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MUSEUMS CALL FOR ADVOCACY FOR COVID-19 RELIEF March 20, 2020 by Editorial StaffLeave a Comment
The
Museum Association of New York is working with the American Alliance of Museums and other museum associations to make the case for museums in this time of crisis. New York State’s museums contribute $5.37 billion to the NYS economy and support over 61,000 jobs. Museums of all sizes and disciplines are closed. Everyone will experience extensive loss of earned income from restricted attendance and canceled events. Museum advocates say some museums have laid off their entire staffs and at least one in the Capital Region has closed permanently. about Museums Call For Advocacy ForCOVID-19 Relief
Filed Under: Adirondacks, Arts
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Catskills ,
History , Hudson
River Valley
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Island ,
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History ,
New York City
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NY , Southern
Tier ,
Western NY
Tagged With: Advocacy , American Alliance of Museums,
MANY , Museums
THE BOMBING OF DRESDEN, GERMANY (PODCAST) March 20, 2020 by Bob CudmoreLeave a Comment
This
week on The Historians Podcast, the guest is World War IIhistorian
Sinclair McKay of the United Kingdom who is author of _The Fire and the Darkness: The Bombing of Dresden, 1945._
The book also details the rebuilding of Dresden, which was located in Communist East Germany after the war. about The Bombing of Dresden, Germany (Podcast) Filed Under: Adirondacks,
Capital-Saratoga
,
Catskills ,
History , Hudson
River Valley
, Long
Island ,
Mohawk Valley
, Natural
History ,
New York City
, Northern
NY , Southern
Tier ,
Western NY
Tagged With: Books ,Military History
, Podcasts
, World War Two
GROUNDS OPEN AT WASHINGTON HEADQUARTERS March 20, 2020 by Editorial StaffLeave a Comment
Washington’s
Headquarters State Historic Site in Newburghhas announced their
grounds will remain open Monday through Saturday, 9 am to 3 pm. about Grounds Open At Washington Headquarters Filed Under: History, Hudson River
Valley
Tagged With: Newburgh , Washington's Headquarters NEW YORK HISTORY AROUND THE WEB THIS WEEK March 20, 2020 by Editorial StaffLeave a Comment
* First To Volunteer: The Conflicting Civil War Claims * MANY Update: Museums Conference Postponed * Poster Women: Commercial Communication * Schoharie Aqueduct Restoration Update * Tavern on the Green Epitomized Colonial NYC Development * Words From Underground: Madness and the OED * Census Suspends 2020 Count Until April * Long Islanders Who Worked for Women’s Suffrage * Preservation Myths: Government Money * An Adirondack Uranium Rush about New York History Around The Web This Week Filed Under: HistoryTagged With:
nyhistoryblogs
POSTER WOMEN: COMMERCIAL COMMUNICATION March 19, 2020 by Jaap HarskampLeave a Comment
In
November 1890 an exhibition took place in the exclusive rooms of the Grolier Club of bibliophiles and print collectors at no. 29 East 32ndStreet, Manhattan .
The exhibit included one hundred mainly French posters and book covers (only seven were by American artists). This, the first public show of Continental posters in America, generated a keen interest in this peculiarly Parisian phenomenon of commercial art. about Poster Women: Commercial CommunicationFiled Under: Arts ,
History , New
York City
Tagged With: Art History, Cultural History
, Manhattan
, New York City
, Social History
, womens history
NEW BOOK EXPLORES A NOTABLE NYC MURDER TRAIL March 19, 2020 by Editorial StaffLeave a Comment
Evelyn Nesbit, a chorus girl in the musical “Florodora,” dined alone with the architect Stanford White in his townhouse on 24th Street in New York in 1901. Nesbit was just sixteen years old and had recently moved to the city. White was forty-seven and a principal in the prominent architectural firm McKim, Mead & White. As a foremost architect of his day, he had a measure of celebrity, and the responsibility for designing countless landmark buildings in Manhattan. That evening, after drinking champagne, Stanford White raped her Evelyn Nesbit. about New Book Explores A Notable NYC Murder Trail Filed Under: Books ,History , New
York City
Tagged With: Books , Crimeand Justice ,
New York City
NEW YORK HISTORY DAY WINNERS CELEBRATED AT FORT TI March 19, 2020 by Maury Thompson1 Comment
Cole Siebels, a sophomore at Gouveneur Central School in St. Lawrence County, aspires to a career in film production. “I want to create things that people enjoy. I want to create things that bring out emotions in people,” he said. Siebels has gained valuable school-to-work experience competing four consecutive years in the documentary category of the North Country History Day regional competition, aimed at introducing middle school and high school students to historical research and presentation skills. about New York History Day Winners Celebratedat Fort Ti
Filed Under: Adirondacks, History
Tagged With:
Fort Ticonderoga
, New York
State Archives
,
Ticonderoga
FIRST TO VOLUNTEER: THE CONFLICTING CIVIL WAR CLAIMS March 18, 2020 by Brenda Thomas1 Comment
When rumbles of impending Civil War rolled through the North, New Yorkers were roused to volunteer even before Fort Sumter was taken and the President rallied troops. After Sumter fell and Lincoln issued his proclamation, more New Yorkers offered their service to the Union. Likewise, men in other states sought to join the Union army both before and after theproclamation.
After the war, some of those early, quick volunteers also battled to be named the first volunteer for the Union. Months, years, and decades after the war, numerous claims and accolades for who had been the first volunteer began emerging across the North. about First To Volunteer: The Conflicting Civil War Claims Filed Under: History, Western NY
Tagged With:
Auburn , Batavia
, Civil War
, Genesee County
, Holland Land
Company Museum
,
Military History
, Niagara
County , Niagara
County Historical Society,
Public History
SARATOGA BATTLEFIELD VISITOR CENTER CLOSURE March 18, 2020 by Editorial StaffLeave a Comment
The National Park Service today announced the suspension of operations at Saratoga National Historical Park (NHP), effective Wednesday, March 18. All facilities and buildings at the Battlefield Unit and Schuylerville Site are closed. The grounds are open sunrise to sunset and to be used at your own risk as there is no emergency staff on site. about Saratoga Battlefield Visitor Center Closure Filed Under: Capital-Saratoga, History
Tagged With:
Historic Preservation, Saratoga
, Saratoga National
Historical Park
ONE WOMAN, THREE COLONIAL AMERICAN WORLDS March 18, 2020 by Liz CovartLeave a Comment
Colonial
America comprised many different cultural and political worlds. Most colonial Americans inhabited just one world, but today, we’re going to explore the life of a woman who lived in three colonial American worlds: Frontier New England, Northeastern Wabanaki, and Catholic NewFrance.
about One Woman, Three Colonial American Worlds Filed Under: HistoryTagged With:
Early American History, Native
American History
, New
France , Podcasts
, womens history
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