Winter Paint pARTy
Instructor Karen Anthony of Karen’s Paint pARTies will teach us to paint a cozy winter scene.
Instructor Karen Anthony of Karen’s Paint pARTies will teach us to paint a cozy winter scene.
Is paid work outside the home incompatible with motherhood? The idea that mothers can’t also be workers grew from eighteenth-century British and colonial ideas about gender and power. In this talk, Professor Ledoux will discuss her new book, "Laboring Mothers: Reproducing Women and Work in the Eighteenth Century" (UVA Press) and explore how today’s assumptions about class, race, and working motherhood stem from these long-standing inequalities.
Join us for a short, illuminated walk in the woods of the Woestyne. Afterwards, we’ll make a fire in the Inn’s historic fireplace
Historian Sarah Wassberg Johnson will explore the origins, journey, and cultural significance of apples in the US, from their introduction by European settlers to their role in cider, pies, and American identity. She'll delves into how apples became so integral to American foodways, moving from a colonial staple to a symbol of national cuisine
Part of SCHS' America at 250 project, this exhibition explores the story of Schenectady and Schenectadians during the American Revolution, weaving together different “threads” of the Revolutionary War-era. See the rare and significant 1771 Liberty Flag, carried by the Schenectady Minute Men during the Revolutionary War, alongside artifacts and documents that explore how Schenectadians contributed to and were shaped by the birth of our nation.
Mabee Farm will be closed on this day.
Mary Liz Stewart from the Underground Railroad Education Center will present.
Join us throughout 2025 and 2026 as we delve into literature, biographies, and more that explore the American Revolution. We'll meet virtually each month to discuss a few chapters of the book at hand.
Folk art doesn’t just look cool – it also tells stories! In this program, kids will create their own folk-inspired art to take home.
Dr. Elisabeth Paling Funk will discuss her recent book, “The Dutch World of Washington Irving: Knickerbocker's History of New York and the Hudson Valley Folktales." She argues that Irving's stories represent a crucial effort to preserve Dutch life and folk customs in the Hudson Valley in the face of Anglo-Americanization.