Verso
The Huntington’s blog takes you behind the scenes for a scholarly view of the collections.
Library
Stone Carver’s Diary from the Spa City of Bath
Tue., Sept. 29, 2015 | Amanda Amanda HerbertWe asked Amanda Herbert—the inaugural Molina Fellow in the History of Medicine and the Allied Sciences at The Huntington and assistant professor of history at Christopher Newport University—to share with us some of her current research in the Library's collection.
Library
Coliseum Politics
Fri., Sept. 25, 2015 | Frank Frank GuridyIn recent months, the National Football League's seemingly imminent return to Los Angeles has been big news. This year, the press has widely reported that three NFL franchises—the Chargers, Raiders, and Rams—want to move their teams to the city.
Library
Jack London, Public Intellectual
Tue., Sept. 22, 2015 | Matt Matt StevensAuthor Jack London found a kindred spirit in famed magician Harry Houdini, whose escape artistry London and his wife, Charmian, witnessed firsthand at the Oakland Orpheum on a November afternoon in 1915.
Conferences
Turbulent End to Civil War
Tue., Sept. 15, 2015 | Diana W. Diana W. ThompsonBy the spring of 1865, when surrenders at Appomattox, Durham Station, and elsewhere had finally delivered an end to four years of bloody battle, the American Civil War had killed a staggering 750,000 soldiers and 50,000 civilians—about two and a half percent of the U.S. population—and wounded hundreds of thousands more.
Botanical
A Prairie Boy’s Passion for Bonsai
Fri., Sept. 11, 2015 | Lisa Lisa BlackburnThe irony doesn't escape Ted Matson. Raised on the prairie of North Dakota, without a tree in sight, the one-time farm boy followed a path in life that led to a full-time career in bonsai. That path also led him to The Huntington, where Matson joined the staff in February (after several years as a consultant) to oversee the more than 400 miniature trees that make up the bonsai collections.
History of Science
Women Computing the Stars
Tue., Sept. 8, 2015 | Catherine Catherine Wehrey-MillerA piece of women's history lies deep in the underground stacks of the Huntington Library, among the papers of American astronomer Frederick Hanley Seares (1873–1964). Seares was the head of the computing division at the Pasadena office of the Mount Wilson Observatory
History of The Huntington
Stories Aboard the Aquitania
Fri., Sept. 4, 2015 | Mario Mario Einaudi, Diana W. Diana W. ThompsonAfter they married in 1913, Henry and Arabella Huntington would spend several months each year in Europe, staying at the Château de Beauregard, a lavish castle located north of Paris, near Versailles. Reaching the Continent in those days meant traveling by ocean liner
Library
LOOK>> A Myriorama
Tue., Sept. 1, 2015 | Olivia Olivia Hummer, Kate Kate LainWith LOOK>>, we venture into our wide-ranging collections and bring out a single object to explore in a short video. Up first is Samuel Leigh and John Heaviside Clark's Myriorama from 1824.







