus, Aeden Leighton, Ty Stahle and Sophie Villanueva engage
each week with co-leaders Paula Sparks and Brian Brigham to explore topics in
Windham history, and other far-ranging subjects like wars and Victorian Santa
Claus.
“(The club) reinforces what they are learning in Social Studies,” says Sparks,
“…it provides an opportunity for them to talk about history from today’s
perspective.” And how what was going in other places influenced the way people
in Windham lived. A study of Victorian times, for example, spawned a discussion
of a famous letter sent by a child to the New York Sun newspaper in 1897.
Following a discussion of “Yes Virginia, there really is a Santa Claus,” and
how it prompted a slew of ‘letters to the editor’ from other children, History
Club member Aeden Leighton solemnly observed how “…it was sad knowing what kids
were asking for (back then), and how little some of them had and wanted.”History Club member Ty Stahle
displays his half-completed
wood-burned map of Windham. The
finished project will include
locations and labels of historic sites.
COURTESY PHOTO
Delia Tomkus liked making the wood-burned maps and learning about historical
places in Windham. Using the town maps found in the history back packs at
Windham Library, the students placed carbon paper (historical in itself)
between the map and the wood surface, traced the outline, wood-burned some of
the geographical features, added paint to bodies of water and applied a natural
stain.
Later, they plan to identify and label historical sites (old fort, powder mills, Quaker district, etc.) utilizing push-pins and string.
The History Club is in its second year at WMS. Sparks says this year has been a real challenge. Some kids miss sessions because of quarantine, “Any time there is an active case (of the virus), anyone determined to have had close contact must quarantine.” Due to a rotating schedule, half of the student population can attend in-school classes on Mondays and Wednesdays; the other half attend on Tuesdays and Thursdays. So, as Sparks points out, “…the only kids who attend are those who come to school on Tuesdays. (I have) no way of knowing if the lack of a late bus or no transportation on a non-school day impacts who can participate.”
Upcoming projects and activities will include more (Windham) trivia games and
crosswords, constructing pinhole cameras to record modern history and a chance
to showcase artifacts and the class’ handiwork in a display case at the school
library.
The History Club is sponsored by the Windham Historical Society. <
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