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  • Sheet music.

    This article offers activities relating to poet Katharine Lee Bates. She is most well known for her poem “America” (also known as "America the Beautiful").

    • Locations: Cape Cod National Seashore, Rocky Mountain National Park, Tallgrass Prairie National Preserve
    black and white portrait of Katharine Lee Bates

    The opening lines of “America the Beautiful” first struck Katharine Lee Bates atop Pikes Peak in the Rocky Mountains. During the summer of 1893, she embarked on a journey across the United States. Originally written as a poem, many of the lines in Bates’ ode to the American landscape refer to geographical features she encountered during her travels.

  • Longfellow House Washington's Headquarters National Historic Site

    Boston Marriages

    • Locations: Longfellow House Washington's Headquarters National Historic Site
    Engraving of two women in long dresses looking out window

    Longfellow’s writing, and that of members of his social circle, provide contemporary audiences a lens on the history of romantic relationships between women in New England in the 1800s. Boston Marriages were a newer concept in the second half of the 1800s, owing its meaning to the women involved in them. Women in these marriages were often from New England, college-educated, financially independent, and with careers of their own.

    • Type: Series
    • Locations: Longfellow House Washington's Headquarters National Historic Site, Minute Man National Historical Park, Salem Maritime National Historic Site
    Engraving of an imagined gallery filled with seated and standing authors of the United States

    This series examines Longfellow's personal and professional relationships with other preeminent authors of the United States.

  • March Into Reading Logo with symbols of Spartanburg, SC

    Your local community has many opportunities for you to discover, learn, and grow! This booklet will help you explore Cowpens National Battlefield and the Spartanburg County Public Libraries.

  • Independence National Historical Park

    "Forget Me Not" Poem, Philadelphia 1834

    • Locations: Independence National Historical Park
    black ink handwriting and colored drawing of a flower on a page of a book

    This is a page from Amy Matilda Cassey's friendship album most likely written by either Margaretta or Mary Forten, daughters of James Forten. This page has a drawing of a forget-me-not flower, the subject of the poem, along with a poem.

  • Reconstruction Era National Historical Park

    Series: Poems by Ellen Murray

    • Type: Series
    • Locations: Reconstruction Era National Historical Park
    Ellen Murray sits in a chair with a book next to two students.

    Very few of Ellen Murray’s writings have been identified or published. However, not all of Ellen Murray’s writings remained private. Between 1861 and 1865, she wrote at least fourteen poems that she had published in the National Anti-Slavery Standard, a prominent abolitionist newspaper. Her poems offer a glimpse in the world and perspective of one of Penn School’s founders.

  • Reconstruction Era National Historical Park

    Lines

    • Locations: Reconstruction Era National Historical Park
    The front page of a newspaper titled "The New South"

    This poem is part of a series by Ellen Murray, a co-founder of the Penn School on St. Helena Island, SC. "Lines" was first published in The New South on November 1, 1862.

  • Acadia National Park

    Samantha DeFlitch

    • Locations: Acadia National Park
    Woman wearing a ball cap and a broad smile stands along the shoreline of a coastal harbor

    Samantha DeFlitch, of Plymouth, NH, is participating as a Poet in the Artist-in-Residence program at Acadia National Park in 2025.

    • Type: Series
    • Locations: Bandelier National Monument, Valles Caldera National Preserve
    A woman stands in front of a colorful sign that says Valles Caldera National Preserve

    "Growing up, Valles Caldera, or The Valle as we called it, was always a place of seductive mystery. We loved it from afar, from the top of Pajarito Ski Hill, from the edges of New Mexico Highway 4, but never from inside its forbidden boundaries." In this series, artist-in-residence Melissa Fu shares place-based memories and ponderings that weave together her upbringing in the Jemez Mountains and her recent residency at Valles Caldera National Preserve.

Last updated: August 2, 2023