Browse Items (160 total)

https://s3.amazonaws.com/omeka-net/18882/archive/files/c26b1568a0c92eece4f873606b97765f.pdf
The Vanderbilt-Marlborough Union, at the very beginning of the magazine starts out almost idealizing this marriage describing it as though it was a perfect extremely extravagant wedding just before breaking from this line of progression to state how…

This illustrated essay shows different street views of New York in the 1850s--many taken from Harper's Weekly--including views of Broadway (which appears in Lydia Maria Child and George Foster's work). Friedman-Stadtler also discusses the import of…

https://s3.amazonaws.com/omeka-net/18882/archive/files/239de8856a7da275e2c120d2103586c0.pdf
Jacob Riis discussed the large number of saloons where there were 111 places of worship and 4,065 saloons below Fourteenth Street. Patrons were interracial men and women. Young boys frequented the saloons, picking up beer for their elders even…

https://s3.amazonaws.com/omeka-net/18882/archive/files/c2c3dd5fca0112ed546c707c1d25388b.pdf
The article, “The Red Petticoat and its Pedigree,” is a timeline of sorts for the hoop skirt for women. The article seems to be dedicated to “...Mrs. Selby, the inventor of the hooped petticoat.” who apparently died from a fever caused by an…

https://s3.amazonaws.com/omeka-net/18882/archive/files/6329bc3f1fd4c2c1bd75a03ac31fb39c.pdf
This illustration accompanies an article describing St. Valentine’s day. The image is of an upset man, looking as if he has been the victim of a cheap trick. The caption of the image is “The recipient of the comic valentine”. The article describes…

https://s3.amazonaws.com/omeka-net/18882/archive/files/f000d48f71a28b7357e792118b2a78e0.jpg
This image I have chosen shows boys ages 6-18 traveling on a train with their heads out the window. This train was known as the Orphan Train. In the 1850’s an estimated 30,000 children were homeless or neglected in New York City. The founder,…

https://s3.amazonaws.com/omeka-net/18882/archive/files/4e2650528474e4d57feffc833948deac.jpg
Harlem Renaissance what was painted by a man named Aaron Douglas. The name of the piece was created for the book The New Negro by Alain Locke. The art work is meant to depict different parts of Afro-American history. You see on the left people…

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This article from Harper' s New Monthly Magazine focuses on the New York Metropolitan Museum of Art. The article begins by describing the origins of the Museum which began on fifth avenue in 1869. The museum originally opened with nothing but a…

https://s3.amazonaws.com/omeka-net/18882/archive/files/97bb39e82dd8b3a18735bb61bd496bfa.jpg
I chose to analyze an illustration in a series of pictures paired with a poem. This poem had a span of two pages and was titled “The Lay of the Cable”(Campbell 744). The poem talks about the “inlays and outlays; the relays and delays”(Campbell 744)…

https://s3.amazonaws.com/omeka-net/18882/archive/files/78f6085188b18b418edec5b26ad04a64.pdf
The most interesting item in my issue of The Ladies’ World Magazine was definitely the “Out Of Doors”(p.10) section. There are five images on this page, but contrary to most of the other images in the magazine, and all of the images in the Harper’s…

https://s3.amazonaws.com/omeka-net/18882/archive/files/cfd873173824d855217592d8ffaa78f9.pdf
The item I chose to examine for this article was one of the many pieces of equipment used by gold miners during the Klondike Gold Rush that was called a “rocker box.” This item was used for the means of separating “alluvial placer gold” from the…

https://s3.amazonaws.com/omeka-net/18882/archive/files/a0307287f48898497b4f0bf2b236ace8.jpg
The Illustrated Manners Book; A Manual of Good Behavior and Polite Accomplishments comes from the monthly magazine, The Dime. The Dime would post etiquette columns every so often informing men and women on correct etiquette. This is the cover of a…

https://s3.amazonaws.com/omeka-net/18882/archive/files/dacb5286cc706ab18034909a7afbb3c7.jpeg
This picture located in digital collection of the New York Public Library depicts the Brooklyn Bridge on the day of it’s grand opening. The bridge officially opened in May 1883 with an elaborate opening ceremony. The ceremony was completed with a…

https://s3.amazonaws.com/omeka-net/18882/archive/files/80c36f920086923a7a1333022836aae1.jpeg
Nathaniel Currier's lithograph titled "The Fire of July 19, 1845 -- The View At Bowling Green" depicts the spread of a massive fire in downtown New York City. The blazing fire, beginning just at dawn on Saturday, July 19, 1845, erupted into a…

https://s3.amazonaws.com/omeka-net/18882/archive/files/a5f06cb01083906f8df0a0743fdfbeb3.PNG
The illustration is a satire of country life from the perspective of a New York City Resident. In the 1850’s, New York City was growing rapidly. Manhattan was becoming more urban in a northward direction. Some chose to move away from the metropolitan…

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This is a cover of the Crisis magazine designed by Aaron Douglas, a famous artist during the Harlem Renaissance. The cover is very similar to his other work that is featured in Fire!!. Many geometric shapes are used to vaguely represent human arms.…

https://s3.amazonaws.com/omeka-net/18882/archive/files/5a5b846e3024043e230cc5efc6de1a04.jpg
Harlem cabarets became an important part of the Harlem Renaissance. They acted as a casual setting where people could break away from the social norms of race and sexuality. They started as establishments for primarily colored people but soon whites…

https://s3.amazonaws.com/omeka-net/18882/archive/files/10717eb7350a3d9535a512dc36f786ed.png
After researching more on the topic of mass immigration in America, otherwise known as the "Great Migration," I came across a very unique translation of the United States' Constitution. This translation caught my eye in particular because it was…

https://s3.amazonaws.com/omeka-net/18882/archive/files/8ebd1b6db8969f290747aff0ca015958.pdf
The image “The Capture of Vigan” depicts American sailors and soldiers coming ashore in the Phillipines during the conflict there, which lasted from 1899-1902. The caption of the image reads “Jackies from the battleship ‘Oregon’ and the gunboats…

https://s3.amazonaws.com/omeka-net/18882/archive/files/a1fe10b7b7340f10d15d923ebe190171.pdf
The image on the cover of the August 28th, 1858 issue of Harper’s Weekly depicts a fire at City Hall in New York City caused by fireworks honoring the success of the laying of the transatlantic telegraph cable. According to PBS, this cable ran from…
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