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The blog of The Huntington Library, Art Museum, and Botanical Gardens.

Botanical

Two Gifts from Master Bonsai Artists

Thu., Feb. 23, 2017 | Ted Matson
One of the most iconic images of California is the coast live oak (Quercus agrifolia). With its rugged trunk, twisting branches, and broad canopy, it adds both power and grace to our native landscape. We're fortunate to have more than 200 coast live oaks on The Huntington property. We also have a very small and special one that expresses the iconographic qualities we associate with our native oaks.
Library

Frederick Douglass, Celebrity

Mon., Feb. 20, 2017 | Olga Tsapina
By the time of his death on Feb. 20, 1895, Frederick Douglass had become one of the most celebrated personalities in the United States. Born a slave in Maryland around 1818, he escaped to New York in 1838
Events

Still Time to Color Our Collections

Thu., Feb. 16, 2017 | Kate Lain
Even if you missed the chance last week to participate in #ColorOurCollections, a coloring extravaganza organized by The New York Academy of Medicine Library, there's still time to join in the fun.
Audio

Recent Lectures: Jan. 9–Feb. 8, 2017

Mon., Feb. 13, 2017 | Huntington Staff
Home to gorgeous gardens, spectacular art, and stunning rare books and manuscripts, The Huntington also offers an impressive slate of lectures and conferences on topics and themes related to its collections. Featured are audio recordings of five recent lectures and conversations.
Botanical

Caring for Camellias

Wed., Feb. 8, 2017 | Diana W. Thompson
The eastern side of the North Vista contains some of The Huntington's oldest and most precious cultivars of camellia. William Hertrich, Henry Huntington's superintendent of the gardens from 1903 to 1948, had a passion for the flowering plant
Beyond The H

Finding Molokai

Mon., Jan. 30, 2017 | Jennifer A. Watts
At daybreak on a steamy morning last August, my husband dropped me off at the Kalaupapa trailhead on the north shore of Molokai and waved goodbye.
Conferences

Religious Affections in Colonial North America

Wed., Jan. 25, 2017 | Caroline Wigginton, Abram Van Engen
In 1746, Jonathan Edwards—the famous preacher, theologian, and philosopher of the Great Awakening—tried to sort through the wide variety of experiences that doubt and faith can generate. Some experiences should be trusted as signs of grace, he argued; others, less so.
Library

Robert Seymour, 19th-Century Political Cartoonist

Wed., Jan. 18, 2017 | Ian Haywood
The Huntington possesses a trove of images from the golden age of British caricature—most notably by artists Thomas Rowlandson (1756–1827) and Isaac Cruikshank (1764–1811). It also owns some gems by Robert Seymour (1798–1836), an illustrator whose fame grew