Posted on Wed., March 20, 2013 by Kate Lain

Hear ye, hear ye—The Huntington is expanding its social media presence and is now venturing into Tumblr territory! And though today is the official launch, we've preloaded our shiny new Tumblr with a smattering of images, links, and announcements for you to thumb through. We welcome you to check it out—and follow us!

Posted on Sat., March 16, 2013 by Shelley Kresan

Another post in a series from the cataloger of the Anne M. Cranston cookbook collection, which consists of approximately 4,400 British and American cookbooks from the 19th and 20th centuries. In this series, Shelley shares fascinating recipes

Posted on Fri., March 15, 2013 by Lisa Blackburn

Will you be wearing green this weekend for Saint Patrick's Day? If so, you'll have plenty of good company. But there will be one notable holdout: Saint Patrick himself. In the earliest known likeness of Ireland's patron saint

Posted on Tue., March 12, 2013 by Sue Hodson

"His finest-tuned tale yet." The tale in question is Kent Haruf's Benediction, just published by Knopf, and the phrase comes from one of a growing body of reviews filled with praise for the novel. In it, Haruf takes us back to Holt

Posted on Thu., March 7, 2013 by Shelley Kresan

Another post in a series from the cataloger of the Anne M. Cranston cookbook collection, which consists of approximately 4,400 British and American cookbooks from the 19th and 20th centuries. In this series, Shelley shares fascinating recipes

Posted on Tue., March 5, 2013 by Steve Hindle

Steve Hindle, the W. M. Keck Foundation Director of Research at The Huntington, will present a lecture at 7:30 p.m. on Wednesday evening, March 6, in Friends' Hall. His subject: The economic history of 18th-century rural England.

Posted on Fri., March 1, 2013 by Matt Stevens

When the conclave of cardinals assembles to replace Pope Benedict XVI, it might look past the example of Pope Gregory XII—the last pope to resign, in 1415—to Gregory I (ca. 540–604), known to history as Gregory the Great

Posted on Wed., Feb. 27, 2013 by Matt Stevens

Henry Edwards Huntington was born on this day in 1850, which makes today Founder's Day at The Huntington. You can mark the occasion by downloading last week's Founder's Day talk by David Zeidberg, the Avery Director of the Library.

Posted on Thu., Feb. 21, 2013 by Catherine Wehrey

Winners of the Pulitzer Prize might walk the halls of the Huntington Library, but come February the only awards that matter are the Oscars. Luckily, The Huntington has one in its collections.

Posted on Fri., Feb. 15, 2013 by Brandon Tam

Aung San Suu Kyi, Ronald Reagan, Margaret Thatcher, Abraham Lincoln, and Nelson Mandela have all changed the world in one way or another. And from Cymbidium Margaret Thatcher to Phalaenopsis Aung San Suu Kyi, these leaders have been forever immortalized in the botanical world as well.