Independence
Total Page:16
File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Load more
Recommended publications
-
2008 Annual Report
5 YEARS OF EXCELLENCE FEATURED ARTICLES AND THE 2008 ANNUAL REPORT Benjamin Franklin’s Shoe PAGE 4 A Road Rich with Milestones PAGE 10 Today and Tomorrow: 2008 Annual Report PAGE 16 2008 Financials PAGE 22 FEATUREMAILBOX ONE 2 NATIONAL CONSTITUTION CENTER 5 Years of Excellence LETTER FROM THE EDITORS Dear Friends: Exceptional. That is the only word that can fully describe the remarkable strides the National Constitution Center has made in the past five years. Since opening its doors on July 4, 2003, it has developed into one of the most esteemed institutions for the ongoing study, discussion and celebration of the United States’ most cherished document. We’re pleased to present a celebration of the Center’s first five years and the 2008 Annual Report. In the following pages you will read about the Center’s earliest days and the milestones it has experienced. You will learn about the moving exhibitions it has developed and presented over the years. You will look back at the many robust public conversations led by national figures that have occurred on site, and you will be introduced to a new and innovative international initiative destined to carry the Center boldly into the future. It has been a true pleasure to work for this venerable institution, informing and inspiring We the People. We both look forward to witnessing the Center’s future achievements and we are honored that the next chapter of this story will be written by the Center’s new Chairman, President Bill Clinton. Sincerely, President George H. W. Bush Joseph M. -
The Liberty Bell: a Symbol for “We the People” Teacher Guide with Lesson Plans
Independence National Historical National Park Service ParkPennsylvania U.S. Department of the Interior The Liberty Bell: A Symbol for “We the People” Teacher Guide with Lesson Plans Grades K – 12 A curriculum-based education program created by the Independence Park Institute at Independence National Historical Park www.independenceparkinstitute.com 1 The Liberty Bell: A Symbol for “We the People” This education program was made possible through a partnership between Independence National Historical Park and Eastern National, and through the generous support of the William Penn Foundation. Contributors Sandy Avender, Our Lady of Lords, 5th-8th grade Kathleen Bowski, St. Michael Archangel, 4th grade Kate Bradbury, Rydal (East) Elementary, 3rd grade Amy Cohen, J.R. Masterman, 7th & 10th grade Kim General, Toms River High School North, 9th-12th grade Joyce Huff, Enfield Elementary School, K-1st grade and Library Coach Barbara Jakubowski, Strawbridge School, PreK-3rd grade Joyce Maher, Bellmawr Park, 4th grade Leslie Matthews, Overbrook Education Center, 3rd grade Jennifer Migliaccio, Edison School, 5th grade JoAnne Osborn, St. Christopher, 1st-3rd grade Elaine Phipps, Linden Elementary School, 4th-6th grade Monica Quinlan-Dulude, West Deptford Middle School, 8th grade Jacqueline Schneck, General Washington Headquarts at Moland House, K-12th grade Donna Scott-Brown, Chester High School, 9th-12th grade Sandra Williams, George Brower PS 289, 1st-5th grade Judith Wrightson, St. Christopher, 3rd grade Editors Jill Beccaris-Pescatore, Green Woods -
Philadelphia and the Southern Elite: Class, Kinship, and Culture in Antebellum America
PHILADELPHIA AND THE SOUTHERN ELITE: CLASS, KINSHIP, AND CULTURE IN ANTEBELLUM AMERICA BY DANIEL KILBRIDE A DISSERTATION PRESENTED TO THE GRADUATE SCHOOL OF THE UNIVERSITY OF FLORIDA IN PARTIAL FULFILLMENT OF THE REQUIREMENTS FOR THE DEGREE OF DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY UNIVERSITY OF FLORIDA 1997 ACKNOWLEDGMENTS In seeing this dissertation to completion I have accumulated a host of debts and obligation it is now my privilege to acknowledge. In Philadelphia I must thank the staff of the American Philosophical Society library for patiently walking out box after box of Society archives and miscellaneous manuscripts. In particular I must thank Beth Carroll- Horrocks and Rita Dockery in the manuscript room. Roy Goodman in the Library’s reference room provided invaluable assistance in tracking down secondary material and biographical information. Roy is also a matchless authority on college football nicknames. From the Society’s historian, Whitfield Bell, Jr., I received encouragement, suggestions, and great leads. At the Library Company of Philadelphia, Jim Green and Phil Lapansky deserve special thanks for the suggestions and support. Most of the research for this study took place in southern archives where the region’s traditions of hospitality still live on. The staff of the Mississippi Department of Archives and History provided cheerful assistance in my first stages of manuscript research. The staffs of the Filson Club Historical Library in Louisville and the Special Collections room at the Medical College of Virginia in Richmond were also accommodating. Special thanks go out to the men and women at the three repositories at which the bulk of my research was conducted: the Special Collections Library at Duke University, the Southern Historical Collection of the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, and the Virginia Historical Society. -
National Register of Historic Places
Form No. ^0-306 (Rev. 10-74) UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR NATIONAL PARK SERVICE NATIONAL REGISTER OF HISTORIC PLACES INVENTORY - NOMINATION FORM FOR FEDERAL PROPERTIES SEE INSTRUCTIONS IN HOWTO COMPLETE NATIONAL REGISTER FORMS TYPE ALL ENTRIES -- COMPLETE APPLICABLE SECTIONS NAME HISTORIC Independence National Historical Park AND/OR COMMON LOCATION STREET & NUMBER 313 Walnut Street CITY. TOWN CONGRESSIONAL DISTRICT t Philadelphia __ VICINITY OF STATE CODE COUNTY CODE PA 19106 CATEGORY OWNERSHIP STATUS PRESENT USE ^DISTRICT —PUBLIC —OCCUPIED —AGRICULTURE 2LMUSEUM -BUILDING(S) —PRIVATE X-UNOCCUPIED —^COMMERCIAL 2LPARK .STRUCTURE 2EBOTH —WORK IN PROGRESS —XEDUCATIONAL ^.PRIVATE RESIDENCE -SITE PUBLIC ACQUISITION ACCESSIBLE —ENTERTAINMENT —RELIGIOUS -OBJECT —IN PROCESS X-YES: RESTRICTED ^GOVERNMENT —SCIENTIFIC —BEING CONSIDERED — YES: UNRESTRICTED —INDUSTRIAL —TRANSPORTATION —NO —MILITARY —OTHER: REGIONAL HEADQUABIER REGION STREET & NUMBER CITY. TOWN STATE PHILA.,PA 19106 VICINITY OF COURTHOUSE, ____________PhiladelphiaREGISTRY OF DEEDS,ETC. _, . - , - , Ctffv.^ Hall- - STREET & NUMBER n^ MayTftat" CITY. TOWN STATE Philadelphia, PA 19107 TITLE DATE —FEDERAL —STATE —COUNTY _LOCAL CITY. TOWN CONDITION CHECK ONE CHECK ONE ^EXCELLENT —DETERIORATED —UNALTERED 2S.ORIGINALSITE _GOOD h^b Jk* SANWJIt's ALTERED _MOVED DATE. —FAIR _UNEXPOSED Description: In June 1948, with passage of Public Law 795, Independence National Historical Park was established to preserve certain historic resources "of outstanding national significance associated with the American Revolution and the founding and growth of the United States." The Park's 39.53 acres of urban property lie in Philadelphia, the fourth largest city in the country. All but .73 acres of the park lie in downtown Phila-* delphia, within or near the Society Hill and Old City Historic Districts (National Register entries as of June 23, 1971, and May 5, 1972, respectively). -
William Penn's Chair and George
WILLIAM PENN’S CHAIR AND GEORGE WASHINGTON’S HAIR: THE POLITICAL AND COMMERCIAL MEANINGS OF OBJECTS AT THE PHILADELPHIA GREAT CENTRAL FAIR, 1864 by Justina Catherine Barrett A thesis submitted to the Faculty of the University of Delaware in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Arts in Early American Culture Spring 2005 Copyright 2005 Justina Catherine Barrett All rights reserved Reproduced with permission of the copyright owner. Further reproduction prohibited without permission. UMI Number: 1426010 Copyright 2005 by Barrett, Justina Catherine All rights reserved. INFORMATION TO USERS The quality of this reproduction is dependent upon the quality of the copy submitted. Broken or indistinct print, colored or poor quality illustrations and photographs, print bleed-through, substandard margins, and improper alignment can adversely affect reproduction. In the unlikely event that the author did not send a complete manuscript and there are missing pages, these will be noted. Also, if unauthorized copyright material had to be removed, a note will indicate the deletion. ® UMI UMI Microform 1426010 Copyright 2005 by ProQuest Information and Learning Company. All rights reserved. This microform edition is protected against unauthorized copying under Title 17, United States Code. ProQuest Information and Learning Company 300 North Zeeb Road P.O. Box 1346 Ann Arbor, Ml 48106-1346 Reproduced with permission of the copyright owner. Further reproduction prohibited without permission. WILLIAM PENN’S CHAIR AND GEORGE WASHINGTON’S HAIR: THE POLITICAL AND COMMERCIAL MEANINGS OF OBJECTS AT THE PHILADELPHIA GREAT CENTRAL FAIR, 1864 By Justina Catherine Barrett Approved: _______ Pauline K. Eversmann, M. Phil. Professor in charge of thesis on behalf of the Advisory Committee Approved: J. -
National Historical Park Pennsylvania
INDEPENDENCE National Historical Park Pennsylvania Hall was begun in the spring of 1732, when from this third casting is the one you see In May 1775, the Second Continental Con The Constitutional Convention, 1787 where Federal Hall National Memorial now ground was broken. today.) gress met in the Pennsylvania State House stands. Then, in 1790, it came to Philadel Edmund Woolley, master carpenter, and As the official bell of the Pennsylvania (Independence Hall) and decided to move The Articles of Confederation and Perpet phia for 10 years. Congress sat in the new INDEPENDENCE ual Union were drafted while the war was in Andrew Hamilton, lawyer, planned the State House, the Liberty Bell was intended to from protest to resistance. Warfare between County Court House (now known as Con building and supervised its construction. It be rung on public occasions. During the the colonists and British troops already had progress. They were agreed to by the last of gress Hall) and the United States Supreme NATIONAL HISTORICAL PARK was designed in the dignity of the Georgian Revolution, when the British Army occupied begun in Massachusetts. In June the Con the Thirteen States and went into effect in Court in the new City Hall. In Congress period. Independence Hall, with its wings, Philadelphia in 1777, the bell was removed gress chose George Washington to be Gen the final year of the war. Under the Arti Hall, George Washington was inaugurated has long been considered one of the most to Allentown, where it was hidden for almost eral and Commander in Chief of the Army, cles, the Congress met in various towns, only for his second term as President. -
National Register of Historic Places Inventory
Form No. ^0-306 (Rev. 10-74) UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR NATIONAL PARK SERVICE NATIONAL REGISTER OF HISTORIC PLACES INVENTORY - NOMINATION FORM FOR FEDERAL PROPERTIES SEE INSTRUCTIONS IN HOWTO COMPLETE NATIONAL REGISTER FORMS TYPE ALL ENTRIES -- COMPLETE APPLICABLE SECTIONS NAME HISTORIC Independence National Historical Park AND/OR COMMON LOCATION STREET & NUMBER 313 Walnut Street CITY. TOWN CONGRESSIONAL DISTRICT t Philadelphia __ VICINITY OF STATE CODE COUNTY CODE PA 19106 CATEGORY OWNERSHIP STATUS PRESENT USE ^DISTRICT —PUBLIC —OCCUPIED —AGRICULTURE 2LMUSEUM -BUILDING(S) —PRIVATE X-UNOCCUPIED —^COMMERCIAL 2LPARK .STRUCTURE 2EBOTH —WORK IN PROGRESS —XEDUCATIONAL ^.PRIVATE RESIDENCE -SITE PUBLIC ACQUISITION ACCESSIBLE —ENTERTAINMENT —RELIGIOUS -OBJECT —IN PROCESS X-YES: RESTRICTED ^GOVERNMENT —SCIENTIFIC —BEING CONSIDERED — YES: UNRESTRICTED —INDUSTRIAL —TRANSPORTATION —NO —MILITARY —OTHER: REGIONAL HEADQUABIER REGION STREET & NUMBER CITY. TOWN STATE PHILA.,PA 19106 VICINITY OF COURTHOUSE, ____________PhiladelphiaREGISTRY OF DEEDS,ETC. _, . - , - , Ctffv.^ Hall- - STREET & NUMBER n^ MayTftat" CITY. TOWN STATE Philadelphia, PA 19107 TITLE DATE —FEDERAL —STATE —COUNTY _LOCAL CITY. TOWN CONDITION CHECK ONE CHECK ONE ^EXCELLENT —DETERIORATED —UNALTERED 2S.ORIGINALSITE _GOOD h^b Jk* SANWJIt's ALTERED _MOVED DATE. —FAIR _UNEXPOSED Description: In June 1948, with passage of Public Law 795, Independence National Historical Park was established to preserve certain historic resources "of outstanding national significance associated with the American Revolution and the founding and growth of the United States." The Park's 39.53 acres of urban property lie in Philadelphia, the fourth largest city in the country. All but .73 acres of the park lie in downtown Phila-* delphia, within or near the Society Hill and Old City Historic Districts (National Register entries as of June 23, 1971, and May 5, 1972, respectively). -
Dinner with Ben Franklin: the Origins of the American Philosophical Society1
Dinner with Ben Franklin: The Origins of the American Philosophical Society1 LINDA GREENHOUSE President, American Philosophical Society Joseph Goldstein Lecturer in Law, Yale University e gather today to celebrate the American Philosophical Soci- ety’s 275th anniversary. But in fact, our story begins 16 years W earlier, in 1727, here in Philadelphia, and it is that origin story that is my focus this afternoon. The measure of my success in telling that story will be whether at the end of the next 20 minutes you will be left wishing—as I was when I first encountered this tale—that you could have been a guest at the young Benjamin Franklin’s table during those years when the notion of the APS was taking shape in his incredibly fertile mind. In 1727, Franklin was 21 years old and working in Philadelphia as the manager of a printing house. He invited those whom he called his “ingenious acquaintances” to join a “club of mutual improvement” that he called The Junto, from the Latin iungere, meaning “to join.”2 Members of the Junto met on Friday evenings in a local tavern. This was not a casual invitation. Here is how Franklin described the club in his Autobiography: The Rules I drew up, requir’d that every Member in his Turn should produce one or more Queries on any Point of Morals, Poli- tics or Natural Philosophy, to be discuss’d by the Company, and once in three Months produce and read an Essay of his own Writing on any Subject he pleased. Our Debates were to be under the Direction of a President, and to be conducted in the sincere Spirit of Enquiry after Truth, without fondness for Dispute, or Desire of Victory; and to prevent Warmth, all Expressions of Posi- tiveness in Opinion, or of direct Contradiction, were after some time made contraband & prohibited under small pecuniary Penalties.3 1 Read 26 April 2018. -
Mitchell/Giurgola's Liberty Bell Pavilion
University of Pennsylvania ScholarlyCommons Theses (Historic Preservation) Graduate Program in Historic Preservation 2001 Creation and Destruction: Mitchell/Giurgola's Liberty Bell Pavilion Bradley David Roeder University of Pennsylvania Follow this and additional works at: https://repository.upenn.edu/hp_theses Part of the Historic Preservation and Conservation Commons Roeder, Bradley David, "Creation and Destruction: Mitchell/Giurgola's Liberty Bell Pavilion" (2001). Theses (Historic Preservation). 322. https://repository.upenn.edu/hp_theses/322 Copyright note: Penn School of Design permits distribution and display of this student work by University of Pennsylvania Libraries. Suggested Citation: Roeder, Bradley David (2002). Creation and Destruction: Mitchell/Giurgola's Liberty Bell Pavilion. (Masters Thesis). University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA. This paper is posted at ScholarlyCommons. https://repository.upenn.edu/hp_theses/322 For more information, please contact [email protected]. Creation and Destruction: Mitchell/Giurgola's Liberty Bell Pavilion Disciplines Historic Preservation and Conservation Comments Copyright note: Penn School of Design permits distribution and display of this student work by University of Pennsylvania Libraries. Suggested Citation: Roeder, Bradley David (2002). Creation and Destruction: Mitchell/Giurgola's Liberty Bell Pavilion. (Masters Thesis). University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA. This thesis or dissertation is available at ScholarlyCommons: https://repository.upenn.edu/hp_theses/322 uNivERsmy PENNSYLVANIA. UBKARIES CREATION AND DESTRUCTION: MITCHELL/GIURGOLA'S LIBERTY BELL PAVILION Bradley David Roeder A THESIS In Historic Preservation Presented to the Faculties of the University of Pennsylvania in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirement for the Degree of MASTER OF SCIENCE 2002 Advisor Reader David G. DeLong Samuel Y. Harris Professor of Architecture Adjunct Professor of Architecture I^UOAjA/t? Graduate Group Chair i Erank G. -
Pennsylvania Pennsylvania
NHL:: flfrrica at Work, Science^Work NATIONAL HISTORIC LANDMARK -.—-^f——————————————— Form 10-300 UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR (Rev. 6-72) NATIONAL PARK SERVICE Pennsylvania COUN TY: . T1 NATIONAL REGISTER OF HISTORIC PLACES Philadelphia AATJOML FiSTOI^VENTORY - NOMINATION FORM _______FOR NPS USE ONL_Y ENTRY DATE (Type all entries - complete applicable sections) COMMON: American Philosophical Society Hall AND/ OR HISTORIC: AMERICAN PHILOSOPHICAL SOCIETY HALL STREET ANQNUMBER: Independence Square CITY OR TOWN: CONGRESSIONAL DISTRICT: Philadelphia 003 COUNTY: Pennsylvania 42 Philadelphia 101 ACCESSIBLE OWNERSH.P STATUS, TATIK TO THE PUBLIC Q District Building D Public Public Acquisition: Occupied Yes: Q) In Process il . , K] Restricted D Site Structure 53 Private Unoccupied "^ D Both | | Being Considered d Unrestricted Object LJr~ i PreservationD worki ' — ' in progress PRESENT USE (Check One or More as Appropriate) O Agricultural Q Government Q) Park l~l Transportation 1 1 Comments [^.Commercial 1 1 Industrial [~| Private Residence D Other (Specify) 1 1 Educational 1 1 Military [ | Religious 1 1 Entertainment tZ] Museum jgj Scientific OWNER'S NAME: American Philosophical Society, Dr. George W. Corner, Executive Officer STREET AND NUMBER: American Philosophical Society Hall sylvania CITY OR TOWN: STATE: Philadelphia Pennsylvania 42 COURTHOUSE, REGISTRY OF DEEDS, ETC: 13 V Dept. of Records H- STREET AND NUMBER: h-> City Hall s.CD CITY OR TOWN: -dh-> *-*•& Phi1adeIphia ____^ W I TITLE OF SURVEY: Historic American Building Survey -
Preserving the Work of Mitchell/Giurgola Associates
University of Pennsylvania ScholarlyCommons Theses (Historic Preservation) Graduate Program in Historic Preservation 1-1-2006 Preserving the Work of Mitchell/Giurgola Associates Brendan R. Beier University of Pennsylvania Follow this and additional works at: https://repository.upenn.edu/hp_theses Part of the Historic Preservation and Conservation Commons Beier, Brendan R., "Preserving the Work of Mitchell/Giurgola Associates" (2006). Theses (Historic Preservation). 3. https://repository.upenn.edu/hp_theses/3 Presented to the Faculties of the University of Pennsylvania in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements of the Degree of Master of Science in Historic Preservation 2006. Advisor: David G. De Long This paper is posted at ScholarlyCommons. https://repository.upenn.edu/hp_theses/3 For more information, please contact [email protected]. Preserving the Work of Mitchell/Giurgola Associates Disciplines Historic Preservation and Conservation Comments Presented to the Faculties of the University of Pennsylvania in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements of the Degree of Master of Science in Historic Preservation 2006. Advisor: David G. De Long This thesis or dissertation is available at ScholarlyCommons: https://repository.upenn.edu/hp_theses/3 PRESERVING THE WORK OF MITCHELL/GIURGOLA ASSOCIATES Brendan Reid Beier A THESIS in Historic Preservation Presented to the Faculties of the University of Pennsylvania in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements of the Degree of MASTER OF SCIENCE IN HISTORIC PRESERVATION 2006 __________________________ -
Program Guide #Getnerdyphl
APRIL 26 – MAY 4 2019 PROGRAM GUIDE www.PhilaScienceFestival.org #GETNERDYPHL PRESENTING SPONSOR 9 DAYS. OVER 60 EVENTS. Welcome to The Philadelphia Science MORE THAN 75,000 ATTENDEES. Festival—a nine-day, community-wide 1 GOAL! celebration of science! Together, The Franklin Institute and 200 collaborators from the region's leading educational, cultural, and scientific institutions are joining forces to educate, inspire, and excite the Delaware Valley about the science present in our everyday lives. From vegetable gardens to beer gardens; from public parks to fossil parks; and from chemistry labs to maker spaces— we invite you to get curious, get creative, and most of all... #GetNerdyPHL | PhilaScienceFestival.org We are grateful to FMC for generously supporting the Philadelphia Science Festival as Presenting Sponsor in 2019. learn more at PhilaScienceFestival.org 2 3 FESTIVAL EVENTS AT A GLANCE PAGE 7 PAGE 8-10 PAGE 11 PAGE 12-15 PAGE 16-17 PAGE 18-19 PAGE 20 PAGE 21 PAGE 22 PAGE 23 PRE FRI SAT SUN SUN MON TUES WED THURS FRI FESTIVAL APRIL APRIL APRIL APRIL APRIL APRIL MAY MAY MAY EVENT 26 27 28 28 29 30 1 2 3 SAT Citywide Science Be a Murder Science Science Science Science Electric MARCH Star Party Saturday Scientist! at the After After After in the Jellyfish 30 Various at Rutgers Various Mütter®: School School School National at the times 11 am–1 pm Times Workplace 3:30– 3:30– 3:30 – Park Philly Tech Science Woes 5:30 pm 5:30 pm 5:30 pm Week Various Various 10 am– at the Locations Rutgers Locations 2–6 pm Greater Andorra, Fumo Kickoff Ballpark University Olney, 2 pm 6–8 pm Mütter Eastwick, In- Family, Indepen- Science Star Party POP Philadelphia Museum dependence, Holmes- dence Science Activities After Party Science in the City of the and Joseph burg, and National History at 2:30 pm in the Park Institute, 10 pm– College of E.