Sunday, May 21, 2:00 pm, Monthly Program via Zoom.
“One Picture — Several Stories: The Petrograd Children’s Colony in Russia and America.”
A Presentation by Maria Sakovich
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A community of scholars based in
the San Francisco Bay Area
Sunday, May 21, 2:00 pm, Monthly Program via Zoom.
“One Picture — Several Stories: The Petrograd Children’s Colony in Russia and America.”
A Presentation by Maria Sakovich
…
Fall 2020: Revealing San Francisco’s Hidden 19th-Century Black History: A Tour of California Historical Society Artifacts, lecture by Susan D. Anderson, SF History Days (video here)
Summer 2020: Harlem of the West: The Fillmore Jazz Era and Redevelopment, online lecture by Elizabeth Pepin Silva
Fall 2019: An event-filled two-day excursion to Sacramento
Fall 2019: Tour of Marin Civic Center and presentation by member Bonnie Portnoy on The Man Beneath the Paint: Tilden Daken
Summer 2019: Reading of Judith Offer's play, Scenes from the Life of Julia Morgan
Fall 2018: Public Program, "South Asians in the South Bay: The Privileged Immigrants"
Spring 2018: Excursion to Niles area of Fremont with historic train ride and silent film museum
Spring 2018: The California and the West study group initiated the two public programs on "The Future of the Past in the Digital Age" and Benjamin Madley's talk on An American Genocide: The United States and the California Indian Catastrophe, 1846–1873.
Fall 2017: Martinez Adobe Fandango; Public Program: “Siberia and California: Connections During the Russian Revolution and Civil War”
Fall 2016: Amador County
Summer 2016: San Francisco Presidio
Winter 2016: Berkeley History Center
Spring 2015: Sonoma Plaza
Winter 2015: San Francisco Public Library
Summer 2014: Red Oak Victory and World War II Homefront National Historic Park, Richmond
Spring 2014: Los Gatos History Museum, "American Bohemia: The Cats Estate in Los Gatos”
Winter 2014: Tour of California Historical Society exhibition on Juana Briones, January 25
Summer 2013: Green Gulch Farm Zen Center visit, August 15
Spring 2013: Visits to Vallejo Naval and Historical Museum and the McCune Collection at the Vallejo Public Library, April 13
Saturday, March 7 am, via Zoom. Ann Harlow will present.
Writing and Revising Narrative History
Megan Kate Nelson is a historian and writer, with a BA from Harvard and a PhD in American Studies from the University of Iowa. She is the author of four books: Saving Yellowstone: Exploration and Preservation in Reconstruction America (Scribner 2022); The Three-Cornered War: The Union, the Confederacy, and Native Peoples in the Fight for the West (Scribner 2020; a finalist for the 2021 Pulitzer Prize in History); Ruin Nation: Destruction and the American Civil War (Georgia, 2012); and Trembling Earth: A Cultural History of the Okefenokee Swamp (Georgia, 2005). She writes about the Civil War, the U.S. West, and American culture for The New York Times, Washington Post, The Atlantic, Smithsonian Magazine, and TIME. Before leaving academia to write full-time in 2014, she taught U.S. history and American Studies at Texas Tech University, Cal State Fullerton, Harvard, and Brown. She grew up in Colorado but now lives in Boston with her husband and two cats.
For 70 years—from 1898 until 1968—Paul Elder was the leading bookseller in San Francisco. And for the first twenty of those years, he was also the major publisher in the city, issuing over 400 titles. His books were praised as works of art and are still collected today as art objects. In addition, Elder created a new kind of bookstore with a well-earned reputation for carefully crafted artistic ambience, where his “books beautiful” were displayed on equal footing with pottery, metalwork, paintings, prints, and jewelry. The store was profitable when many other bookstores were failing, and his novel approach gained both national attention and imitators. This talk presents a biography of Paul Elder, a survey of his bookstores, and some of his significant publications.
David Mostardi bought his first Paul Elder book in 1997, and has been researching him ever since. His Paul Elder website, paulelder.org, debuted in 2003. He published his Checklist of the Publications of Paul Elder in 1999, and curated exhibitions on Paul Elder at the San Francisco Public Library in 2004 and the Book Club of California in 2023. His forthcoming book, A Western Publisher: Paul Elder & Company 1898-1968, will be published by the Book Club of California this spring. David also leads field trips for the Golden Gate Bird Alliance and plays accordion for Scottish Country Dancing. David and his wife Arlene Baxter live in Berkeley, in a home designed by Julia Morgan.The Institute for Historical Study is a community of researchers, writers, and artists. Our common bond is a devotion to history in its many forms. Through wide-ranging programs, we share research, ideas, and practical advice and provide a public forum for the discussion of history.
Members: Please submit news of your history-related publications, lectures, awards, research finds, etc. to info@instituteforhistoricalstudy.org.
We welcome all men and women who have a commitment to historical study, which may be demonstrated in one or more of the following ways...
Institute for Historical Study
1399 Queens Road
Berkeley, CA 94708
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