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Showing 215 results for advertising ...
- Type: Article
The year 2025 marks the 10th year since Honouliuli was designated as a National Monument, cementing it as a unit of the National Park Service. In 2019, Honouliuli National Monument was established as Honouliuli National Historic Site. To celebrate its 10th anniversary as a park, Honouliuli National Historic Site is partnering with over 50 organizations to connect communities to its important history of incarceration of prisoners of war and American civilians.
Nettie Craig Asberry
- Type: Person
Nettie Craig Asberry is considered the first Black woman to earn a doctorate degree. Her family settled in Nicodemus in 1879, and she taught in town from 1886-1889, teaching both at the District No. 1 School and offering private music lessons. Asberry spent most of her life in Tacoma, Washington where she continued to teach music and advocated for the equal rights of all.
- Type: Article
Located at 610 SW Alder Street, the Selling Building was built in 1910 and was added to the National Register in 1991 for its historic and architectural significance. Early tenants of the building were physicians and dentists including psychologist J. Allen Gilbert who, in 1917, treated Dr. Alan Hart (nee Alberta Lucille Hart) for sexual inversion. Despite categorizing Hart's condition as pathological and abnormal, Dr. Gilbert eventually supported Hart's transition.
- Type: Place
Todd Union on the University of Rochester campus in Rochester, New York, was listed in the National Register of Historic Places in 2023. Todd Union is significant as the site of origin of the University of Rochester's chapter of the Gay Liberation Front (GLF), which was founded in 1970. The creation and activities of the GLF established a sense of community amongst Rochester's LGBTQ residents, and advanced the community's fight for civil rights and gay liberation.
Cato’s Freedom Seeking Ad by Philip Syng - May 5, 1748
Saving Mori Point
Four Powered Flights
Musical Staircase
Historic Long House
- Type: Place
The Long House was constructed in 1833 by Phillip Long and Isabella (Murphy) Long. It was originally built of log construction, and additions were later added. On the lawn there is a granite pyramid identifying the first industry in Farmington, a tannery, owned by Phillip Graham Long. The house is typically open for tours during the first weekend of June and select dates during the holiday season.
Advertisement Seeking Recapture of Ona Maria Judge - May 24, 1796
Lorenzo G. Chase
- Type: Person
A member of the Boston Vigilance Committee, Chase contributed to the larger abolition movement through his work as a daguerreotypist.
Lamar Buffalo Ranch: Birthplace of Wildlife Conservation
Margo Connolly-Masson
- Type: Article
Margo Connolly-Masson, a Massachusetts-based collage artist and oil painter, brought her vibrant talent and unique artistic perspective to the New Bedford Whaling National Historical Park's Artist-in-Residence program from October to December 2022. Known for her ability to blend color, texture, and storytelling, Margo’s work is deeply inspired by the communities in which she has lived and worked, and her time in New Bedford added a fresh layer of inspiration to her craft.
- Type: Place
During the 1970s and early 1980s Sound 80 was widely recognized as the top recording location in the Twin Cities, and amongst the best recording studios in the nation. Designed and built using the latest acoustical engineering specifically for music recording. The studio was also heavily involved in the advancement of movie sound systems and digital recording. Utilizing Sound 80s cutting edge design and technology Prince achieved international success and stardom.
Virginia L. Wilder Parker
Freedom Seeking Ad for Bet - October 29, 1776
Freedom Seeking Ad for Bet - October 5, 1776
- Type: Article
During their junior year, students from Worcester Polytechnic Institute complete research projects for a variety of organizations. These research projects are an interdisciplinary, immersive team experience that usually take place off campus. In 2018, Glacier National Park was added to the list of project centers. Students work with park leadership on identified research projects. From mobile apps to solar webcams, students generate solutions that help park management.
Digitizing Artifacts from the Museum Collections at Valley Forge National Historical Park
- Type: Article
Lexi Coburn, a Revolutionary War and Iron Industry Museum Collections Intern at Valley Forge, spent the summer of 2021 working among the artifacts of the George C. Neumann collection, photographing historic objects one by one, and adding them to the digital records in the Interior Collections Management System (ICMS).
How the National Archives Became Home to the US Constitution, Declaration of Independence, and Bill of Rights
- Type: Article
The National Archives was established in 1934 to be a repository of important government documents due to inadequate storage of important federal records elsewhere. It was not until almost two decades later that the founding documents of the United States made their way into the Archives to ensure their protection.