Handmade History
Join us for a very special bonus episode! Alicia sat down to chat with Jane Healey, the author of The Saturday Evening Girls Club, a novel set in the early 1900s. The SEGC was a real club that launched a pottery venture, Paul Revere Pottery. Bowls, plates, tiles, and vases from this small shop are held in museums today, and sell for hundreds of thousands of dollars. Most of the girls in the SEG were first-generation Americans in Jewish and Italian families in Boston's North End. The Saturday Evening Girls Club follows an imaginary SEG, Caprice who wishes to open her own hat shop, and three of her friends, who face struggles in their families, work, and social lives. The intertwined stories of these four girls are inspiring and relatable. Alicia and Jane talk about: * Why Jane decided to combine Edith Gurrier, the founder of the SEGC, and her partner, Edith Brown, the co-founder of Paul Revere Pottery, and what she would do differently today * The annual SEG tradition that she wishes she could have put into the story * Why we still to relate to the struggles of turn-of-the-century girls and women today * The special emails she's gotten from descendants This episode also caps off our readalong of Jane's book. You can find all of the posts for this readalong (and join in anytime!) at patreon.com/handmadehistorypodcast [https://www.patreon.com/c/HandmadeHistoryPodcast]. Grab your favorite handcraft and listen in for fun facts to text to your crafting bestie! Have a question, comment, or idea for a future episode? Email us at handmadehistoryhosts@gmail.com [handmadehistoryhosts@gmail.com]. Find links, images, and more on the free blog post for this episode; visit our Patreon page at patreon.com/handmadehistorypodcast. [https://patreon.com/handmadehistorypodcast.] Or visit our website at handmadehistorypodcast.com [https://handmadehistorypodcast.com/] for more information.
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