Knowing Our Place

Arthur Mullen

Knowing Our Place is a series of reflections by Arthur Mullen, exploring the layered history of New Haven, through architecture, adaptive reuse, civic memory, and the meaning embedded in physical places. Moving through forgotten buildings, public spaces, landscapes, and historical moments, the series uses the story of one city to ask larger questions about identity, democracy, community, and what it means to belong somewhere. Through history, preservation, and observation, we examine how the places we inherit continue shaping the people we become.

Episodes

  1. May 16

    Marshal of the Opera House

    In this episode of Knowing Our Place, we explore the remarkable rise and dramatic fall of Peter R. Carll, the United States marshal, theater impresario, and visionary behind New Haven’s great nineteenth century opera house. Standing at the intersection of ambition, spectacle, politics, and urban transformation, Carll helped reshape Chapel Street during an era when American cities were rapidly reinventing themselves. His opera house was not merely a theater, but an enormous civic machine for wonder, gathering thousands beneath one roof at a moment when mass entertainment itself was transforming American life. But Carll’s story is also one of instability, speculation, and collapse. Financing the immense project required a precarious web of loans, stock arrangements, mortgages, and personal risk. As New Haven modernized around him, Carll embodied both the brilliance and volatility of the Gilded Age dreamer: charismatic, reckless, endlessly ambitious, and often unable to maintain control over the very systems he helped create. His personal struggles eventually became inseparable from the fate of the opera house itself. And yet, despite losing the theater that defined his life, Peter Carll’s vision endured. The original opera house is gone, but the site remains layered with memory: Roger Sherman, the Warner House, Carll’s Opera House, the Hyperion, and today’s Union League. Each generation built over the last, believing in its own permanence. In many ways, Carll’s life becomes a reflection of New Haven itself, a city shaped not only by careful planners, but also by unstable dreamers bold enough to imagine something larger than the world around themselves. Source: https://hyperionnewhaven.com/2019/06/10/carlls-opera-house-grand-opening-night/

    29 min
  2. Apr 28

    Washington's New England Tour 1789

    In October 1789, during the first congressional recess, mere months after the Constitution took effect, George Washington set out from New York on a demanding tour through New England. The young United States was fragile and widely mistrusted, and Washington’s journey was meant to give the new federal government a visible, tangible legitimacy. Traveling rough Connecticut roads, he arrived in New Haven early on Saturday, October 17th, after bypassing a formal escort, taking time to quietly observe the town, its churches, and Yale College before official duties began. That evening, Washington met local leaders, including New Haven’s mayor, Roger Sherman. Sherman was uniquely influential, the only founder to sign all four key founding documents, and a central figure at the Constitutional Convention. When debates over representation nearly collapsed that effort, he helped craft the Connecticut Compromise, establishing a bicameral Congress that balanced the interests of large and small states. Washington deeply respected Sherman, seeing in him the practical intellect that helped make the new government workable. On Sunday, October 18th, Washington carefully attended both Episcopal and Congregational services to show unity, then dined with state officials before visiting Sherman’s home for tea. There, a brief exchange revealed the human side of history: as he left, Sherman’s young daughter Mehitabel held the door, and the president shared a moment with her. It was a small scene, but it reflected something larger. The founding of the United States happened not just in grand halls, compromises, and documents, but also in homes, conversations, and quiet acts of connection that helped hold a new nation together. Source: https://rogershermanhouse.com/2021/11/09/the-tour-of-general-washington-in-1789-by-katharine-m-abbott/

    26 min

Ratings & Reviews

5
out of 5
5 Ratings

About

Knowing Our Place is a series of reflections by Arthur Mullen, exploring the layered history of New Haven, through architecture, adaptive reuse, civic memory, and the meaning embedded in physical places. Moving through forgotten buildings, public spaces, landscapes, and historical moments, the series uses the story of one city to ask larger questions about identity, democracy, community, and what it means to belong somewhere. Through history, preservation, and observation, we examine how the places we inherit continue shaping the people we become.