Historical Association Visits Oriental Institute

Jan 05, 2022

By Patricia Yang 25

It was long and eagerly awaited. Erin Davis, a senior and current president of the Historical Association of Students (HAS), was especially excited. It was the first field trip since the spring of 2020, and HAS was泭going to泭泭(OI). Granted, Davis had been there beforebut why turn down the offer to go again? Before the trip, Davis said I love going to museums, and I miss going to museums.

She was delighted to have visited again. I forgot how quiet they can be, especially history museums. It’s like a reverent silence, because you’re looking at all these artifacts that are sometimes thousands of years old, and you suddenly remember that humanity is ancient. We’ve changed so much, and even now continue to change in monumental ways.

OI is a museum featuring Middle Eastern, East Asian, and North African history, exhibiting the history of places like Assyria, Babylon, and Egypt. Davis favorite part of the museum was a massive stone wall three times the size of a person, and carved on it was a mystical creature with the head of a man, the body of a lion, and wings like eaglesa lamassu.

This time around, the OI had a new exhibit on the photographer . He was a photographer in Iran during the 1880s to 1890s and took photos of people and everyday life. The exhibit featured several of his photos and also described泭Sevruguins泭career evolution. The thing that struck me was seeing泭Sevruguins泭photos and realizing that these are real people who existed, who had their own lives, families, loved ones, goals, and thoughtsand just so much made them泭them.泭These photos may be the only thing we have that shows us their lives, yet cannot possibly capture all of it, said Davis, reflecting on her museum trip experience.

HAS, founded in the spring of 2003, is recognized as an official club by the Student Government Association with the help of the History Department itself. For almost twenty years, weve been meeting, having the president hit his or her shoe on the desk to start and end the meeting, doing This Day in History, and other historical fun stuff, said Dr. John Fry, Professor of History. Most recently, weve taken advantage of Kahoots, some of which are really hilarious and all of which are fun.

Previously, HAS had hosted some lively activities on campus, such as a jousting tournament. I dont know how it went, because I was not there for the event, said Davis as she laughed. But I would love to bring something like that back! HAS also used to have a trebuchet (a medieval catapult). Fry retold, We put about 300 pounds of weights from the weight room on it, and it could throw a gallon jug of water about 75 feet.狸e also sometimes threw laptops, printers, and other items. The trebuchet is long gone now, but Davis would love to have something like that again, too.

And of course, HAS enjoys field trips to museums both local and regional: Cantigny Park, the Great Lakes Naval Museum, the Lincoln Museum and the Lincoln Home, and the Henry Ford Museum are just a few this club has gone to. They would go in 窪做惇蹋厙 vans and head out. On road trips, they would stay the night in a hotel, visit the site in the morning, and head back in the afternoon. Now that things are getting more back to normal, I would love to see us be able to do a road trip again, said Fry.

The OI field trip came to a closeand now the club returns to its usual routine: hitting the shoe, seeing This Day in History, and playing fun泭Kahoots. And perhaps next semester HAS will once again head out for another exciting museum泭visit.

To find out more about HAS and its activities, email Erin Davis泭or Dr. John Fry.