Cover of the memorial volume for John David Wolfe, 1872. MS 3146, John David Wolfe Memorial Book and Case, New-York Historical Society Mixed up in the notorious Gilded Age dichotomy of incredible displays of wealth and extreme poverty, were extraordinary achievements in design and art, many of which reveal exceptional artisanship. This is especially evidenced…
Read MoreEngraving showing pastoral Italian landscape entitled “Evening” by William Byrne after Claude Lorrain, 1769. PR 141, Luman Reed Print Collection, New-York Historical Society A fundamental role of the cemetery is to ensure a peaceful final resting place for loved ones. They are also extraordinary living records of our society, in spite of often being overshadowed…
Read MoreThis post is one in a quarterly series in which the New-York Historical Society highlights the collections for which detailed finding aids were published over the prior three months. All collections receive at least a summary description in our catalog, Bobcat. But many collections have such depth or are simply so large or complex that…
Read MoreA great deal of what we know of New York’s archeological record, especially of Revolutionary New York, can be traced to the work of amateur archaeologist, William L. Calver, and his cohort in the New-York Historical Society’s Field Exploration Committee. Along with a series of Committee reports, Calver was a regular contributor of his findings to…
Read MoreIn 1995, retired Time Inc. Corporate Editor Gil Rogin sent a memorandum to Time Inc. Ventures President Bob Miller, the head of magazine development, regarding his “weird fascination with a zine called Bust.” A zine is a homemade publication, and in 1995 was usually printed using a photocopier, meaning Bust would have room to grow with investment from a…
Read MoreIn considering the 1797 map “A New & Accurate Plan of the City of New York in the State of New York in North America”–commonly known as the Taylor-Roberts Plan after its creators, Benjamin Taylor and John Roberts–Manhattan was then a little island of many identities. It was a city emerging from the devastating occupation…
Read MoreThe March of Time radio newsreel, created by radio executive Fred Smith along with Time magazine circulation director Roy Larsen, debuted on March 6, 1931 on CBS Radio with Time Inc. as the main sponsor. The series dramatized the news and reenacted events from its inception through 1942 when it became a regular news program…
Read MoreMahlon Day was a Quaker, publisher of children’s books, printer, and bookseller who resided in New York City. He was born in Morristown, New Jersey on August 27, 1790. By the age of 26, he owned a printing shop at 35 Beaver Street. Mahlon Day was one of two printers who dominated the New York…
Read MoreHow various and how strange are the events of life. What unexpected changes occur in the course of a few short years, or even months. How little I dreamed one year since, that I should ever make a voyage to China. To China, that far distant land, which so few of my country women, or…
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