Hosted by Vaughan Woods & Historic Homestead

Sunday, March 29, 2026
2:00- 5:00 pm

Vaughan Woods & Historic Homestead
2 Litchfield Road
Hallowell, ME 04347


$10/person includes refreshments and a copy of The Great Resistance
Space is limited

Acclaimed historian and author Carrie Gibson visits Hallowell’s Vaughan Woods and Historic Homestead for their annual Rural Socrates Series Book Talk.

Ms. Gibson is the author of The Great Resistance: The 400-Year Fight to End Slavery in the Americas, a sweeping and deeply human history of resistance to enslavement across the Western Hemisphere. For more than four centuries, enslaved people in the United States, the Caribbean, Brazil, and beyond fought in countless ways to secure their freedom. For the first time, their stories are brought together in a single, powerful narrative—one that offers both historical insight and inspiration for our own time.

Book cover of 'The Great Resistance' by Carrie Gibson, featuring an illustration of a muscular man holding a weapon against a red background.

“Among the emancipators are the millions whose stories will never be known. They lived the struggle. They were the great resistance,” Gibson writes. In tracing these collective acts of defiance, she reminds us that freedom itself is an idea made real through action—and that freedom, to be true, must belong to everyone.



The Vaughan Homestead will be open for informal touring before and after Ms. Gibson’s talk. Visitors are invited to enjoy refreshments in the dining room and explore a special self-guided exhibit, “What the Walls Don’t Say,” which examines the Hallowell–Vaughan family’s historical connections to Caribbean slavery and slave rebellions in Jamaica.

A promotional image for an interactive ArcGIS StoryMap exploring the legacy of Samuel Vaughan and his family's involvement in transatlantic commerce and the slave economy. The image features portraits of historical figures and includes a QR code for access to the StoryMap.

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