Spotlighting the History Department
History Major, Olivia Larson, is panning for gold and unearthing stories. At Queens, students complete an internship and create a capstone project before graduation. For Larson, these two opportunities struck the same vein.
Larson interned at Reed Gold Mine, a National Historic Landmark and the first documented discovery of gold in the United States. “I was a historic interpreter. I led tours, taught classes, and taught [visitors] how to pan for gold” said Larson. “I think the internship process at Queens is really valuable. It helps clarify what you want to do.” Her experience inspired research and refined her goals.
For her year-long project, she dug into the local history she had been showcasing. Her research considers “how gold mining in North Carolina led to class stratification and eventually helped set up Charlotte to be a banking city Post-Civil War.” Larson sees this history as not only enduringly present industrially, but also relevant socially. She argues that mining influenced “how attitudes towards blue-collar workers developed and how they mingle with racial nuances.”
Tangible evidence and tons of hands-on archival work are the support system for Larson’s thesis. “I found a lot of stuff,” she said. “I drove around to all the counties in North Carolina and found different records they had on gold mining families.” She explored the property and graveyard at Reed Gold Mine and examined ledgers.
Larson’s capstone paper is sparkling, and currently being submitted to academic journals, but at the beginning of her education at Queens she was drilling a new passageway. “I came [to Queens] as a nursing major. I was dead set. I come from a family of nurses,” said Larson. After taking a History course at Queens, she found new direction.
Faculty involvement and support illuminated the way. “The passion the History teachers have drew me into the program” said Larson. Those professors continued to provide help and guidance, all the way through her final project. She specifically appreciated “access to records [she] would have had to pay for.” This allowed her to tunnel deeper in her research. Queens faculty “are able to really funnel resources in at you when you’re passionate about something” said Larson.
As a student in the College of Arts and Sciences, Larson has found her passion. “I fell in love with the way you can tell the stories of people who got left behind in the historical narrative or are misrepresented [by it]” said Larson.
Struck by how much has yet to be excavated, she is excited to pursue a career as an educator. “I grew up in Charlotte, and this is a local history paper, but it is something I had never thought about before I started this capstone.” In simplification of a vast wealth of research, she wants people to know that in “1799 a little boy found a piece of gold and that is why we have Bank of America here today.”
From mines to archives, knowledge and ideas are constantly being created and discovered. In the College of Arts and Sciences at Queens University, all that glitters is academic excellence.








Hi everyone! My name is Alex Carver, and I’m one of the CAS blog writers and editors. I am a senior at Queens and majoring in Professional Writing and Rhetoric. I enjoy bullet journaling and hanging out with my dogs in my spare time, and I plan to teach English in South Korea once I graduate in May! What I love about Queens University is the quality of the education that I’ve received here so far. The professors within the College of Arts and Sciences are phenomenal and attentive, and truly care about your growth and learning as a student and person. We are encouraged to serve our community and are prepared to do important work out in the world once we graduate. My hope for this blog is that it showcases the high caliber of work done by both students and faculty within the College of Arts and Sciences, and I’m proud to play a role in helping show this.



