Franklin Park Bird Walk
Take a 90-minute walk through Scarboro Hill Woods and around Scarboro Pond.
Thrill to the sights and sounds of an array of birds that inhabit Franklin Park each spring. All levels welcome. Bring binoculars.
Take a 90-minute walk through Scarboro Hill Woods and around Scarboro Pond.
Thrill to the sights and sounds of an array of birds that inhabit Franklin Park each spring. All levels welcome. Bring binoculars.
Indians are the most recent immigrants in Massachusetts. Though a tiny minority, their contributions are numerous and far-reaching.
Author Meenal Atul Pandya details the influence of Indians on Massachusetts history. Pandya has been writing about India and its culture for more than two decades, observing the lifestyle and issues that face the Indian diaspora.
This talk examines the lives of African American children in Philadelphia, New York, and Boston during the late-18th to early-20th centuries by focusing on Black children's labor, play, and schooling.
It argues that northern Black children intersected shifting constructions of race and childhood, as a group upon which society experimented with treatments of the newly recognized social category of the child, and came to terms with the social and economic place of the nascent free Black community.
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This is a brown-bag lunch hosted by the Massachusetts Historical Society.
Part of the Bach Project, this concert features some of the nation’s finest period musicians performing solo works by the composer.
Vilna Families gather to say good bye to Shabbat with havdalah and celebrate, craft, and dance in honor of Israel’s Independence Day.
This interactive, fun event is for children ages 0-12. Please bring hula hoops, basket balls, parachutes, and other activities. Pizza dinner (kosher-style) served.
Join author and photographer Susan Mara Bregman as she shares stories from her book, "New England Neon."
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The golden age of neon in New England lasted more than 30 years, from the dark days of the Great Depression through the go-go years of the 1960s, but its spectacular legacy remains — if you know where to look.
With dozens of original color photographs and informative text, the book takes armchair travelers — and nostalgia lovers — up and down the main streets and back roads of the region, from the shores of Lake Champlain to the tip of Cape Cod.
Major Taylor broke racial barriers by becoming the world’s fastest and most famous bicyclist at the height of the Jim Crow era.
As a young man Taylor moved to Worcester, Masss. There is now a memorial to him outside the Worcester Public Library. Michael Kranish shows how Taylor indeed became a world champion, traveled the world, was the toast of Paris, and was one of the most chronicled black men of his day.
Kranish is an investigative political reporter for The Washington Post. He is the co-author of the New York Times bestseller, "Trump Revealed," and other books.
The Boston Society of Architects (BSA) Foundation is hosting an Architecture-themed trivia night to help raise money for its mission to build a better Boston.
Trivia questions will be based on architecture and design elements. All skill levels are welcome. You do not need to be an architect or master builder to participate.
This event is for adults 21 and older.
Dr. James O’Connell will share his experience from 30 years of working with the homeless community in Boston.
As president of Boston Health Care for the Homeless Program, Dr. O'Connell has spent decades working to provide healthcare to Boston's unhoused population. Join us as he shares his insights on access to healthcare in the 21st Century, and the state of homelessness in Boston today.
A panel discussion featuring four prominent, female architects reflecting on their journeys in the industry and their experiences with sexism, ageism, equal pay, and how none of these challenges inhibited their success.
Panelists include Nancy Berry, Editor of Northshore Home; Jean Carroon of Goody Clancy Architecture Firm; Elizabeth Graziolo, Partner at Peter Pennoyer Architects; Rachel Staud of G.P. Schafer Architects; and Beth Niemi, Architect at Elkus Manfredi.
This event is hosted by the Boston Design Center, in partnership with the Institute of Classical Architecture and Art.