Join us for a live, virtual journey through history, as Museum docents or curators answer your questions and walk you through a slideshow of objects and imagery via Zoom, an easy-to-use video conferencing platform that requires no special login or membership.
Join us for a live, virtual journey through history, as experts walk you through a slideshow of objects and imagery and answer questions via Zoom, an easy-to-use video conferencing platform that requires no special login or membership.
Join us for a live, virtual journey through history, as Museum docents or curators answer walk you through a slideshow of objects and imagery and answer questions via Zoom, an easy-to-use video conferencing platform that requires no special login or membership.
In the winter of 1767, Bernard Ratzer, a lieutenant in the British Army, completed a remarkable survey of New York City. Ratzer’s map—an excellent edition of which is housed at New-York Historical—is a detailed depiction of the city on the eve of the American Revolution and has been called “perhaps the finest map of an American city and its environs produced in the 18th century.”
Join us for a live, virtual journey through history, as Museum docents or curators answer your questions and walk you through a slideshow of objects and imagery via Zoom, an easy-to-use video conferencing platform that requires no special login or membership.
Join us for a live, virtual journey through history, as Museum docents or curators answer your questions and walk you through a slideshow of objects and imagery via Zoom, an easy-to-use video conferencing platform that requires no special login or membership.
Technological advances revolutionized American agriculture in the 19th century. New machines and implements played key and familiar roles, but biotechnologies—in the form of new plant varieties, breeds of animals, and farming techniques—were of equal importance.