National Susan B. Anthony Museum & House Receives Greater Hudson Heritage Network Grant

Credit: National Susan B. Anthony Museum & House
Credit: National Susan B. Anthony Museum & House

Rochester, NY – The National Susan B. Anthony Museum & House has been awarded a 2014 Museum Conservation Treatment Grant by the Greater Hudson Heritage Network, in association with the New York State Council on the Arts (NYSCA). The $1,856.84 grant will be used to conserve a cross-stitch sampler created by Susan B. Anthony over a three-year period beginning in 1831. Conservation work will be completed by Sarah Stevens of Zephyr Preservation Studios.

Deborah L. Hughes, President & CEO of the Anthony Museum, noted, “Susan B. Anthony had this sampler prominently displayed in her office when she was in her eighties, so we know that it was important to her. It is precious today because it connects us personally to young Susan and her family. This was her handiwork, long before she was the Great Reformer. We are most grateful for this conservation grant from the Greater Hudson Heritage Network, and we are pleased that Sarah C. Stevens will be the conservator for this important project”.

Greater Hudson Heritage Network’s grant programs recognize “excellent stewardship of New York State’s cultural heritage”, according to its Executive Director, Priscilla Brendler, and are highly competitive. The National Susan B. Anthony Museum & House sincerely thanks the Greater Hudson Heritage Network for this generous grant.

Lady Long Rider, Bernice Ende, to visit Anthony Museum

Bernice Ende, Lady Long Rider
Courtesy of endeofthetrail.com

Bernice Ende will travel through Rochester on Thursday, September 4th, making stops at the National Susan B. Anthony Museum & House and Mt. Hope Cemetery. Ms. Ende, a retired teacher, is currently on a 2 ½ year, 8,000 mile horseback trek across the United States and Canada to commemorate Montana’s suffrage centennial.

Ms. Ende will pay her respects and give prepared remarks at Susan B. Anthony’s gravesite in Mt. Hope Cemetery, section C, at approximately 11:15 am. She will be available to media for a limited time following her remarks. Ms. Ende will then proceed to the Susan B. Anthony neighborhood, arriving at the Anthony Museum on horseback by 1:30 pm, where she will also be available to the press. At 3:00 pm, Ms. Ende will present “1914 to 2014: 100 years of woman suffrage in Montana” in the Carriage House. The public is invited to attend this exclusive engagement.

 

For more information on Bernice Ende, please visit her website at www.endeofthetrail.com.

Museum Contact: Sarah M. Abbamonte, Director of Communications, 585/279-7490 x15

Upcoming Event: 2014 Susan B. Anthony Festival

The 2014 Susan B. Anthony Festival will take place on Sunday, August 17, from noon to 5pm in the Susan B. Anthony Park between Madison & King Streets. This annual event celebrates the anniversary of the ratification of the 19th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution, granting women throughout the country the right to vote. The amendment is better known as the “Susan B. Anthony Amendment”.

ChetCatallo2Live music & entertainment will be provided throughout the afternoon in the Park. Local artists include 6-time Grammy nominee and 2012 Arts & Cultural Council for Greater Rochester “Artist of the Year”, Chet Catallo & the Cats, who will perform at 3pm. Also performing are Cammy Enharo, the Raging Grannies, and the Spiritus Christi Choir. Food vendors and unique artisans will also be on hand.

tours (3)Free walking tours of this 19th century Historic Preservation District will also be offered, beginning in the Park. Tours of the Anthony House will be available at a discounted cost for the event.

This event is presented by the Susan B. Anthony Neighborhood Association and the National Susan B. Anthony Museum & House. Deborah L. Hughes, President & CEO of the Anthony Museum, said, “Susan B. Anthony worked all her life to give women a voice. Considering the events of the past year, her work is as relevant today as it was when she was living.”

Dawn Noto, President of the Susan B. Anthony Neighborhood Association, said, “We are very excited for the annual Susan B. Anthony Festival. Our Historic Preservation District is looking fantastic and this festival gives us an opportunity to share the collaborative work this community has done.”

 

Happy 50th Birthday, Gladys Nocon Songer!

gladys50th

“With Miss Anthony the love of family was especially intense…”

– Ida Hustead Harper, The Life & Work of Susan B. Anthony

 In this tradition, Nannette Nocon, of Nocon & Associates, has generously sponsored today at the Anthony Museum in honor of her sister, Gladys Nocon Songer’s, 50th birthday!

 Nocon, a private wealth advisor for 30 years, is also the author of several children’s books, including, What’s Up with Yuk?, “an art book on positive & negative choices”.

Nocon-Associates

Special Members Event!

neighborhood-girlDo you have children or grandchildren entering grades 3 – 6?

Join the National Susan B. Anthony Museum & House for Susan B’s Summer Fun in the Sun program on Wednesday, July 30, from 3pm – 5pm, for games, activities, refreshments, and more, including:

  • Sculpture Creation
  • Alligator Purse Game
  • Sidewalk Murals
  • Tour Miss Anthony’s home 

    This event is complimentary for members, but space is limited! Register below to reserve your spot!

    **Children must be accompanied by an adult throughout the event. At least one adult per every two children is required.

    For more information, please contact our Program Director, Annie Callanan, or call 585/235-6124 x19.

Monday Lecture Series Special Presentation

Image courtesy of Mercer University Press.
Image courtesy of Mercer University Press.

Special Monday Lecture Series Summer Date

Monday August 4, 2014, for one presentation with Lunch at noon

Author Carolyn Newton Curry

SUFFER & GROW STRONG: The Life of Ella Gertrude Clanton Thomas

Ella Gertrude Clanton Thomas, born in 1834 in Georgia, kept a diary for 41 years of her life before, during, and after the Civil War.  The aftermath of the war brought bankruptcy, the death of loved ones, serious illness, and devastating family strife. Thomas examined what was happening, asked questions, and strived to find ways to improve her family’s dire economic straits.  She started a school in her home and later ran a boardinghouse out of the old family mansion.  She became active in many women’s organizations including the Women’s Christian Temperance Union and the Suffrage Movement. She wrote articles for newspapers.  She was elected president of the Georgia Woman Suffrage Association. Her life is an amazing story of survival and transformation that speaks to women in our own time.

Ms. Curry will have her book available for sale and she will be available to sign her book after her presentation.

The Susan B. Anthony Legacy Experience: Be Part of the Story

The Program:
Monday, August 4, 2014

  • A special tour of the Susan B. Anthony Museum & House
  • An evening of wine tasting and dinner with Rochester’s own Holly Howell featuring New York state wines and women vintners

Tuesday, August 5, 2014

  • Program with Rochester city historian, Christine Ridarsky
  • Motor coach tour of some of the key Rochester landmarks in our story
  • A special docent-led tour to the graves of Anthony and Frederick Douglass
  • An afternoon program at the Rochester Museum and Science Center by historian and Underground Railroad expert, Dr. David Anderson
  • Special viewing of Anthony artifacts from the Rochester Museum vault
  • Dinner at the beautiful and historic Perkins Mansion
  • A evening of entertainment by the group “Then Again”

Wednesday, August 6, 2014

  • A bus trip to Auburn and the William Seward House for a special “Suffrage” tour
  • Lunch at the Spring Side Inn on the shores of beautiful Owasco Lake
  • Afternoon programs at the Wesleyan Chapel, the Women’s Rights National Park, and the Elizabeth Cady Stanton home
  • A late afternoon drive through the Finger Lakes with dinner at Bristol Harbor Lodge overlooking beautiful Canandaigua Lake.

Thursday, August 7, 2014

  • Explore an interest in depth. Choose one seminar: “The Little Known Story of the Anti-Suffragists” or “Susan B. Anthony: A Champion for Nursing”
  • Travel to the Anthony House for a closing program: “Leadership in the Anthony Tradition-Unfinished Business” by the Susan B. Anthony Institute of the University of Rochester
  • Closing Remarks by Deborah L. Hughes, President & CEO, National Susan B. Anthony Museum & House

 

Sharing Stories

For every visitor at the National Susan B. Anthony Museum & House, our staff and volunteers are dedicated to “keeping Susan B. Anthony’s vision alive & relevant”. Our tours and programs aim to “challenge individuals to make a positive difference in their lives and communities”. Our passion is sharing Susan B. Anthony’s story with all of you, but it is always special when guests share their stories with us: what brought them to the House or how a previous visit inspired them in some way.

On May 17th, 2014, a smiling woman appeared in our Visitor Center, dressed in graduation cap & gown, and proclaimed, “The Susan B. Anthony House changed my life”. This guest had attended one of our women’s programs several years ago, when she was middle-aged and homeless. That day, something about the House and the story of Susan B. Anthony inspired her. “Susan B. Anthony said ‘Failure is impossible!’ and I decided it was time for me to tackle the barriers in my life,” she said. “Today, I graduated with a Masters in Marriage and Family Counseling from the University of Rochester. I came here as soon as the graduation ceremony was over to say thank you”.

Susan B. Anthony, who in the 1890’s worked to admit the first women to the University of Rochester, would have loved to hear this story. It certainly touched every one here that day and has inspired us in return.

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To view our programs, mission & vision, or to show your support, please visit our website.