University News
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The Charger Blog
As colleagues in the Universityâs Lee College, Daniel Maxwell, MPA and Virginia Maxwell, D. Phil, typically connect while on or near campus in Connecticut. Recently, they met across the pond in Scotland for a âonce-in-a-lifetimeâ adventure that enabled them to explore a castle connected to their shared heritage.
October 2, 2023
Daniel Maxwell, MPA and Virginia Maxwell, D. Phil, share Scottish heritage and a passion for seeing their students in the Universityâs Lee College excel. They even started their positions at the University on the same day. While they do share a last name, they are, in fact, not related. But theyâve discovered that their families hail from the same region of Scotland â one they recently reconnected with.
The professors have gotten to be good friends, and theyâve discussed where in Scotland the Maxwells are from. Theyâve now had the opportunity to visit that very region together â each coming from a different country, six time zones away from each other â to get there.
Prof. Dan Maxwell spent the Spring semester teaching at the Universityâs campus in Prato, Italy. Many of his students would travel throughout Europe on weekends and during spring break, and he, too, took the opportunity to travel while he was in Italy. Prof. Maxwell and his wife decided to venture to Scotland over spring break. Awaiting them was an adventure that included winding roads, the ruins of a unique castle, and Dr. Virginia Maxwell.
âThere is a Maxwell castle thatâs a ruin,â explains Dr. Maxwell. âWe built a triangular castle. Actually, we built two castles, and one sank.â
âThis is why weâre in criminal justice and not engineers!â adds Prof. Maxwell with a laugh.
was familiar to both of them before the trip. Dr. Maxwell visited with her kids a few years earlier, and she describes it as âa pretty awesome place.â Prof. Maxwellâs uncle, who was exploring the familyâs genealogy, had told him about the castle. Prof. Maxwell was interested in visiting it, and when he was in Italy, he saw his opportunity.
When Prof. Maxwell and his wife were planning their trip, he reached out to Dr. Maxwell and let her know when they were planning to visit. As luck would have it, she was planning to be there at that time as well. Her mother, who lives on the east coast of Scotland, also has a cottage near Caerlaverock Castle. Thereâs an estuary between her cottage and the castle â theyâre just a few miles apart as the crow flies â though getting there requires a drive inland through back roads. The professors decided to meet at the castle.
âUsually, colleagues will meet each other at the kebab place near campus or at Jazzmanâs, and here we were meeting in Scotland in the middle of absolutely nowhere,â said Prof. Maxwell. âIt was crazy, and pretty cool.â
Cool, but also somewhat challenging, the Maxwells soon found. Prof. Maxwell, who had never been to Scotland, was particularly surprised by the drive to the castle. He found himself navigating narrow roads with stone walls alongside them â walls that seemed to come ever closer to the carâs side-view mirrors. The route also included several rotaries. And, of course, he was driving with a very different setup than what heâs used to.
âI didnât know anything about what this would entail, especially the driving part,â he recalls with a laugh. âWeâre driving a car with the steering wheel on the opposite side, and youâre driving on the other side of the road.â
âIt is challenging â plus, the castle is in the middle of nowhere,â adds Dr. Maxwell. âItâs not an easy castle to find. Kudos to Danny for actually finding it because you come off whatâs essentially an interstate, and you go on a smaller road, then you start driving on roads that are just a carâs width. For me, Iâm used to driving on those, but he isnât.â
Despite its size, the castle is not easy to locate. The professors drove down winding back roads, passing a small, inconspicuous sign pointing the way to the castle down a narrow road that isnât always well-maintained. But, they made it.
Dr. Maxwell explains that there isnât much else there on the grounds â just the castle itself and the moat surrounding it. They walked around the grounds, taking in the structure from the outside because, they found, they couldnât go inside. This castle, like many others in Scotland, was being repaired at the time. It has since reopened, though visitor access to certain areas is still restricted.
The professors did get a good look at the outside. They could walk all the way around the structure and even see what was being done inside. They got to see the castle, explored their shared heritage, and enjoyed connecting while across the pond from where they typically meet.
âIt was so much fun because of this notion that heâs in Italy and Iâm over here,â said Dr. Maxwell. âNow, weâre going to meet in this completely different place that both of us have to get to on a certain day at a certain time. Itâs kind of like "The Amazing Race", and we have to get there. I really enjoyed it. Weâll have to make sure the next time Danny and his wife are there, that Iâm over there again, too.â
Prof. Maxwell has taken the reins from his uncle, and heâs now in charge of the Maxwell genealogy in his family. Heâs now inspired to learn more, and heâd like to return to Scotland â and to again conquer the narrow roads and rotaries.
âIt was a cool experience, a once-in-a-lifetime thing,â he said. âIt was so unusual because weâre working at the same place at the same time, and we meet on another continent. I mean who does that? No one. It was awesome.â
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