social and politics

PETER HITCHENS: We're destroying the nation's wealth - and the health of millions

PETER HITCHENS: Why do I bother? For six weeks I have been saying the Government's policy on Covid-19 is a mistake. Most people do not agree, and many are angry with me for saying so.




social and politics

LIZ JONES COMMONS SKETCH: Theresa May smashed it.

LIZ JONES: Theresa May had been looking jittery all morning. She put her glasses on, she took her glasses off, she clutched her notes. She ignored her friend Ken Clarke, mouthing, 'Not now'.




social and politics

'किसानों की आय दोगुनी से भी ज्यादा कर देंगे'

किसानों के लिए क्या-क्या कर रही है मोदी सरकार? कृषि राज्य मंत्री कैलाश चौधरी ने न्यूज18 से बातचीत में दी जानकारी




social and politics

PHOTOS: 17वीं लोकसभा आज से, लेकिन इस बार सदन में नहीं दिखेंगे राजनीति के ये दिग्गज चेहरे!

इस बार लालकृष्ण आडवाणी, सुषमा स्वराज, उमा भारती, हुकुमदेव नारायण यादव, कमलनाथ और शरद पंवार ने नहीं लड़ा था लोकसभा चुनाव, ये मंत्री भी नहीं बने हैं इसलिए लोकसभा में नहीं दिखेंगे




social and politics

मायावती ने नेता नहीं कलेक्शन एजेंट रखे हुए हैं: राज बहादुर

बसपा के संस्थापक सदस्य रहे राज बहादुर ने कहा, मायावती ने कांशीराम का सपना कर दिया है ध्वस्त, वो अपने स्वार्थ से आगे नहीं बढ़तीं.




social and politics

ओबीसी से SC में आने वाली इन जातियों को क्या-क्या मिलेगा लाभ?

इन 17 ओबीसी जातियों को अब मिलेगा अनुसूचित जाति का लाभ, पढ़ाई-लिखाई से लेकर शासन और सत्ता तक के सफर में मिलेगा खास सहयोग




social and politics

नसीमुद्दीन का आरोप, 'मायावती ने मुझे जाने नहीं दिया और मेरी

नसीमुद्दीन ने आरोप लगाया है कि मायावती की वजह से वह अपनी बेटी के जनाजे में शामिल नहीं हो पाए थे.




social and politics

जब एक ही दिन में तीन बार पार्टी बदलकर यहां के निर्दलीय विधायक ने बनाया रिकॉर्ड

ये है आयाराम-गयाराम मुहावरे की पूरी कहानी! जो राजनीतिक कल्चर 1967 में हरियाणा ने शुरू किया था वो क्‍या था? सुबह में जो एमएलए इधर होता था, दोपहर में दूसरे खेमे में. शाम में तीसरे, रात में चौथे खेमे में, यह सब आज भी जारी है.




social and politics

ऐसा है देवीलाल परिवार की बहू नैना चौटाला का सियासी सफर!

Haryana Assembly Election: निशानेबाज रही हैं नैना चौटाला, इस बार इनेलो और बीजेपी दोनों को देंगी जवाब! उनके बेटे दुष्यंत चौटाला ने बनाई है जेजेपी नाम से नई पार्टी, बाढ़ड़ा सीट से लड़ रही हैं चुनाव




social and politics

कैप्टन अभिमन्यु: सेना से सियासत तक का सफर

Haryana Assembly Election: हरियाणा के सबसे ज्यादा पढ़े-लिखे नेताओं में होती है कैप्टन अभिमन्यु की गिनती, जाटलैंड की नारनौंद सीट पर उनके सामने बरकरार है चुनौती!




social and politics

जन्मदिन विशेष: यूं ही नहीं भारतीय राजनीति के सबसे बड़े 'खिलाड़ी' हैं अमित शाह!

अपनी लगन, कर्मठता और कार्यशैली की वजह से ही अमित शाह प्रधानमंत्री नरेंद्र मोदी के सबसे विश्वासपात्र साथी हैं. राजनीतिक विश्लेषकों का कहना है कि कोई भी अमित शाह की विचारधारा और कार्यशैली की आलोचना कर सकता है, लेकिन उनकी जीवटता और मेहनत पर सवाल नहीं उठा सकता.




social and politics

दिल्ली विधानसभा चुनाव 2020: 'आप' को बीजेपी से ज्यादा कांग्रेस से है खतरा!

Delhi Assembly Election-2020: पिछले तीन चुनावों में 30 फीसदी से कम नहीं हुआ बीजेपी (BJP) का वोटबैंक, लेकिन कांग्रेस (Congress) का 40 से गिरकर 10% पर आया. कांग्रेस का वोटर आम आदमी पार्टी (Aam Aadmi Party) के साथ खड़ा हो गया था. इसलिए कांग्रेस जितना बढ़ेगी 'आप' उतना ही कमजोर होगी.




social and politics

अमित शाह ने केजरीवाल से बहस के लिए प्रवेश वर्मा का ही क्यों लिया नाम?

बीजेपी के राष्ट्रीय अध्यक्ष के एक बयान ने दिल्ली में पार्टी की ओर से सीएम पद के दावेदारों में बढ़ाई बेचैनी




social and politics

आखिर किस मजबूरी में आंध्र के सीएम जगनमोहन खत्म करना चाहते हैं विधान परिषद?

क्या विधानसभा के पास है उच्च सदन खत्म करने का पूरा अधिकार, संविधान विशेषज्ञ सुभाष कश्यप कही ये बड़ी बात...




social and politics

Preserving History, One Sticky Note at a Time

Written by Claire L. Lanier During the heated 2016 election, New York artist Matthew “Levee” Chavez famously started the “sticky note project” in the Union Square subway station in Manhattan. Armed with nothing more than some pens and sticky notes, Levee encouraged passersby to write down their emotions surrounding the election and post them on the...

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social and politics

Donate Items from Inauguration, Women’s Marches, and Nationwide Protests

Become a part of history! We’re collecting signs, posters, banners, sashes, buttons, flyers, and other ephemera–and the stories behind them–from the presidential inauguration in Washington, D.C., and any recent nationwide protests, including the women’s marches in January 2017. Do you have something you’d like to donate to our permanent collection? Contact our curatorial team at responses@nyhistory.org. Please...

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social and politics

The First Inauguration

Written by Marci Reaven, Vice President of History Exhibits With presidential inaugurations in mind, we recently mounted a display of rare artifacts from the first inauguration—George Washington’s. You can see them as soon as you enter the museum. One of the objects is a section of the wrought-iron balustrade, or railing, that adorned the new capitol...

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social and politics

The Origins of the American Presidency

by Ted O’Reilly, Curator & Head of the Manuscript Department As part of the New-York Historical Society’s Presidency Project, the Patricia D. Klingenstein Library is displaying a selection of documents highlighting the earliest moments of the American presidency. Included are a leaf from the notes of Rufus King at the Constitutional Convention (a very rare...

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social and politics

George Washington’s Letter to Jewish Americans

written by Marci Reaven, Vice President for History Exhibitions In April 1789, when George Washington swore to uphold the Constitution as the first president of the United States, only 11 of the 13 states had voted to join the new union. North Carolina did not ratify the Constitution until that fall, and it took until the...

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social and politics

Presidential Power Program Series: Looking at what it means to be president

by Claire L. Lanier This spring, in conjunction with The Presidency Project, the Museum is offering a series of twelve public programs exploring the American presidency – what it means, who did it well, who did it not so well, how different interpretations of the presidency have manifested the current functioning of the office, and...

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social and politics

The Evolution of the Electoral College

by Jean Tanis The need for the Electoral College in our electoral process has long been debated, particularly after heated political contests as we saw in 2016. But despite wide discussion, this complicated system still remains murky to many Americans. What exactly is it? How was it developed? And why do some insist it stay...

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social and politics

Suffrage on the Menu: Traces of the Life and Legacy of Alva Vanderbilt Belmont

Written by Ina R. Bort Recently acquired by the New-York Historical Society, this small plate adorned with the “Votes for Women” slogan is linked to Alva Vanderbilt Belmont, a notable New Yorker whose fascinating, improbable life trajectory began as a society doyenne and ended as suffrage activist. This, the first of three posts, explores perhaps the...

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social and politics

Suffrage on the Menu, Part II: The Marble House Conferences of 1909 and 1914

Written by Ina Bort Our last post explored the biography of Alva Vanderbilt Belmont, the doyenne-turned-activist we believe commissioned this plate’s manufacture. Today we explore the first of two likely scenarios where this and similar plates may have been used: The suffrage conferences Alva organized at Marble House, her Newport estate, in 1909 and 1914....

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social and politics

Beyond the Hudson: The Singular Achievements of Robert Scott Duncanson

Written by Sophie Lynford, Acting Assistant Curator of American Art The term “Hudson River School” first appeared in print in 1879 in a review by the American art critic Earl Shinn. “Hudson River School” is an appellation that is still broadly applied to landscape paintings produced in the United States during the 19th century. Shinn,...

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social and politics

Mobilizing the Military: Enlistment Posters in World War I

Written by Kelly Morgan Before America’s entry into World War I in 1917, citizens significantly debated whether the United States should remain neutral. Artists contributed to this national conversation through their artwork. Consequently, the government depended on these artists in a variety of ways. From garnering support from the American public to ascertaining information from...

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social and politics

Christy Girls and Woman Workers: The Depiction of Women in World War I Posters

Written by Kelly Morgan Last week we looked at a few selections of World War I propaganda posters promoting enlistment culled from the New-York Historical Society. This week, we’ll examine how the posters called on women to support the war effort and utilized female imagery both for the purpose of enlisting soldiers and for their...

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social and politics

“Together We Win”: Unifying the Home Front

Written by Kelly Morgan In this final installment of the propaganda posters series, we’ll be examining the mobilization of the home front through Liberty loan drives and through manufacturing by appealing to the labor force, immigrant groups, and citizens unable to serve in the military or Red Cross. All posters discussed in this post are...

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social and politics

America’s Crown Jeweler

On September 1, 1939, in New York City, the World’s Fair was in its opening months of presenting an imponderable “world of tomorrow” to the wonder of the exposition’s visitors. At the same time in Europe, Hitler was setting in motion events that would constitute the very real underpinnings of a modern epoch. Standing then on...

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social and politics

“Over There”: Sheet Music and Propaganda during World War I

Written by Kelly Morgan, N-YHS Intern, Ph.D. candidate, Drew University Propaganda posters weren’t the only means of transmitting popular sentiment to the American public during World War I. Sheet music, both for popular songs and songs never even recorded, were ubiquitous in American homes. In the early 20th century, even the most popular songs sold...

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social and politics

Suffrage on the Menu, Part III: Alva’s Political Equality Association Lunchroom

Written by Ina Bort In our last two posts, we explored the life of Alva Vanderbilt Belmont and dropped in at her Marble House suffrage conferences in Newport, where “Votes for Women” plates like this one may very well have been used. But it may be that these plates were instead (or also) used—that is,...

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social and politics

Heels and History: What sparkly, red platform boots tell us about American culture

Written by Debra Schmidt Bach, Curator of Decorative Arts The New-York Historical Society recently acquired a pair of custom-made boots created for actor Kevin Smith Kirkwood for his role in the hit Broadway musical Kinky Boots, which tells the story of Charlie Price, a young Englishman who inherits his family’s failing shoe factory. While trying...

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social and politics

Bringing It All Back Home: The Vietnam War in Public History and Personal Memory

Written by Louise Mirrer, President and CEO, New-York Historical Society I was born in 1953, three months before the signing of the armistice that ended the Korean War. My uncle, a U.S. soldier stationed in the Philippines, came home to New York that summer, bearing souvenirs. Among them was an exquisite embroidered silk kimono. A...

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social and politics

National Art in Education Week: Meet the Art Educators of the Institution

In July 2010, the U.S. House of Representatives designated the second week of September as National Arts in Education Week. This annual celebration showcases and promotes the positive impact of arts education across the nation and its power to transform student learning. At the New-York Historical Society, arts education is a pillar of our educational mission. The...

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social and politics

“Live Your American Dream”: Celebrating 200 New U.S. Citizens

Sunday, September 17 marked the 228th anniversary of the signing of the U.S. Constitution, a day commonly honored as Constitution Day and Citizenship Day—acknowledging the role not only of our founding document but also of the citizens who live by it. How special, then, that one day after this noteworthy anniversary, we welcomed more than...

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social and politics

Scanning Bomblets: NYPD Bomb Squad Visits the Museum

It’s not every day you welcome the NYPD Bomb Squad into your museum…but that’s what happened recently at the New-York Historical Society! This week, we’re opening our groundbreaking new exhibition, The Vietnam War: 1945-1975, exploring the causes and consequences of one of the most divisive and controversial events in American history. The expansive exhibition features...

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social and politics

Program Recap: Loving v. Virginia

On Tuesday, October 24, the New-York Historical Society hosted its first Frederick Douglass Council event. The program — a look at the landmark U.S. Supreme Court case Loving v. Virginia — welcomed Dorothy E. Roberts as the guest speaker and featured Brent Staples as a moderator. Dorothy E. Roberts is an award-winning professor who has...

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social and politics

Talking Turkey and John James Audubon

Contrary to our notions of a Thanksgiving feast, the first harvest celebrated by the Pilgrims with the Wampanoag in 1621 did not focus on roast turkey. According to the one preserved written account, the menu pivoted around duck, venison, seafood, and corn. Turkey only became part of the annual Thanksgiving ritual after 1863, when Abraham...

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social and politics

Crystal Eastman and the Women’s Peace Movement

You have to think a little before you realize they want to talk peace and get ready to fight. – Crystal Eastman Benedict, chair of Woman’s Peace Party, in “Women Ridicule Security League,” The New York Times, June 6, 1915 The outbreak of World War I in Europe launched competing movements for “preparedness” and peace...

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social and politics

“Pilgrims Going to Church”: Thanksgiving and the Pilgrim in Public Memory

Thanksgiving in the modern-day American consciousness often evokes images of turkeys, balloons, pumpkin pies, and, of course, the inevitable reference to the Pilgrims. More than any other Thanksgiving icon, the Pilgrim emerged as the exemplary American success story: religious refugees banned from openly practicing their brand of Protestantism and desperate to retain their English identity....

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social and politics

Program Recap: The Slave’s Cause: A History of Abolition

On Tuesday, November 14, the New-York Historical Society hosted a discussion, “A Slave’s Cause: A History of Abolition.” This Frederick Douglass Council event featured Manisha Sinha as the guest speaker and Eric Foner as the moderator. Manisha Sinha, a James L. and Shirley A. Draper Chair in American History at the University of Connecticut, is...

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social and politics

Program Recap: Stalin: Waiting for Hitler, 1929-1941

On December 6, 2017, the New-York Historical Society hosted a lecture featuring distinguished historian Stephen Kotkin. Stephen Kotkin, author of the book Stalin: Waiting For Hitler, 1929-1941, explored Joseph Stalin’s forced industrialization of the Soviet Union and assessed his relationship with Hitler’s Nazi Germany during World War II.  When Kotkin took the stage, he opened...

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social and politics

Toy Drives and Women’s Charitable Work in New York City

Toy drives are a beloved feature of the holiday season, and have been for over a century. In New York City, women have long been at the center of efforts to care for poor and orphaned children. In 1806, Elizabeth Hamilton (yes, that Eliza) was one of the founders of the Orphan Asylum Society of...

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social and politics

Event Recap: Women of the Village with Blanche Wiesen Cook and Lara Vapnek

On December 15, 2017, the Center for Women’s History at the New-York Historical Society hosted a Salon Conversation titled “Women of the Village.” A hearty crowd filled the Museum’s fourth-floor Skylight Gallery on a snowy Friday evening for a tour of Hotbed in the Joyce B. Cowin Women’s History Gallery, followed by a conversation between Scholarly...

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social and politics

Women at the Center: Celebrating Our First Year at the Center for Women’s History

This year we opened the Center for Women’s History at the New-York Historical Society, the first institution of its kind within the walls of a major U.S. museum. Since then, we’ve been sharing the stories of formidable women whose courage, activism, and determination in the face of resistance inspire us all. It’s been a busy year! A...

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social and politics

Finding Women in the Archives: Student Nurses

Nursing, which as a profession has long been associated with women, offered opportunities not only for education and employment, but leadership. Long before American women could vote, they were able to influence public policy, often through professional organizations, such as those formed by nurses in the early 20th century. Student Nurses in the Orrin Sage...

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social and politics

“You Can’t Be What You Can’t See”: Teaching Women’s History

Currently, only 13 percent of the historical figures in history textbooks are women. Why does this matter? As one teacher put it, in his response to our national survey: “You can’t be what you can’t see.” Girls and young women make up more than half of K-12 students and college undergraduates. If women are considered...

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social and politics

Women Marching, Then and Now

Women in New York City have a long history of taking to streets and stages to make their voices heard. The suffrage parades of the 1910s captured the attention of the city and helped convince men that women were engaged citizens who deserved the right to vote. This past weekend, 200,000 women and men again...

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social and politics

Finding Women in the Archives: “Ladies without escorts cordially invited”

No visit to Hotbed, the exhibition currently on view in New-York Historical’s Joyce B. Cowin Women’s History Gallery, is complete without a stop in the “nickelodeon,” our re-creation of an early movie theater. Inside, visitors can see excerpts from the pro- and anti-suffrage films that proliferated in the early 20th century. However, you may be...

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social and politics

Family, Legacy, and Citizenship: Celebrating Frederick Douglass at 200

If you’ve ever visited the New-York Historical Society, you’ve probably enjoyed saying hello to (or even taking a selfie with!) our Frederick Douglass statue outside our 77th Street entrance. While we’re thrilled to celebrate his work every day as he welcomes visitors to the Museum, we’re especially excited this year to celebrate his life and...

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social and politics

Listening to Black Women’s Voices

What do diversity and inclusivity mean in a museum-based digital interactive installation? This question was central to the design of our Women’s Voices exhibit, a wall of touchscreens that allow visitors to explore individuals, groups, and events spanning New York State and City women’s history. Our goal was to balance the appeal of biographies while...

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