Don't Forget the Concord Homepage!
Our Community Website acts as an underlying resource to the Concord Magazine...like an encyclopedia of information to fill in background and to provide you with more information should you want it. You can also choose from:
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Hidden Concord: Sacred Landscapes - Prehistoric or Not?
By Peter Waksman. Come on a journey through local sites which may or may not be prehisoric sacred places. First of three articles.
Letters to the Editor
From our electronic mailbag...submit your own for publication!
This Month's Art
The verdict is in and the new, more graphical look for the magazine is in! This month, Concord artist Kristina Joyce is in focus on our pages.
Hidden Concord: Liberty's Daughters
By D. Michael Ryan. The contributions by local colonial women are oft-overlooked when it comes to the history of the Concord Fight. Here we help to rectify that omission.
Under Water Walden
By Kristina Joyce. What's below the surface of Walden Pond? The author is probably the first to photograph its depths...find out what she saw down there.
The Arts in Concord: Dance Classes with Fun and Variety
By Grace Foote. This adult dance class offers fun, exercise, and a variety of dance styles for both beginning and more experienced dancers.
Editorial: When IS Concord's Birthday?
By the Concord Magazine. Concord's birthdate is NOT as straight-forward as you might think it would be.
The Concord and Lexington Minuteman Statues: Not the Same!
By Deborah Bier. Often confused with one another, these two statues are definately NOT the same. The ways they differ may surprise you.
The Arts in Concord: Limner of the New England Landscape
By Kristina Joyce. Former director of Concord Art Association Loring Coleman's work is given an unforgettable retrospective.
The Concord Sonata and Symphony
By Anthony Dorman. The Concord Sonata by Charles Ives and the Concord Symphony by Henry Brant important pieces of American Music and reflect the lives of the 19th Century Concord Authors.
The Back Page
Favorite Concord views and quotes. This time: "Little Women" and the grave of Elizabeth Alcott, the model for Beth March.
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Go to: Concord Homepage Subscribe
Table of Contents
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Read us like a magazine
How do you like to read through a paper magazine? Do you navigate through the table of contents, going only to articles which catch your eye? Do you start at one end and turn one page after another until you've flipped through every one? Or some of both approaches?
You can read this electronic magazine (or "e-zine") the same way. Choose the Table of Contents link at the bottom or top of each page for the index of articles. Or, choose the "next" or "previous" page links if you want to "flip" through every page.
The only thing we can't offer you that a paper magazine can is those annoying little subscription cards which fall out, littering everywhere. Oh, and papercuts. Ouch!
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©1998 The Concord Magazine. All rights reserved. The Concord Homepage, The Concord Magazine and Hometown Websmith and their respective logos are servicemarks of Hometown Websmith. Reproduction or repurposing in whole or in part
in any form or medium without express written permission from the publisher is prohibited.
The opinions expressed by the authors are their own and not necessarily those of
The Concord Magazine. There may be errors, inaccuracies or omissions in information on the
site. The Concord Magazine disclaims any responsibility or liability for errors,
inaccuracies or omissions.
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