Posted on Thu., July 10, 2014 by Linda Chiavaroli

With summer in full swing, a few highlights from the past school year still linger in the minds of soon-to-be 8th graders from Eliot Middle School in Pasadena. Last fall, as 7th graders, they toured "Beautiful Science: Ideas that Changed the World" in Dibner Hall

Posted on Fri., July 4, 2014 by Matt Stevens

With the arrival of Independence Day weekend, The Huntington is counting down the days to the opening of expanded gallery space in the Virginia Steele Scott Galleries of American Art. Come July 19, you can visit five new rooms that will allow for the display of nearly 100 more works.

Posted on Mon., June 30, 2014 by Sue Hodson

British author Hilary Mantel has been named Dame of the British Empire in Queen Elizabeth's annual birthday honors, announced earlier this month. The Huntington, as home to her literary archive, celebrates and congratulates Dame Hilary.

Posted on Thu., June 26, 2014 by Matt Stevens

"One man lives in the city, the other in the woods," writes Huntington Curator of Photographs Jennifer A. Watts about photographers Bruce Davidson and Paul Caponigro.

Posted on Wed., June 18, 2014 by Lisa Blackburn

With its tidy beds of colorful flowers and leafy plants, the Herb Garden might not look like a classroom. But, in fact, that's precisely what it is. It's where school children discover where the minty flavor in their toothpaste comes from and where salsa gets its kick.

Posted on Fri., June 13, 2014 by Steve Koblik

Ten years ago, on Father's Day weekend in 2004, the Helen and Peter Bing Children's Garden made its debut. As we mark this milestone anniversary, a look back at how the garden came into being seems fitting.

Posted on Thu., June 12, 2014 by Nicole Yunger

The book had a sheepskin cover, and mold was growing on the sheepskin. Robert Hooke, a pioneering microbiologist, slid the cover under one of the world's first microscopes. Mold, he discovered, consists of "nothing else but several kinds of small and variously figur'd Mushroms."

Posted on Thu., June 5, 2014 by Matt Stevens

If California Chrome wins the Belmont Stakes this weekend, he will become the first California-bred racehorse to win the Triple Crown. And if he succeeds, it will be his second triple of 2014, following three big wins at Santa Anita Park

Posted on Thu., May 29, 2014 by Matt Stevens

Fifty years ago today the U.S. Postal Service issued a commemorative stamp on what would have been John F. Kennedy's 47th birthday. It features a pair of images: on the left is the eternal flame at Kennedy's gravesite at Arlington National Cemetery

Posted on Tue., May 27, 2014 by Lisa Blackburn

For those who enjoy both gardening and cooking (not to mention eating), cultivating an herb garden can be one of life's most rewarding pleasures. Being able to add freshly snipped chives to a buttery baked potato or some aromatic rosemary