Volume 62 / Number 3

2020

Spotlight On: Investigating Philadelphia's Garden History

On The Cover: Detail of Christian Inger and D. Hensel, Philadelphia: Chromatic View (Philadelphia: D. Hense, 1876).

Vol. 62 / No. 3

Sara Yorke Stevenson: Suffragist, Egyptologist, and Pioneer: Looking Back

2020 marks the centenary of women’s suffrage. As we celebrate this milestone, we can also commemorate the achievements of Sara […]

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Vol. 62 / No. 3

Museum News

Remembering Jo Klein THE PENN MUSEUM COMMUNITY was saddened to learn of the passing of longtime volunteer and friend Josephine […]

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Vol. 62 / No. 3

Virtual Museum

School and Family Programs Thrive Online SCHOOL IS BACK in session, and for many students from pre-K to college, this […]

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Vol. 62 / No. 3

By: Brian I. Daniels

The Pennsylvania Declaration at 50

ARCHAEOLOGICAL SITE LOOTING is an ancient problem, but one that intensified after World War II as museums and collectors sought […]

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Vol. 62 / No. 3

Meet Our Members: Leah Smith

Leah Smith, pictured at Glencairn Museum, grew up visiting museums and developed a love for Egyptian art. MY MOTHER was […]

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Vol. 62 / No. 3

By: Khayla Saunders

Summer Internships—Virtually: Working Remotely

“HI, MY NAME IS ____, I am from ____, I attend Delaware/Georgia/Tuskegee/Syracuse/Penn, and I want to be an anthropologist/foreign policy […]

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Vol. 62 / No. 3

By: Yupeng Wu

A Miao Baby Carrier from China: Favorite Object

THIS EMBROIDERED MIAO BABY CARRIER is typical of those made in Zhijin (织金), a county in Guizhou province in southwest […]

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Vol. 62 / No. 3

By: Karen M’Closkey

Seeds of Change: A View From Philly's Rivers

Plants are on the move. Of course, they always have been—whether dispersed as seeds in the droppings of birds or […]

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Vol. 62 / No. 3

By: Kathryn Butler Reber

Changes in a Penn Campus Oasis: A View From Kaskey Park

James G. Kaskey Memorial Park is a small garden on the southwest end of Penn’s campus that was set aside […]

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Vol. 62 / No. 3

By: Anthony S. Aiello, Timothy A. Block and C. Skema

Public Gardens and Climate Change: A View From The Morris Arboretum

People must be convinced that if we want to continue to exist as a species, it is imperative that we […]

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Vol. 62 / No. 3

By: Miranda E. Mote

The Art of Gardening in a Pennsylvania Woods: The Garden of Francis D. Pastorius

SEVERAL CITY BLOCKS separate what is today 6019 Germantown Avenue and the green space of the Awbury Arboretum. At one […]

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Vol. 62 / No. 3

By: Chantel White, Elizabeth Coulter, Bevan Pearson and Juliet Stein

A Botanical Discovery at Bartram’s Garden: Evidence for Preserved Plant Material

TODAY, visitors to Bartram’s Garden, located along the Schuylkill River in southwest Philadelphia, are greeted by a green terraced landscape […]

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Vol. 62 / No. 3

By: Alexandria Mitchem

Unearthing the Roots of the Past: Archaeology at Historic Bartram's Garden

ESTABLISHED around 1728, Bartram’s Garden is the oldest surviving botanical garden in the United States. John Bartram (1699–1777) was a […]

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Vol. 62 / No. 3

By: Marie-Claude Boileau, Justin Lynch and Yuyang Wang

Late 18th- to Early 19th- Century Flowerpots at The Woodlands

FLOWERPOTS—earthenware pots that are built to contain plants, not to be confused with ornamental urns—have a long history that dates […]

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Vol. 62 / No. 3

By: Jason Herrmann, Kacie Alaga and Katie Breyer

Reconstructing a Historic Landscape: Geophysical Prospection at the Woodlands

THE COUNTRY ESTATE of native Philadelphian William Hamilton (1745–1813), known as The Woodlands, included much of the land now occupied […]

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Vol. 62 / No. 3

By: Robert McCracken Peck

A Lucky Find: Seed Packets Shed Light on Philadelphia's Horticultural History

BECAUSE OF the ephemeral nature of gardens and the plants they contain, the history of horticulture is generally studied through […]

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Vol. 62 / No. 3

By: Chantel White

An Introduction to the Garden History of Philadelphia

ONE OF THE GREATEST GIFTS offered by gardens is the enduring way they connect the living world to the past. […]

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Vol. 62 / No. 3

Eight Years with Julian Siggers: At the Museum

Over the past eight years, Williams Director Julian Siggers led the way in transforming our Penn Museum. Re-imagining how visitors […]

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Vol. 62 / No. 3

By: Steve Tinney, Melissa Smith and Amanda Mitchell-Boyask

From the Co-Interim Directors

Dear Friends, Our gardens are part of the Penn Museum experience. All year, the Warden Garden and Stoner Courtyard invite […]

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Vol. 62 / No. 3

By: Jane Hickman

From the Editor

We are fortunate to have many public gardens in the Philadelphia region that are wonderful places to visit in all […]

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