The following are some examples of Native American Heritage Month Events taking place at museums and historical societies across New York State.
...
The following are some examples of Native American Heritage Month Events taking place at museums and historical societies across New York State.
...
The New York State 250th Commemoration Commission will be holding a meeting on Wednesday, October 23rd beginning at 10:00am. The meeting is open to the public and will take place at the Seneca Art & Culture Center at Ganondagan State Historic Site.
Remote viewing of the meeting will...
This episode delves into New York State’s role in the War of 1812, which is often considered America’s “second war of Independence.” With a particular focus on the State Historic site at Sackets Harbor, we learn the particularly important role that New York, and New Yorkers, played in the war....
The New York History Conference is accepting proposals that deal with the history, culture, economy, politics, geography, anthropology, or archaeology of New York State. We also welcome proposals that use New York’s history as a lens to understand a regional, national, or...
The following are some examples of Hispanic Heritage History Events taking place at museums and historical societies across New York State.
...
This episode focuses on culinary history and the Pomeroy Foundation’s Hungry for History program. We discover that the history of what we eat, and how we eat it, can tell us much about ourselves and our shared pasts.
Markers of Focus:...
As New York State prepares to host the oldest state fair in the nation, this episode tells the history of the summertime tradition of agricultural fairs and how they developed from gatherings of learned societies into the popular attractions that we all know today.
Marker of...
This episode tells the story of Lady Christian Henrietta Caroline “Harriet” Acland, aristocratic wife of Major John Dyke Acland, who commanded the British 20th Regiment of Foot during the Burgoyne campaign of 1777. When Major Acland was wounded and taken prisoner, Lady Harriet risked her own...
This episode tells the story of Ronek Park, a non-discriminatory housing development built in 1950 in the village of North Amityville. Unlike the many housing developments created in the post-WWII U.S. that followed the practice of redlining and did not allow African American or Jewish people to...
The following are some examples of LGTBQ+ Pride Month Events and LGBTQ+ History Events taking place at museums and historical societies across New York State.
Capital-Saratoga...
The New York State 250th Commemoration Commission will be holding a meeting Wednesday, May 15th beginning at 10:30am. The meeting is open to the public and take place at the New York State Museum’s Huxley Theater, located at 222 Madison Avenue, Albany NY 12230.
...
May is Asian American and Pacific Islanders Heritage Month and in celebration this episode highlights the community history of Manhattan’s Chinatown, one of the oldest and largest Chinese and Chinese American communities in the United States. The episode tells the story of how during a time of...
The following are some examples of Women’s History Month Events taking place at museums and historical societies across New York State. Check back often for updates.
...
The following are some examples of Black History Month Events taking place at museums and historical societies across New York State. Check back often for updates.
...
New York History invites submissions for a special volume on the 250th anniversary of the American Revolution in New York to be published by Cornell University Press in Spring 2026. New York was a leading participant in the Revolutionary process and was critical to the Revolution's...
On this month’s episode, Devin and Lauren explore the story of Plymouth Freeman, a black Patriot who served in the Continental Army during the American Revolution, and discuss how disenfranchised communities have harkened back to the promises outlined in the...
New Deadline: January 12, 2024
The New York History Conference is still accepting proposals that deal with the history, culture, economy, politics, geography, anthropology, or archaeology of New York State. We also welcome proposals that use New York’s history as a lens...
For our first episode of this new season, we’re celebrating Native American Heritage Month with a conversation regarding how historians can center authentic indigenous voices and work with Native American communities across the state in planning for the...
The following are some examples of Native American Heritage Month Events taking place at museums and historical societies across New York State.
The New York History Conference is accepting proposals that deal with the history, culture, economy, politics, geography, anthropology, or archaeology of New York State. We also welcome proposals that use New York’s history as a lens to understand a regional, national, or...
For our season finale, Devin and Lauren tell the story of the Fox sisters, who rose to fame as early practitioners of modern spiritualism in the 19th Century. Margaretta and Catherine Fox were able to convince many people that they could commune with the dead, though they later admitted to...
On this episode, Devin and Lauren tell the story of the Florence Farming and Lumber Association, a settlement of free African Americans in Oneida County beginning in 1846. The Association was the creation of abolitionists Gerrit Smith and Stephen Myers, and it developed on land given by Smith,...
On this episode, Devin and Lauren learn about an enclave of restaurants, bars and resorts that catered to predominately Latin American clientele near the Catskill Mountains. As more and more Latinos immigrated to New York City for work, they began to look to places outside the city for...
Juneteenth is the commemoration of the end of slavery in the United States. The origins of the commemoration date back to June 19, 1865, when enslaved African Americans in Galveston, Texas, first heard that the Civil War had ended and they were free, the June 19,...
Please save the date for this new annual history conference!
The New York State Museum, State Library, State Archives, and the New York State Archives Partnership Trust, in collaboration with the Hudson River Valley Institute at Marist College and the...
The following are some examples of LGTBQ+ Pride Month Events and LGBTQ+ History Events taking place at museums and historical societies across New York State.
Capital-Saratoga...
On this episode, Devin and Lauren delve into the history of the Dutch patroon system in New York state, and tell the story of the anti-rent movement of the 19th Century, during which tenant farmers banded together to (sometimes, violently) oppose the outdated system. In the Albany County town of...
For Women’s History Month, Devin and Lauren tell the story of Dr. Mary Walker: physician, heroine of the Civil War, and the only woman in history ever to be awarded the Medal of Honor. Born to progressive parents in western New York, Walker would defy the odds to become a surgeon, spy for the...
This article originally appeared on the WAMC Podcasts website.
On this episode, Devin and Lauren discuss a William G. Pomeroy marker recognizing the contributions of the Mossell family in western New York, and their efforts to successfully integrate the Niagara County city of...
The following are some examples of Women’s History Month Events taking place at museums and historical societies across New York State. Check back often for updates.
Capital Region
...
The following are some examples of Black History Month Events taking place at museums and historical societies across New York State. Check back often for updates.
New...
This article originally appeared on the WAMC Podcasts website.
On this episode, Devin and Lauren tell the forgotten story of Boston Corners, which once belonged to Massachusetts, but was ceded to New York state by an act of Congress in 1855. The area, now part of the Town of...
This article originally appeared on the WAMC Podcasts website.
Believe it or not, the 250th anniversary of the American Revolution is right around the corner. On this episode, Devin and Lauren discuss how some state agencies and communities are preparing for the big event (from...
This article originally appeared on the WAMC Podcasts website.
In this episode, Devin and Lauren tell the story of Verdelle Louis Payne from Ithaca in Tompkins County, who joined the Army Air Forces during WWII and became a pilot. During the war, Payne served in...
The following are some examples of Native American Heritage Month events taking place at museums and historical societies across New York State. Check back often for updates.
...
New York State’s history community is dynamic and diverse. In October, historians, scholars, curators, preservationists, librarians, archivists, genealogists, re-enactors, and educators will work together to promote the education and appreciation of New York State’...
It’s a new season of A New York Minute in History! In this episode, Devin and Lauren dig into the 19th Century discovery of a mastodon skeleton in Orange County. The “Orange County Mastodon” was one of the earliest, if not the first, complete mastodon skeletons discovered in the U.S. As...
This article originally appeared on the WAMC Podcasts website.
On this episode, Devin and Lauren visit New York’s oldest continuously operating courthouse, located in the City of Johnstown in Fulton County. Built in 1772 by Sir William Johnson, the Fulton County Courthouse has...
Juneteenth is the commemoration of the end of slavery in the United States. The origins of the commemoration date back to June 19, 1865, when enslaved African Americans in Galveston, Texas, first heard that the Civil War had ended and they were free, the June 19, 1865 date was...
The following are some examples of LGTBQ+ Pride Month Events and LGBTQ+ History Events taking place at museums and historical societies across New York State.
Capital-Saratoga
Capital Pride 2022 Parade...
This article originally appeared on the New York State Education Department website.
Once again, we are left with an overwhelming sense of grief that is so deep and so raw we can hardly begin to process it. We grieve for the innocent lives taken so cruelly in this...
This article originally appeared on the WAMC Podcasts website.
On this episode, Devin and Lauren discuss a William G. Pomeroy marker recognizing a 1900 auto race in Suffolk County, New York, and the importance of racing in automobile history. Was that race to Babylon really the...
This article orginally appeared on the WAMC Podcast website.
In honor of Women’s History Month, Devin and Lauren highlight a Pomeroy marker in Tioga County and tell the story of Corporal Margaret Hastings, a member of the Women’s Army Corps who survived 47 days in a New Guinea...
The following are some examples of Women’s History Month Events taking place at museums and historical societies across New York State. Check back often for updates.
Capital Region...
The following are some examples of Black History Month Events taking place at museums and historical societies across New York State. Check back often for updates.
New York City...
The New York State Museum is in the process of creating a webpage dedicated to New York State’s Commemoration of the 250th anniversary of the American Revolution. The webpage will contain events, resources, and information about New York’s Commemoration, highlighting not just the role of New...
This article originally appeared on the WAMC Podcasts website.
On this episode, Devin and Lauren tackle all of New York's historical markers at once — sort of. Devin and Lauren discuss how the state's historical marker program got started, what...
We are saddened to announce the passing of Dr. Oscar Williams. Dr. Williams was an Associate Professor in the Department of Africana Studies at the University at Albany and a member of the New York History Journal Advisory Board. He will be greatly missed by the history community.
...
This article originally appeared on the WAMC Podcast website.
In this episode, Devin and Lauren discuss the “Burned Over District,” and how upstate New York became a “cauldron” of emergent religions and alternative communities during the 19th century. How did the Burned Over...
It is with heavy hearts that we announce the passing of Ruth Piwonka. Ruth was Village of Kinderhook Historian and a local expert on Dutch New York History. She will be missed by the entire New York State History community.
...
This article originally appeared on the WAMC Podcasts website.
On this episode of A New York Minute in History, Devin and Lauren delve into the public health industry that emerged in New York in the 19th century. As the understanding of medicine and health evolved over time there...
The newest issue of New York History is now available. This special issue focuses on Attica's Legacy at 50 and can be viewed here.
A sample article by Heather Ann...
Devin and Lauren dive into the history of Timbuctoo, an African American settlement founded by philanthropist Gerrit Smith in response to an 1846 law requiring all Black men to own $250 worth of property in order to vote in New York state. To counter this racist policy, Smith decided to give...
The following are some examples of LGTBQ+ Pride Month Events and LGBTQ+ History Events taking place at museums and historical societies across New York State.
Capital-Saratoga
"Pride Center of the Capital Region Panel...
This episode investigates the life and times of Audrey Munson, America’s first supermodel. Born and raised in upstate New York, Audrey Munson would go on to become the most famous artist's model of the Gilded Age, posing for many of the top American artists in the Beaux Arts movement....
This article originally appeared on the WAMC website.
WAMC is proud to announce that it has won three Excellence in Broadcasting Awards from the New York State Broadcasters Association.
In the 55th annual competition, WAMC won in the following categories:
...
The following is a message from A New York Minute in History and RTDNA.
A New York Minute in History has been awarded a Regional Edward R. Murrow award for Best Podcast by the Radio Television Digital News Association....
This season of A New York Minute in History features a brand new format. Each episode will delve into a chapter of New York’s history through a topic introduced by one of the William G. Pomeroy Foundation’s historic markers, which collectively tell the story of the state’s unique and important...
Women’s History Month Events
The following are some examples of Women’s History Month Events taking place at museums and historical societies across New York State. Check back often for updates....
In recognition of Black History Month, the New York State Museum is offering educational resources and programs for classroom teachers, educators, and the public from our collections, exhibits, and research. The resources and programs can be accessed here: ...
Following the attempted coup that took place at our nation's capital on January 6th and the continuing calls for violence and anti-democratic extremism led by former-President Trump and elected Republicans in Congress, please read the following statements, which have my full endorsement.
...
Just in time for the November election, New York History, published by Cornell University Press, is featuring an article by historian Marsha E. Barrett titled "Millionaires are More Democratic Now: Nelson Rockefeller and the Politics of Wealth in New York." Dr. Barrett is assistant...
Today’s historical community is as dynamic as it is diverse. It includes scholars, curators, preservationists, librarians, archivists, genealogists, re-enactors and local and community historians. In October, historians across the state will work together to strengthen the state’s history...
The New York State Board of Regents (“the Regents”) charters museums in New York State as educational corporations and has governing authority over these incorporated organizations. In 2011, the Regents approved an amendment to its Rules regarding deaccession...
This article originally appeared on the Women at the Center, New-York Historical Society website.
Early in the morning on August 26, 1920, Secretary of State Bainbridge Colby unceremoniously certified the ratification of the 19 Amendment at his home, depriving suffragists the...
Juneteenth is the commemoration of the end of slavery in the United States. The origins of the commemoration date back to June 19th, 1865, when enslaved African Americans in Galveston, Texas first heard that the Civil War had ended, and they were free. The June 19th, 1865 date was more than two...
The Office of Cultural Education (OCE), made up of the New York State Archives, Library and Museum, has been working to support New York State’s cultural community throughout the COVID-19 Pandemic. OCE has formed the New York State COVID-19 Documentation Initiative to collect information on...
It is with heavy, broken hearts that we join our voices with those mourning the indefensible and tragic death of George Floyd.
America’s greatness lies in our diversity, our tolerance, and our willingness to accept and welcome others. These are our nation’s founding principles. Sadly,...
On this special episode of A New York Minute In History, we explore how historians are documenting the coronavirus pandemic in real time. Co-hosts Devin Lander, the New York Historian, and Saratoga County Historian Lauren Roberts are joined by Christine Ridarsky, the ...
Museums across New York State are closing and delaying events in response to Covid-19. Organizations at the state and national level have been compiling lists of resources for museums and cultural organizations.
Arts Service Initiative of Western New York:...
The following are some examples of Women's History Month Events taking place at museums and historical societies across New York State. Check back often for updates.
Brooklyn Historical Society
Brooklyn/NYC
March 2nd...
The following are some examples of Black History Month Events taking place at museums and historical societies across New York State. Check back often for updates.
New-York Historical Society
Manhattan/NYC
7:00 pm to 8:00 pm
February...
On this episode of A New York Minute In History, we explore slavery in New York and specifically the resistance to the institution, including the Underground Railroad. Co-hosts Devin Lander and Lauren Roberts speak with area experts and tour a historic home in Albany that is living a new life as...
The New York State Museum, State Library, and State Archives will celebrate New York State History Month in November with a variety of free public programs for children, families and adults.
"As we celebrate New York State History Month, we thank historians and educators help us...
Now regarded as one the most iconic cultural expressions of American society, the Woodstock festival of 1969 served to encapsulate the spirit of the 1960s counterculture movement. Despite Woodstock’s continued popularity 50 years after it was first held, the complexities that led to its creation...
One hundred years ago, on April 11, 1919, New York Governor Al Smith signed the “Historians Law.” The first law of its kind in the United States, the Historians Law allowed for every village, town, and city in the state to have an official historian to gather and preserve historical records. On...
The following are some examples of LGTBQ+ Pride Month Events and LGBTQ+ History Events taking place at museums and historical societies across New York State.
Capital - Saratoga
Capital Pride Parade
Sunday, June 9, 2019
Pride Center of the...
A reservoir system capacity of 570 billion gallons. A watershed area that covers 1.2 million acres. And a supply that is 90 percent unfiltered. The parameters of New York City’s drinking water infrastructure are astounding, but the story behind the system is much more fascinating. It’s a tale...
Responses Needed: What visitation trends have you seen at your site over the last few years? The American Association for State and Local History (AASLH) is conducting a national visitation survey and wants your feedback! Please take five minutes to complete the survey and...
The following are some examples of Women's History Month Events taking place at museums and historical societies across New York State. Check back often for updates.
Adirondacks
Fort Fever Series: Remembering the Ladies: Anglo-American Women in...
On this episode of A New York Minute In History, co-hosts Devin Lander and Don Wildman examine how two New Yorkers – Al Smith and Franklin Delano Roosevelt – influenced the Progressive Era of the early 20th century. The episode also explores how the administrations of Smith and Roosevelt shaped...
The following are some examples of Black History Month Events taking place at museums and historical societies across New York State. Check back often for updates.
New-York Historical Society
Manhattan/NYC
Black Citizenship in the Age of Jim...
On April 11, 1919, Governor Al Smith signed into law Assembly Bill #160, which added new sections to the Education Law and created the "office of local historian for each city, town, or village except in New York City." The bill had been introduced by Assemblyman Louis M. Martin of Oneida County...
On the fourth episode of A New York Minute In History, we detail Henry Hudson’s exploration of what would become the Empire State and how his journey up the aptly named Hudson River led to the Dutch settlement of New Netherland. Join us as we explore how the Dutch colony differed from its...
The journal of record for the history of the Empire State will continue in collaboration with the New York State Museum
Ithaca, New York, November 15, 2018—Cornell University Press announces that, beginning in 2019, the Press will publish the century-old journal, New York...
On the third episode of A New York Minute In History we explore the Empire State’s most ambitious engineering feat…the Erie Canal. Completed in 1825, it transformed New York and the nation by compressing time and distance, providing the fuel for an explosion of commerce, communication and social...
The second episode of A New York Minute In History explores the Women’s Rights Movement from the Seneca Falls Convention in Central New York in 1848 to equality matters being debated today. We explore the Movement’s progress through the lineage of Coline Jenkins, the great-great granddaughter of...
County and Borough Historians’ Institute
August 24th, 2018
9:00am-4:30pm
New York State Museum
Huxley Theater
222 Madison Avenue
...
The New York State Museum, WAMC/Northeast Public Radio and Archivist Media are excited to announce the launch of a new podcast, “A New York Minute In History,” which explores the story of New York State and the unique tales of...
ALBANY — The New York National Guard on Tuesday marked the 100th anniversary of Henry Johnson's defeat of nearly two dozen German soldiers, an act that won him the Medal of Honor 97 years later.
Johnson was one of the first American heroes of World War I and he was among the last to be...
Congraulations to all of the participants and winners of the 2018 New York State History Day contests! After a series of exciting regional contests throughout the spring, nearly 500 student winners gathered in Cooperstown along with their parents and teachers to take part in the statewide...
Students and their families and teachers from every region of the state will gather in Cooperstown on April 23rd to take part in New York State History Day. This annual competition allows students to work individually or in groups on a historical project of their choosing in the following...
New York’s capital city is as rich in cultural institutions as it is history! Join us during Women’s History Month 2018 as several of Albany’s partners in history host talks and tours to tell the complex story of the Empire State’s leading role in the fight for (and in some cases, against!)...
This article originally appeared in the Waterville Times
Prior to the Civil War fugitive slave laws sought to capture runaway slaves from the south and return them to their owners. The famous “Jerry” rescue in Syracuse occurred in 1851, but Utica had a similar rescue in December...
2018 marks the Bicentennial of Frederick Douglass' birthday and Rochester, NY is taking the lead in celebrating this momentous occasion. Though Douglass was born into slavery in Maryland, he lived for several years with his family in Rochester, where he published is abolitionis newspaper ...
There are some obvious truths that emerge from the survey of New York State county and borough historians, submitted by the State Historian to all county and borough historians in September 2017 to which approximately thirty individuals responded. What follows is apparent from the surveys and is...
A couple of weeks ago Keith Williams, the author of the "F.Y.I." column that runs in The Sunday New York Times, reached out to me (and others) for his end-of-year article. He asked us: If you could go back in time and attend any party in New York City history, which one would you choose, and why...
A survey created by New York State Historian Devin Lander in partnership with Tompkins County Historian Carol Kammen was recently sent to all 62 County and 5 Borough Historians. The survey questions ranged in topics from the amount of time spent on activities, salary and...
On August 25th, 2017, the Office of State History and Office of Cultural Education hosted the 2017 County and Borough Historians' Institute, a day-long facilitated workshop. The day was a success and allowed for an interesting and informative exchange of ideas between historians from across the...
On Saturday, July 22, 2017, I had the honor of being asked to give the keynote address at the 238th Anniversary of the Battle of Minisink Commemoration. I was asked to attend and speak at the event by Sullivan County Historian John...
WHAT
County and Borough Historians’ Institute
WHEN
August 25th, 2017 9:00am-5:00pm
WHERE
New York State Museum
Huxley Theater
222 Madison Avenue
Albany, NY
Goal—The County and Borough...
This is the first article in an ongoing series from professional publishers on current trends in the field of New York State History.
Trends in the History of Early New York
Big history is making a comeback in the subfield of early American history. Or...
(This article was originally published in the March issue of Perspectives on History by the American Historical Association)
As part of a 2013 AHA Roundtable in Perspectives about the Supreme Court ruling in Fisher v. University of Texas at Austin, which upheld affirmative action in...
COMMEMORATING WOMEN'S SUFFRAGE 100TH ANNIVERSARY
Honoring the Fight for Women's Rights
From the inception of the women’s rights movement in Seneca Falls in 1848, New York has been a leader in advancing women’s equality.
To honor the centennial of women's...
Greetings and Happy (Belated) New Year!
2017 is a huge year for History in New York State. Throughout the year we are celebrating several important and exciting anniversaries including the 200th anniversary of the beginning of construction of the Erie Canal, the 100th...
Several months ago, New York State Historian Devin Lander sent out a survey to the various municipalities in New York about their local government historian. This survey included questions such as: salary, time spent at the post, college degree and type, the facilities offered to them as the...
The Madison County World War I project was an offshoot of a project we undertook in 2013. Each year in October we host Archives Day, usually displaying documents from our archives. In 2013 we decided to “create new archives.” Partnering with local libraries, we created a list of all WWII...
While researching for the 2013 Archives Day we found a box that housed the book Madison County’s Welcome Home for her Sons and Daughters who served in the World War from 1917 to 1919, published in 1919 by the Oneida Dispatch Press and Madison County’s WWI register. Each source has its...
With assistance from the County Clerk’s Office, Madison County Veterans Office and a number of local libraries, I compiled as much information as I could from the above sources and more, and continue to update the list as more information becomes available. Our goal is to have as comprehensive...
“We fall forward,” said women in New York in November 1915 when the suffrage bill failed by 80,000 votes. After that initial stumble, two years later New York voters passed the 1917 Suffrage Amendment. President Wilson then changed his position on the issue of women voting and in August 1919...
Article originally appeared in America: The National Catholic Review. Access article HERE.
2017 is New York State's 240th birthday! The first State Constitution was finished and approved in Kingston on April 20, 1777, and promulgated two days later by being read from the courthouse steps in that city. The document had been written on the fly by a hastily elected Provincial Congress,...
Find statewide history at your fingertips.
The idea for this website is to provide an online conduit for information exchange between the New York’s historical field and the work of the NYS Museum Office of State History. The website includes links to various history...