Okay, so we all know we’re not supposed to do this to our books (although I suspect we’re probably all guilty of it, spine-breaking be hanged). But what do you use to mark your place? I must confess to grabbing whatever piece of paper is readily at hand–grocery receipts and library checkout slips being frequent …
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Back to School
Now is the time for children to head back to school, so I pulled a few school-related items from the files. This photo, although unidentified, seems to be some sort of school/class photograph including the young Abie Rosenbach (the future Dr. R). He is seated at the far left of the front row with arms …
200 Years Ago: Washington in Flames
Last weekend marked the 200th anniversary of the burning of Washington during the War of 1812. British troops entered Washington in the afternoon of August 24, 1814 and set fire to the government buildings, including the White House and the Capitol building. The goal in sacking the city was symbolic rather than strategic; as Robert …
Beach Reads
As the summer draws to a close, it’s time for one last trip to the beach. From the decreased traffic on my morning train ride I can tell that lots of folks are enjoying a well-deserved vacation this month. One of the great pleasures of a beach vacation is a chance to laze in the …
What’s the Worst Thing You Have Done to a Book?
We asked this question of the visitors in Bescribbled, Nibbled, and Dog-Eared: Early American Children’s Books and we got quite a lot of answers! Visitors confess to having dropped books in the bathtub (I’ve done that), painted them, written in crayon, and having failed to read them (yup, done that one too). Readers have …
Artistic Travelers
This week’s post comes from our collections intern, Jordan Rothschild. – – – – As the summer is here and it is time for travel I would like to share a few works related to travel from our collections. They come from two artists—one, a Renaissance Italian who spent time in Italy’s greatest cities and …
All Quiet on the Western Front
A month ago the Rosenblog marked the centennial of the assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand on June 28, 1914. This week marks the 100th anniversary of the beginning of World War I itself: on July 28th Austria-Hungary declared war on Serbia and by August 4 Russia, Germany, and Britain had all entered the fray. Last …
Vest Pocket Pictures
The rise of the cellphone means that most of us now carry a camera in our pocket just about everywhere we go. Marianne Moore also had a pocket camera: a Vest Pocket Kodak, measuring 4 ¾” x 2 ½” by 1″, which is about the size of a modern smartphone, although a bit thicker. Kodak …
Happy Birthday Isaac Watts
What do Joy to the World, How Doth the Little Busy Bee, When I Survey the Wondrous Cross, and I Sing the Mighty Power of God have in common? They were all written (the texts at least) by Isaac Watts, who was born on July 17, 1674, and so would turn 340 today (if you …
Toledo: a painted lady, ingenious gentlemen, pretty patterns, and assorted connections
In March we told you about the conservation of one of our portrait miniatures and its loan to an exhibition commemmorating the 400th anniversary of the death of its probable artist, El Greco. Last month the exhibition closed (on Bloomsday) and I went to Toledo bring the portrait back. I headed to the Philadelphia airport …