One of the great things about working at the Rosenbach is getting to meet and work with great folks from other local museums. Last Friday night I volunteered to help the Mütter Museum (our closest museum neighbors) with a really neat event– Murder at the Mütter 2TM. Courtesy of The College of Physicians of Philadelphia …
Our Largest Object: Part II
A few weeks back I posted a bit about our largest collections object–the Rosenbach brothers’ house at 2010 Delancey. My last post covered some of the early history of the house, but much of the way the house looks now, at least in the interior, has to do with later renovations. One of the most …
A Stoker Century
Bram Stoker. Dracula. London: Archibald Constable and Company, 1897. EL3 .S874d 897 Although his most renowned literary creation was famously “un-dead,” Bram Stoker was as mortal as the rest of us and today marks the centennial of his death on April 20, 1912. Here is a link to his obituary, as printed in The Times …
Our Largest Object
If you saw our Superlative Showcase, you know that the Rosenbach brothers’ home at 2010 Delancey place is our largest collections object. But how much do you know about it? The 2000 block of Delancey was built in the early 1860s as a developers row, which explains the unified brick appearance of the street. It …
Happy Holidays
With Passover and Easter nigh upon us, here are a couple of holiday-related items from our collection. The two-volume Mahzor Minhag Roma, published by the Soncinos in 1485/1486, is the first printed Jewish prayerbook and includes the Passover haggadah. The haggadah section marks another first–it is illustrated with the earliest known printed illustration of a …
Oldest? Biggest? Foxiest?
What book is big enough to fill this enormous book cradle? (constructed by Karen Schoenwaldt, in the foreground) What photograph is Patrick Rodgers planning to hang on the wall? What is that green thing in the back of this case, anyway? You can find the answers to all these questions, and more, in our Superlative …
The Rights of Woman
March is Women’s History Month and this week I thought I’d highlight a letter from our Rush collection that deals with Mary Wollstonecraft’s famous 1792 book A Vindication of the Rights of Woman. (Full text of Vindication can be found at Project Gutenberg) In this ca. 1793 letter, Annis Boudinot Stockton, herself a published poet …
Irish Writers
We never need an excuse to talk about Irish authors–James Joyce and Bram Stoker are year-round staples of the Rosenbach diet– but with St. Patrick’s Day approaching I thought I’d highlight a few other famous Irishmen in our collection. Many thanks to our librarian Elizabeth Fuller for letting me crib from the script from her …
Great Gratz
This past weekend we celebrated the Gratz family in style with a recognition of Joseph Gratz by the First Troop Philadelphia City Cavalry, of which he was a member, and a celebration of Rebecca Gratz’s 241st birthday (but who’s counting). For those of you who were unable to attend the festive event, I thought I’d …
Rosenbach Company Records
One of the many jobs our collection staff handles is answering research questions from folks outside the institution. Sometimes the questions can be downright unusual–our librarian remembers fielding a call from someone asking if we had newly discovered photos of Area 51 (apparently a news site mixed up a couple of links). But oddities aside, …