Last summer, I vacationed at Lakeside, Ohio, a community on the shore of Lake Erie. My kids played along the beach of the world's largest fresh-water lake, while I relaxed or played tennis. My family enjoyed free daily concerts from orchestras and performers. Free lectures on historical and scientific topics were also offered. I marveled that despite having nearly ten thousand summer residents, crime is seldom heard of, and bicycles are often left about unlocked.
Lakeside Ohio is known as a "Chautauqua", an American community movement which emerged in the 1870's, when a Methodist minister combined a church revival meeting with lectures from noted speakers and performances by musicians and actors. Chautauqua grew to become an American summer tradition, and yearly Chautauqua assemblies emerged, many organized around a particular faith. But by the 1930's, as radio and other sources of information and entertainment spread, the tradition had largely died out.