SOURCE: Hartford Courant
6-16-10
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6-16-10
Bruce Fraser, historian of Connecticut, dies at 63
Historians in the News
Bruce Fraser knew that history is not the study of the dead, but of the living, at an earlier point in time. It is about the great and the powerful, but also about the lives and hopes of ordinary people. It tells us where we are from, connects us with a sense of place. Few did more to explore and explain the place between Boston and New York than Mr. Fraser.
Mr. Fraser, 63, executive director of the Connecticut Humanities Council since 1982, died Sunday after battling cancer for nearly a year. A compact, athletic, intense man with a Swiftian wit and Yankee work ethic, Mr. Fraser was a gifted historian as well as a skilled advocate, organizer and fundraiser. He built the humanities council into one of the largest and most effective such agencies in the country, and then used it, in the words of Connecticut Trust for Historic Preservation Executive Director Helen Higgins, "to transform Connecticut's once sleepy heritage community into a vibrant industry."
His accomplishments are myriad. He wrote a history of Connecticut. He developed "The Connecticut Experience" — an award-winning 19-part TV series on the history of the state. He developed reading programs for children and adults and established the council's Cultural Heritage Development Fund, which has granted more than $13 million to help sustain Connecticut's heritage and cultural institutions. He helped create mutually beneficial partnerships among arts and heritage groups, and was most recently immersed in one of his most ambitious projects, an online encyclopedia of Connecticut history. It should be ready in 2012.
Read entire article at Hartford Courant
Mr. Fraser, 63, executive director of the Connecticut Humanities Council since 1982, died Sunday after battling cancer for nearly a year. A compact, athletic, intense man with a Swiftian wit and Yankee work ethic, Mr. Fraser was a gifted historian as well as a skilled advocate, organizer and fundraiser. He built the humanities council into one of the largest and most effective such agencies in the country, and then used it, in the words of Connecticut Trust for Historic Preservation Executive Director Helen Higgins, "to transform Connecticut's once sleepy heritage community into a vibrant industry."
His accomplishments are myriad. He wrote a history of Connecticut. He developed "The Connecticut Experience" — an award-winning 19-part TV series on the history of the state. He developed reading programs for children and adults and established the council's Cultural Heritage Development Fund, which has granted more than $13 million to help sustain Connecticut's heritage and cultural institutions. He helped create mutually beneficial partnerships among arts and heritage groups, and was most recently immersed in one of his most ambitious projects, an online encyclopedia of Connecticut history. It should be ready in 2012.
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