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Image by Olga Thelavart

Stories from the Experiment

New Harmony's story doesn't belong to any single person, organization, or perspective. Here, people share their insights into the Owen-Maclure experiment: its ambitions, its conflicts, and what it means today. These stories will grow and evolve throughout the bicentennial.

This blog features diverse voices examining what happened in New Harmony between 1825 and 1827 and why it still matters. Some posts will raise more questions than they answer. That's intentional. The Owen-Maclure 200 is built around inquiry, and these stories reflect that commitment to honest, rigorous engagement with a complicated history.

We invite you to read, reflect, and join the conversation at our events, through our website, and on social media. 

Image by The New York Public Library

Featured Stories

Image by Olga Thelavart

Education and Innovation

New Harmony became a laboratory for educational ideas that were generations ahead of their time. These stories explore William Maclure's passionate belief that education could transform individuals and society, and the radical teaching methods that flourished in this small Indiana town. The educational ideas practiced here proved far more durable and influential than the social experiment that produced them, changing how Americans thought about teaching, learning, and human potential.

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