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DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20210205T130000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20210205T133000
DTSTAMP:20260506T222548
CREATED:20210128T205317Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20210128T205317Z
UID:26696-1612530000-1612531800@baltimoreheritage.org
SUMMARY:The Preserve the Baltimore Uprising Project: A People's Archive (Virtual Lecture)
DESCRIPTION:Preserve the Baltimore Uprising began as a digital repository designed to preserve and make accessible original content captured and created by individual community members\, grassroots organizations\, and witnesses to the protests that followed the death of Freddie Gray on April 19\, 2015. It is a people’s archive. For the people. By the people. Owned by all. \nPublic Historians strive to be both responsible and responsive. As scholars\, we are responsible for upholding the highest standards of intellectual inquiry. As public servants\, we are committed to responding to the needs\, interests\, and desires of our audiences and stakeholders. Sometimes it is difficult to balance these two demands. In this talk\, Dr. Denise Meringolo\, Professor and Director of Public History at the University of Maryland\, Baltimore County\, describes the processes\, values\, and ethical considerations underlying the creation of Preserve the Baltimore Uprising\, a crowd-sourced digital collection. \n  \nThis program is hosted on Zoom. Upon registering you will receive an email confirmation and a Zoom link. If you do not receive a link\, please contact ndennies@aiabalt.com. If you do not contact us at least 1 hour prior to the start of the program\, we cannot guarantee admittance. \nVirtual Histories are back in 2021! The Baltimore Architecture Foundation (BAF) and Baltimore Heritage present a series of 30 minute live virtual tours and presentations focusing on Baltimore architecture\, preservation and history. \nTickets are donation based. We encourage you to give what you can to support BAF and Baltimore Heritage. Your support helps us make up for lost tour and program revenue from COVID-19 and create more virtual programs like this.
URL:https://baltimoreheritage.org/event/the-preserve-the-baltimore-uprising-project-a-peoples-archive-virtual-lecture/
LOCATION:Virtual\, MD\, United States
CATEGORIES:Talks,Virtual
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ORGANIZER;CN="Baltimore Heritage":MAILTO:info@baltimoreheritage.org
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20210212T130000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20210212T133000
DTSTAMP:20260506T222548
CREATED:20210127T210014Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20210127T210014Z
UID:26693-1613134800-1613136600@baltimoreheritage.org
SUMMARY:Finding Eutaw Farm: The Herring Run Archaeology Project (Virtual Talk)
DESCRIPTION:Join us to learn about how Eutaw Farm was discovered and its role in Baltimore history! \nJason Shellenhamer and Lisa Kraus are the co-directors of the Herring Run Archaeology Project\, a free public archaeology program in the City of Baltimore. Jason\, Lisa and their team of volunteers have spent the last 6 years exploring the remains of Eutaw Farm\, an 18th and 19th century estate located in modern Herring Run Park. The house at Eutaw Farm burned down in 1865\, and vanished from memory\, but it was never really gone. Join us to learn about how Eutaw Farm was discovered\, the roles it played in Baltimore’s history\, and the fascinating people who once called Eutaw home. \nThis program is hosted on Zoom. Upon registering you will receive an email confirmation and a Zoom link. If you do not receive a link\, please contact ndennies@aiabalt.com. If you do not contact us at least 1 hour prior to the start of the program\, we cannot guarantee admittance. \nVirtual Histories are back in 2021! The Baltimore Architecture Foundation (BAF) and Baltimore Heritage present a series of 30 minute live virtual tours and presentations focusing on Baltimore architecture\, preservation and history. \nTickets are donation based. We encourage you to give what you can to support BAF and Baltimore Heritage. Your support helps us make up for lost tour and program revenue from COVID-19 and create more virtual programs like this.
URL:https://baltimoreheritage.org/event/finding-eutaw-farm-the-herring-run-archaeology-project-virtual-talk/
LOCATION:Virtual\, MD\, United States
CATEGORIES:Talks,Virtual
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://baltimoreheritage.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/01/https___cdn.evbuc_.com_images_124359821_70966038103_1_original.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="Baltimore Heritage":MAILTO:info@baltimoreheritage.org
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20210219T130000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20210219T133000
DTSTAMP:20260506T222548
CREATED:20210209T201757Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20210209T201757Z
UID:26706-1613739600-1613741400@baltimoreheritage.org
SUMMARY:Virtual Talk: Olmsted Brothers Vision for Wyman Park and the Stony Run Stream Valley
DESCRIPTION:The presentation will focus on the Olmsted vision and what remains today! Wyman Park and the Stony Run Stream Valley demonstrate the premier design work of the Olmsted Brothers from 1903 to 1947. The influential landscape architecture firm was established in 1898 by brothers John Charles Olmsted and Frederick Law Olmsted Jr.\, sons of the eminent landscape architect Frederick Law Olmsted. The Municipal Art Society hired them to produce the City’s first comprehensive park system plan in 1904\, the Development of Public Grounds for Greater Baltimore Report. The Wyman family had donated land for Johns Hopkins University in 1902 for use as a northern campus and that same year\, the University gave the remainder of the land to the City of Baltimore to serve as a public park. \nIn the 1904 Report\, the Olmsted Brothers identified Wyman Park\, with its old beech trees and bold topography\, as one of the finest single passages of scenery to be so near a large city and advocated for it to become a stream valley reserve and extended north and south Bookending the University to the southeast and fitting into the City grid is the intact Wyman Park Dell\, a 16-acre public park noted for its steep enclosing slopes and a large\, sweeping lower lawn\, fully realized and conceived by the Olmsted Brothers. The presentation will focus on their vision and what remains today from Stony Run’s headwaters at the city’s northern border to where the stream joins the Jones Falls River to the south. \nIn addition to the Baltimore Architecture Foundation (BAF) and Baltimore Heritage\, Inc.\, this Virtual History is co-sponsored by the Friends of Maryland’s Olmsted Parks & Landscapes (FMOPL) and the Maryland Society of Landscape Architects. \n  \nPresenters’ Bios: \nSince 1986\, Sandy Sparks\, founding president of the FMOPL\, is strongly committed to the non-profit organization’s involvement in streetscape\, park system and watershed planning\, in addition to its significant archive of Olmsted drawings. Since the 1990s\, Sandy has served as the designer/editor of The Olmstedian monograph series focused on Olmsted designs in the Baltimore region. A strong believer in the value of stakeholder-based parks friends groups\, Sandy launched the Friends of Wyman Park Dell (1983)\, Friends of Mt. Vernon Place (2000) and Friends of Stony Run (2011). With support from the Central Baltimore Partnership\, she led the launch of the Friends of the Jones Falls\, becoming the group’s first President in 2019. A graduate of the University of Illinois (BFA) and Maryland Institute of Art (MFA)\, Sandy remains an active leader in Charles Village\, where she has lived since 1966 and continues to design/edit The Charles Villager. \nJillian Storms\, AIA\, is an architect in the School Facilities Branch of the Maryland State Department of Education. She once served on the Board of Directors and Inventory Committee of FMOPL. She is a former President of the BAF and now serves as co-chair of its research committee\, the Dead Architects’ Society. She received BAF’s Roger Redden Award and Preservation Maryland’s George T. Harrison Volunteer Award in recognition of her extensive architectural research and public programming and has already graced us with a couple of Virtual Histories focused on that research. \n  \nAbout this Event \n\n\nThis program is hosted on Zoom. Upon registering you will receive an email confirmation and a Zoom link. If you do not receive a link\, please contact ndennies@aiabalt.com. If you do not contact us at least 1 hour prior to the start of the program\, we cannot guarantee admittance. \nVirtual Histories are back in 2021! The Baltimore Architecture Foundation (BAF) and Baltimore Heritage present a series of 30 minute live virtual tours and presentations focusing on Baltimore architecture\, preservation and history. \nTickets are donation based. We encourage you to give what you can to support BAF and Baltimore Heritage. Your support helps us make up for lost tour and program revenue from COVID-19 and create more virtual programs like this. A portion of donations will also go to Friends of Maryland’s Olmsted Parks & Landscapes (FMOPL).
URL:https://baltimoreheritage.org/event/virtual-talk-olmsted-brothers-vision-for-wyman-park-and-the-stony-run-stream-valley/
LOCATION:Virtual\, MD\, United States
CATEGORIES:Talks,Virtual
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://baltimoreheritage.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/02/https___cdn.evbuc_.com_images_124356813_70966038103_1_original.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="Baltimore Heritage":MAILTO:info@baltimoreheritage.org
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20210226T130000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20210226T133000
DTSTAMP:20260506T222548
CREATED:20210209T202224Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20210209T202224Z
UID:26709-1614344400-1614346200@baltimoreheritage.org
SUMMARY:Design for Distancing: Reopening Baltimore Together (Virtual Talk)
DESCRIPTION:Learn how local designers are working to make public spaces safer during the pandemic! \nHear from three local design teams – Envirocollab\, Graham Projects and Living Design Lab – who are working to adapt public spaces for COVID-19 and how Baltimore’s Design for Distancing program can serve as a model for other cities. This program is presented in partnership with Neighborhood Design Center\, AIA Baltimore/Baltimore Architecture Foundation\, the Maryland Chapter of the American Society of Landscape Architects (MD ASLA) and the Baltimore Museum of Industry. \nDesign for Distancing is a program of the City of Baltimore\, Office of the Mayor and the Baltimore Development Corporation\, in partnership with local nonprofit the Neighborhood Design Center. Developed in the summer of 2020 in response to COVID-19 and the challenges faced by local businesses\, the Design for Distancing program called on Baltimore’s world class design and public health communities to develop innovative approaches to safe\, physically distant gathering. \n  \nAbout this Event \n\n\nThis program is hosted on Zoom. Upon registering you will receive an email confirmation and a Zoom link. If you do not receive a link\, please contact ndennies@aiabalt.com. If you do not contact us at least 1 hour prior to the start of the program\, we cannot guarantee admittance. \nTickets to all Virtual Histories are donation based. Your support helps us make up for lost tour and program revenue from COVID-19 and create more virtual programs like this. Donations from this program will also be split with Baltimore Heritage and the Baltimore Museum of Industry.
URL:https://baltimoreheritage.org/event/design-for-distancing-reopening-baltimore-together-virtual-talk/
LOCATION:Virtual\, MD\, United States
CATEGORIES:Talks,Virtual
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://baltimoreheritage.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/02/https___cdn.evbuc_.com_images_125523453_70966038103_1_original.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="Baltimore Heritage":MAILTO:info@baltimoreheritage.org
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