We at AAS are excited to be embarking on a culinary road trip this summer! What’s a culinary road trip, you might ask? A culinary road trip is an AAS social media series featuring AAS staff members traveling back in time and across the country (we’re not really doing either, but it’s fun to imagine) by ...
Tag: travel
A Trip Around the World with Nellie Bly
Working from home during the COVID-19 pandemic has allowed me the opportunity to explore the AAS catalog in fun new ways. Inspired by my family’s board games, which have been stacked in the living room since our transition to remote work, one recent search led to our games collection. While many of the games piqued ...
The Caribbeana Project
Luke Henter is a senior in the History Department at Princeton University. He studies 19th and 20th century international history, with certificates in the History and Practice of Diplomacy and Creative Writing. He has also worked at the Princeton Historical Review and is a member of the Community Service Interclub Council at Princeton. ...
The Acquisitions Table: Curtis House Inn Daybook
Curtis House Inn (South Woodbury, Connecticut). Daybook, 1814-1815.
The Curtis House Inn, in the prosperous town of South Woodbury, Connecticut, was built in 1735 by Anthony Stoddard, and is still in operation today. The business changed ownership within the family many times, and was sold outside of the family in 1799. When this daybook was recorded ...
The Acquisitions Table: Keeler Tavern Daybook
Keeler Tavern (Ridgefield, Connecticut) , Daybook, 1807-1808.
The Keeler Tavern was built as a residence by Benjamin Hoyt in 1713, and was converted into an inn and tavern by Hoyt’s grandson, Timothy Keeler, in 1772. The Tavern itself has a very interesting history, having been fired upon by the British during the Revolution when they learned ...
On the Road for AAS
A lot of the Society's staff travels for work. We are a national organization and we collect material from all across the fifty states and Canada. Curators travel to conferences and to visit collectors, catalogers move about for training and to stay up to date with the latest methods, managers visit members, foundations, granting agencies, ...
Lecture tonight!
Tuesday, November 15, at 7:30 p.m. at the American Antiquarian Society
Carolyn Eastman will be talking about Books and the Imagined World of Travel in the Eighteenth Century. For more information, including directions, click here.
In the eighteenth century, lavishly illustrated travel narratives quickly became one of the most popular book genres for American readers. These books ...
The Acquisitions Table: Travels by Land & Water
Barnard, H. D. Travels by land & water. [Hartford: H. D. Barnard, 1860]
A very rare and unusual biography and travel narrative authored by 11-year-old H. D. Barnard, who also set this small-format pamphlet in type and printed it on an amateur press. Born in Detroit, Barnard describes several long journeys to Michigan and Wisconsin, and ...
The Acquisitions Table: Sophia May Tuckerman Letters
Tuckerman, Sophia May. Letters, 1841-1857.
Sophia May (1784-1870) was the daughter of Col. John May (whose jaunty portrait in military uniform hangs in the AAS reading room) and his wife Abigail, who was also his cousin. Sophia May married Edward Tuckerman (1775-1843). AAS has a business letterbook of Edward Tuckerman’s firm of Tuckerman and Rogers. Among ...