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Exploring Maryland's Historic Cookbooks

 

Thursday, July 21, 7:30pm

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Historic recipes can give us a taste of the food that Maryland was once famous for. They can also offer a window into the past: changing times and trends, and the lives of everyday people.

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Kara Harris maintains a database of over 50,000 recipes from Maryland cookbooks and manuscripts housed in libraries and archives around the country. She has appeared in local and national publications, TV and radio, including the Baltimore Sun, CBS Mornings, and WYPR.

 

To register, please visit the Eventbrite page for the event. Thank you. 

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This virtual event is free! Sponsored by the Friends of the Greenbelt Museum and the City of Greenbelt. We are proud to offer these lectures free of charge, but FOGM, the 501(c)3 nonprofit that supports the Museum, always welcomes your tax deductible donations. To make a donation, click here.

Women of World War II

 

Thursday, April 21, 7:30pm

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What famous TV chef worked in the WWII spy business?

What famous actress was a scientist whose inventions are still in use today?

What WWII era Miss America foiled a plot to steal her property by shooting the perpetrators tires out of their getaway truck at age 82?

Long-time Greenbelt Museum volunteer, Donna Peterson, will share the answers to these questions answers and much more!

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This is an in-person event. Please register in advance via Eventbrite here. This event is free and will take place at the Greenbelt Community Center Room 201 (multi-purpose room), 15 Crescent Road, Greenbelt, MD 20770.

There is free parking on site.

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Sponsored by the Friends of the Greenbelt Museum and

the City of Greenbelt.

Saving Black History Sites

 

Thursday, February 24, 7:30pm

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Join us for a conversation with Lawana Holland-Moore, Program Officer at the National Trust for Historic Preservation's African American Cultural Heritage Action Fund, about saving Black history sites. We'll talk about some of the challenges and barriers that make saving these sites difficult. We'll also hear about some inspiring projects that the Action Fund is supporting. Holland-Moore will also discuss preservation of sites associated with other marginalized groups, such as those that explore Asian American, Native American, and LGBTQ history. Finally, learn about ways we can all be involved in the preservation of BIPOC sites.

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To register, please visit the Eventbrite page for the event. Thank you. 

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This event is free! Sponsored by the Friends of the Greenbelt Museum and the City of Greenbelt. We are proud to offer these lectures free of charge, but FOGM, the 501(c)3 nonprofit that supports the Museum, always welcomes your tax deductible donations. To make a donation, click here.

Aberdeen Gardens: A New Deal Community for Black Families

 

Thursday, October 21, 6:00pm

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Join us for a virtual event to learn about Aberdeen Gardens (formerly known as Newport News Homesteads). Aberdeen Gardens was built under the umbrella of the Resettlement Administration during roughly the same time period as Greenbelt, Maryland. The most significant difference between the communities, however, is that Aberdeen Gardens was specifically built "by blacks, for blacks." Greenbelt, sadly, was only open to white families though both Black and white workers labored on its construction. The Aberdeen Gardens community was designed by prominent Black architect Hilyard Robinson and everyone involved in the project from Robinson, to the lead architect, to the community manager were Black. We are thrilled to welcome Mrs. Margaret Wilson, Aberdeen Gardens resident and historian, to speak about the history of this important community.

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To register, please visit the Eventbrite page for the event. Thank you. 

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PLEASE NOTE: This virtual event will begin at 6pm, earlier than our normal lecture series start time. Also, we will NOT be recording this event as we do not have permission.  Please register by 3pm on the day of the lecture. Participants will then be emailed a link by 4pm, two hours before the lecture starts. This event is free! Sponsored by the Friends of the Greenbelt Museum and the City of Greenbelt.

Photo above: "Community manager Walker with applicant. Newport News, Virginia," by Arthur Rothstein, November 1937. Courtesy Library of Congress

Retro Town Fair 

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Sunday, September 5, 1-4pm

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Retro Town Fair is back and in person! 

 

Want to participate? Click below to download the form.  

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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See the list of winners here! 

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This event is free! Sponsored by the Friends of the Greenbelt Museum and the City of Greenbelt.

Exploring Greenbelt's Pride

Movement  

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Thursday July 15, 7:30pm

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Join us for a virtual event exploring Greenbelt, Maryland's Pride movement. Hear from some of the founders of GreenBeLT Pride, one of the community's most visible LGBTQIA organizations. Following an interview with founders and Board members, stay for an informal discussion about gay pride and life in Greenbelt.

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Greenbelt, Maryland, a National Historic Landmark planned community, was built in 1937 as part of Franklin D. Roosevelt’s New Deal. The town was designed as a garden city that would be a model of modern town planning and cooperative living in America. Despite its progressive history, though, was it always welcoming to gay people? Have attitudes changed over time in the community?

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This is a virtual event. Please register by 5pm on the day of the lecture. Participants will be emailed a link approximately two hours before the lecture starts. This event is free! Sponsored by the Friends of the Greenbelt Museum and the City of Greenbelt.

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The North End: Greenbelt's WWII Community 

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Thursday June 17, 7:30pm

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Take a virtual stroll through the North End and discover what made - and continues to make - this area so important in Greenbelt's history.

 

When the federal government built defense housing at the planned community of Greenbelt, Maryland, it ended up with a town divided into two neighborhoods, with two different populations that lived in two kinds of housing, old and new, defense and nondefense. The two neighborhoods bonded through the home front experiences of World War II and the cooperative nature of Greenbelt’s municipal, social, and economic institutions. However, one section of defense housing physically and sociologically separate from the planned community, managed to create their own identity and spaces within the built environment provided to them. This area became known as the North End.

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Come take a virtual stroll through the North End with volunteer docent Stephen Oetken and discover what made - and continues to make - this area a unique part of Greenbelt’s history. This is a virtual event. Please register here. Participants will be emailed a link shortly before the lecture starts. This event is free! Sponsored by the Friends of the Greenbelt Museum and the City of Greenbelt.

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How the New Deal Transformed Greater Washington

 

June  6, 4pm

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Join the Greenbelt Museum for a virtual panel talk that explores how the New Deal transformed the greater Washington area through parks, buildings, bridges, art, housing, and more!  

Speakers: Richard Walker, executive director of the Living New Deal project, Isabelle Gournay, Architectual Historian, and Brent McKee, Living New Deal, Project Historian. The Living New Deal has published a map showing the immense contribution of the New Deal to Washington DC. A large-format map that folds to pocket size, it locates over 500 New Deal public works sites around the District of Columbia and highlights 34 notable sites, with descriptions on the back. Hear about several of the sites in the greater Washington area. 

Offered in conjunction with the Living New Deal Project and cosponsored by the Art Deco Society of Washington. Free! Pre-registration required. To register: https://www.eventbrite.com/e/how-the-new-deal-transformed-greater-washington-tickets-153698318809

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Black History Month Event

Desegregating Greenbelt: Family Histories of the Community's First Black Residents

 

Thursday, February 25 

 

7:00pm

Did you know that Greenbelt began as a segregated community? Despite the fact that it was built by both Black and white relief workers, only white families would be accepted as residents and it would remain segregated for several decades after its founding in 1937. Join the Greenbelt Museum to learn about the community's first residents of color.

 

Watch the prerecorded interview here!

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Offered in conjunction with the City of Greenbelt's Black History Month Celebration

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