Increased interest in UGRR and Abolitionist activity in Putnam and a recommendation from the National Park Service has resulted in an effort to update Putnam’s listing in the National Register of Historic Places (NR). The original 1975 listing recognized the historic impact of Putnam at the local level. It was amended in 2004 to include Putnam’s importance at the state level. The 2024 update seeks recognition of Putnam’s national significance.
Each meeting will feature a program about Putnam History as well as an update on the status of the NR update including related Q&A and discussion. The program theme for the Inaugural Season is Old Putnam: Stories That All Americans Can Relate To, Regardless of Where They Live.
The Putnam UGRR Forum, made possible by the generosity of the community-minded J.W. and M.H. Straker Charitable Foundation, is open to the public free of charge.
PROGRAM TOPIC: Putnam Women: Social Reform, Abolition, and the UGRR
PROGRAM DESCRIPTION: History becomes Herstory in this program about the Hale Sisters, Lucinda Belknap Nye, Sarah Guthrie, Harriet Beecher Stowe, and others.
SPEAKERS: Lacey Bonar Hall and Dr. Larisa Harper