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The Media Room
MdHS at a GlanceLocation The Maryland Historical Society is located in the heart of Baltimore’s historic Mount Vernon Cultural District, just 10 blocks from the Inner Harbor. Address: 201 W. Monument Street Baltimore, MD 21201 Parking A guarded visitor parking lot is available on the MdHS campus during museum hours. Ample on-street parking is also available Hours Wednesday through Sunday 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Admission Adults - $4 Children 13-17 years, Students with ID, Seniors - $3 Children 12 and under - Free Library Patrons - $6 Telephone 410- 685-3750 Website www.mdhs.org
Press ReleasesListed below are links to MdHS press releases. Photos for press use are hosted on Flickr™-simply find the set you wish to view and click on it. To download a hires image, click on the desired image, click on "all sizes" up at the top, then select and download the size you need. Images may only used with permission from: Anne Garside, director of communications 410-685-3750, ext. 354 agarside@mdhs.org. Current Press Releases
Press Release ArchiveThe Voss Family, Artists of American Sporting Life Borders and Boundaries: The Mason-Dixon Line Exhibition Schedule Winter-Spring 2008 World Premiere of Mencken Opera Exhibition “Aunt Pauline’s Gospel Ministry” Opens February 28 Rob Rogers appointed Acting Director Beatles ’64, The Photographs of Morton Tadder Winter Lecture Series at the Maryland Historical Society Family Events at the Maryland Historical Society Craft Workshops at the Maryland Historical Society BackgroundersMdHS Description The Maryland Historical Society (MdHS) is the nation’s leading center for the study of Maryland history and one of the most comprehensive resources to explore our nation’s past. Its collections, totaling over seven million objects, comprise the largest collection in the state and one of the largest collections of Americana in the world. These resources are shared with over 100,000 individuals every year through on-and off-site educational programs, the publication of new scholarship on Maryland history, and an ongoing schedule of long-term and changing exhibitions. The MdHS Press The Press at the Maryland Historical Society publishes new works and reprints in the field of Chesapeake regional history and biography. It also publishes quarterly a scholarly journal, Maryland Historical Magazine. Recent Press titles include, The Diary of William Faris: The Daily Life of an Annapolis Silversmith, Kent Island: The Land That Once was Eden, The Living City: Baltimore’s Charles Center & Inner Harbor Development, The Chesapeake: An Environmental Biography, and Yellow Flag: The Civil War Journal of Surgeon’s Steward C. Marion Dodson. MdHS History In 1844, a group of Marylanders had the foresight to understand that preserving manuscripts, books, paintings, furniture, and more, was a way to preserve the state’s and the country’s heritage. The founders of the Maryland Historical Society (MdHS) knew that these objects could bring Maryland’s past and its role in our nation’s history to life-to tell Maryland’s story-so that future generations could learn from Maryland and its history. In January of that year, 28 leaders of Baltimore’s intellectual community met to form a historical society, which was chartered by the Maryland State legislature that spring. The new institution, housed in a former post office on St. Paul Street, began collecting books, records, manuscripts, and objects of local interest for preservation and display. Today, the Maryland Historical Society is one of the nation’s oldest and largest state history centers. It operates two satellite locations in downtown Baltimore, the Baltimore Civil War Museum and the Fells Point Maritime Museum, and has touched the lives of hundreds of thousands of children and adults from across the state, the country, and even the world through an array of dazzling exhibitions, scholarly publications, vibrant educational offerings, and an exhaustive library. Education and Public Programs The MdHS sponsors a dynamic schedule of educational programs and special events to make Maryland’s history come alive for visitors of all ages. Lectures, symposia, living history performances, weekend programs for children, Traveling Trunks for teaching Maryland history to schoolchildren, gallery tours, Civil War Walking Tours, and many other programs, held both on- and off-site, promote pride and understanding of Maryland’s rich history. In 2003 alone, over 90,000 people were served by MdHS educational programs both on- and off-site. Permanent ExhibitionsLooking for Liberty: An Overview of Maryland History, the centerpiece of the Maryland Historical Society’s Carey Center for Maryland Life, explores Maryland’s history-its people and events-using Marylanders’ pursuit of liberty from the colonial period to the present as its theme. The exhibition combines new research, important objects and artifacts from the MdHS and other collections with oral histories, video installations, and interactive elements, allowing the visitors to experience Marylanders’ pursuit of liberty in ways that are compelling and represent a true departure from conventional state history exhibits. Maryland Through the Artist’s Eye, considers the history of Maryland through visual representations of the state’s land and its people. The exhibition features the Society’s rich assemblage of paintings by the Peale family, its treasure trove of precious miniatures, and its distinguished collection of portraits and landscapes, which includes not only oil paintings but previously unexhibited fragile watercolors and drawings on paper. Original research, combined with relevant decorative arts and everyday objects, enables the visual arts collection to be interpreted in new ways. Furniture in Maryland Life explores the manufacture, design and function of furniture made and used in Maryland from 1634 to 2000. Installations present furniture in innovative ways and include engaging hands-on activities to illustrate furniture construction. Decorative arts treasures, such as silver and porcelain, along with stunning paintings of Maryland interiors will contribute to this fresh look at the furniture industry in Maryland. In addition to familiar favorites, 30 percent of the exhibition will feature pieces that have never before been displayed, including examples of Maryland furniture from every region of the state. Campus Expansion and RenovationsThe Mount Vernon campus includes more than 230,000 square feet of space and encompass more than a city block. The completed campus expansion plan, including new construction, the acquisition of three buildings, and renovations to existing structures, has more than doubled the institution’s size since the mid 1990s. The Zabelle S. and E. Read Beard Jr. Pavilion The Beard Pavilion, the society’s new public entrance and central reception area, is clad entirely in glass and contributes to the campus’s visual continuity while also serving as the society’s new, engaging, and contemporary public face along Park Avenue, a major Baltimore thoroughfare. Combining traditional materials in a contemporary setting, the Read Pavilion is set upon a floor of granite that begins outdoors in a landscaped courtyard and extends indoors through a reflecting pool and a large two-story reception area. Interior walls are composed of brick, limestone, and white marble and echo the materials found in the society’s older buildings on Monument Street. The Museum and Carey Center for Maryland Life A stunning and contemporary three-story museum, adjacent to the new entrance and the former Heritage Wing, houses the Carey Center for Maryland Life, which includes the exhibitions, Looking for Liberty: An Overview of Maryland History, Maryland Through the Artist’s Eye, and Furniture in Maryland Life; as well as new areas for educational programs. The new exhibition areas boast high ceilings (including 20-foot ceilings in the third floor furniture gallery), flexible spaces, and northern light. Clad in a zinc-paneled exterior punctuated by windows of varying sizes, the dramatic and contemporary gallery building also contributes to the campus’ visual unity. The H. Furlong Baldwin Library Renovations to existing spaces have more than doubled the library’s size. As part of the current expansion and renovations, the library’s main reading room has been restored to its original 1919 splendor, while modern additions include new lighting, wireless computer stations, and increased seating. Special collections occupy an elegant new reading room with tall windows and original mantelpieces, two galleries showcase library collections, and SeaRCH, the Student Research Center for History Student Research Center provides students with the resources they need to conduct original historical research. |
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