Season One

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Ep. 001 – Why Does Elizabeth Robins Get Her Own Podcast?

This week we sit down with Dr. Joanne Gates from Jacksonville State University who retired from the Department of English. Dr. Gates wrote a comprehensive biography, Elizabeth Robins, 1862-1952: Actress, Novelist, Feminist, and created the Elizabeth Robins Web. She has spent over 30 years learning about Elizabeth and is the perfect person to introduce us to her!

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Allisa Babor Allisa Babor

Ep. 002 – When Literature Became a Weapon

In the battle for women’s suffrage, Elizabeth and some friends formed the Women Writers Suffrage League. Their weapon? The pen. Over the next decade, the group would flood the market with suffrage literature of all types such as plays, novels, editorials, and poetry. How did they come up with this strategy? And more importantly, did it work?

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Allisa Babor Allisa Babor

Ep. 003 – Raymond, Always Raymond

Elizabeth was the oldest of seven siblings and Raymond was the youngest. Elizabeth remained his primary confidante throughout his life and because they were rarely together, much of their conversation was by letter and we are able to share in their confidences. While Elizabeth was living an artist’s life, Raymond was immersed in Progressive Era politics. You may not know his name, but his fingerprints are all over modern American government. Today’s guest, Dr. James Clark, first discovered Raymond while researching Claude Pepper. That’s the launching point that takes this podcast through many famous figures and events.

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Allisa Babor Allisa Babor

Ep. 005 – Chinsegut Civilian Conservation Corps

FDR quickly implemented the Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC) as part of his New Deal program and Chinsegut became a CCC Camp in 1937. While employing a couple hundred young men on the property in the way millions of others would work on other CCC camps across the country, the CCC camp at Chinsegut also had some singular qualities.

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Allisa Babor Allisa Babor

Ep. 006 – Home of the Tangerine

For much of the twentieth century, Brooksville, Florida identified itself as "Home of the Tangerine" and incorporated the fruit into their city stationery, police badges, and high school class rings. But why was the tangerine so embedded into the community identity and how did it impact Brooksville's development? Our special guest in this episode is fifth-generation Brooksvillian Jim Kimbrough. He is a descendant of Francis Ederington, who built the Chinsegut Manor House. His family and descendants would live on the property from 1851 until Elizabeth Robins purchased it in 1905.

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Allisa Babor Allisa Babor

Ep. 007 – Rest Cures

The Rest Cure was a medical treatment combining various physical and mental treatments as well as a surprising diet. When Elizabeth continued to suffer side effects from a bout with typhoid, she undergoes a couple of rest cures. Out of those experiences came a novel, A Dark Lantern: A Story with a Prologue, that would be made into a film in 1920 starring Alice Brady and James Crane.

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Allisa Babor Allisa Babor

Ep. 008 – “Home Sweet Home” Music

Music played an integral role at Chinsegut, from casual sing-a-longs around the piano to the annual community sunrise Easter service, to concerts on the porch. In this episode, Elizabeth's diary provides proof of the surprising and welcome existence of the Snow Hill band.

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Allisa Babor Allisa Babor

Ep. 009 – The Snows of Snow Hill

Covering people and events from The Gilded Age through post-WW2 in America and Europe, the podcast studies the life of actress and author Elizabeth Robins. Listeners will be reminded how life has changed in the last 150 years– the many ways it has stayed the same.

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Allisa Babor Allisa Babor

Ep. 010– The Author of Her History

Mayor Blake Bell, seventh-generation Brooksvillian Andrea Hedick Read, and graphic designer Barry Meindl dig into Season One of the podcast with our host. The foursome will go from fun facts to philosophy, and what we should anticipate from the podcast moving forward.

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