- Bushmaster Maker Remington Being Sold
- Separate SUNY Presidencies Preserved
- Farm Bureau Opposes Rooftop Highway
- 1800s Archeology Find in Utica
- $165M UAlbany Expansion Approved
- Call for New Urban Research
- Conservation Center Opening in Brooklyn
- Fiscal Cliff: Ed Facing Millions in Cuts
- Destruction of Historic Church Approved
- Military Museum Opens G.I. Joe Exhibit Read more
This Weeks New York History Web Highlights
- Gettsyburg 1863: Washington Co’s Heroic Fight
- Opinion: Rail-Removal Advocates Twist Facts
- Brian Mann: Do Regional Economic Councils Work?
- Holidays: Shared Roots of Hanukkah, Christmas
- 2nd Amendment: A History in Two Paintings
- Film History: Historians Assess Spielberg’s ‘-Lincoln’
- Jessica Collier: Young Visions For OWD Factory
- USDA Chief: Rural America Less Relevant
- Libraries: Becoming Havens for Homeless
- Albany’s Hudson Access: Waterfront Potential
Each Friday morning New York History compiles for our readers the previous week’s top web links about New York’s state and local history. You can find all our weekly round-ups here.
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Preservation League Seeks Nominations for 2013
The Preservation League of New York State is seeking nominations for its 2013 Excellence in Historic Preservation Awards, which recognize significant achievements in historic preservation throughout New York State.
The postmark deadline for nominations is February 14, 2013. The awards will be presented during the Preservation League’s Annual Meeting on May 15, 2013 in New York City at the historic New York Yacht Club. Read more
Saving Cities: Learning from Melanie Griffith
One of my favorite movie scenes is from Working Girl when Melanie Griffith explains while riding up the elevator with Trask and Indiana, how she came up with the idea for the corporate merger. It wasn’t as if she had been thinking about anything even remotely related to it. Her insight derived from a chance juxtaposition perceived by a mind willing to learn and open to new possibilities. Read more
New Exhibit: Long Island at Work and Play
Long Island’s story of work and play comes to life when a farmer, dust flying, rushes to market, a boy swings a baseball bat, a peddler sells fish door to door and a family, wearing their Sunday best, poses for a portrait in their new car.
The remarkable images, many of which have never been exhibited, are just some of the gems in the Society for the Preservation of Long Island Antiquities (SPLIA) collections and feature the work of such turn of the 20th century photographers as Clarence A. Purchase, Arthur S. Greene and Harry R. Gelwicks. Read more
Cayuga Museum Returns Iroquois Sacred Objects
The Cayuga Museum of History and Art, in Auburn, New York, has announced the return of 21 objects of spiritual significance to the custody of the Onondaga Nation. Nineteen masks and two wampum articles associated with burials were transferred from the Museum collection to the Onondaga Nation.
The 1990 Federal Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act (NAGPRA) mandates that federally funded museums return Native American “cultural items” to the lineal descendants or culturally-affiliated groups of the people who created them. The cultural objects covered include human remains, funerary objects, sacred objects, and items of cultural patrimony. Read more
The Churubusco Live-In: Clinton Countys Woodstock
We’ve all heard of Woodstock at one time or another—that famous (or infamous) concert held in August 1969. It was scheduled at different venues, but the final location was actually in Bethel, New York, about 60 miles from Woodstock. For many who lived through three major homeland assassinations, the Vietnam War, and the racial riots of the turbulent 1960s, Woodstock was an event representing peace, love, and freedom. It’s considered a defining moment of that generation, and a great memory for those who attended (estimated at 400,000). Read more
Chip Reynolds: Jupiter, Galileo and the Half Moon
What follows is a guest essay by Chip Reynolds, Half Moon Captain and Director of the New Netherland Museum.
Don’t miss a great opportunity that presents itself over the next two months —- and not on the ship, the Half Moon is in for the winter! Just step outside on a clear night and take a look overhead.
Jupiter is clear and distinct in the constellation Taurus, which can be seen in the east early in the evening, overhead about midnight and in the west before dawn. It is the brightest object in the sky (except when the Moon is around), flanked by Orion below and Gemini above. Read more
Fine Lines: Brooklyn Museums American Drawings
Fine Lines: American Drawings from the Brooklyn Museum presents a selection of more than a hundred rarely seen drawings and sketchbooks produced between 1768 and 1945 from the Brooklyn Museum’s exceptional collection. The exhibition will feature the work of more than seventy artists, including John Singleton Copley, Stuart Davis, Thomas Eakins, William Glackens, Marsden Hartley, Winslow Homer, Edward Hopper, Eastman Johnson, Georgia O’Keeffe, John Singer Sargent, and Benjamin West. Read more
Books: Fight All Day, March All NIght
In 1862 twenty-one-year-old Morris Brown Jr. left his studies at Hamilton College to take up the Union cause. He quickly rose in rank from sergeant major to captain and acting regimental commander for the 126th New York Volunteers. Fight All Day, March All Night: A Medal of Honor Recipient’s Story (SUNY Press Excelsior Editions, 2012) is the narrative of a young Civil War officer, as told through his letters from the battlefield and edited by Civil War historian Wayne Mahood.
In letters written to his family in Penn Yan, New York, Brown describes his experiences at war: the unseemly carping between fellow officers, the fear that gripped men facing battle, and the longing to return home. Brown’s letters also reveal an ambitious young man who not only wanted recognition but also wanted to assure himself of a financial future. Read more