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

 

Upcoming Event!

FIPbannerFragile Freedom

Saturday July 12, at 2:00 pm in the Carriage House

General Admission: $15 / Members: $10

FRAGILE FREEDOM, written and performed by Christine Emmert, is a personal look at the struggle of women to achieve the elective franchise.  It is directed by Richard Emmert.  Stage manager is Donna Samluk.

“Freedom is fragile and must be protected. To sacrifice it, even as a temporary measure, is to betray it.” – Germaine Greer

 

This one-woman play takes an historical look at the fight for woman’s political freedom and includes a look at figures, such as Lucy Burns, Lucretia Mott, and, of course, Susan B. Anthony. Ms. Emmert draws parallels between the past and the present with a script that is sprinkled with words of wisdom from Maya Angelou, Marian Anderson, Virginia Woolf, Gloria Steinem and others, emphasizing that our freedom as women is still “unfinished business”.

Tickets are available online or by calling our office at 585/279-7490 ext. 10. Members of the National Susan B. Anthony Museum & House receive discounted admission.

 

ABOUT THE PLAYWRIGHT

Christine Emmert is a born feminist and has been an actress, playwright, director, and educator for over fifty years.  Presently she volunteers in the Hopewell National Park outreach program where she brings tales of women’s struggles to a wider audience than that of the National Park.  This summer she is also performing in the Berkshires in August with her one-woman play, RED ROSE, about the life of Rosa Luxemburg.

Another of Ms. Emmert’s works, “From Out the Fiery Furnace,” was performed at the National Susan B. Anthony Museum & House in 2013.

FRAGILE FREEDOM is part of Hopewell Furnace National Park’s outreach program to raise money for preserving the Hopewell stoves that still exist.  Hopewell Furnace National Parks gave women equal pay for equal work and access to any job in the community in the 1800s, and so it is a good match with the struggle for the elective franchise.  The Friends of Hopewell support this production as an educational tool.

National Susan B Anthony Museum & House Celebrates Social Reformers

sar_imageSusan B Anthony was a champion for human rights for all, but she lived in a time when racism was rampant. Visit her National Historic Landmark home and take a tour to learn about her work to end slavery, as well as her friendships with Frederick Douglass and Ida B Wells Barnett.

Let us know you’re taking a “Stand Against Racism” on Friday, April 25, and receive a free admission with the purchase of one at equal or greater value.

The National Susan B. Anthony Museum & House is open Tuesday – Sunday, 11am – 5pm. Regular Price: adult admission $10; $8 seniors; $5 students and ages 12 and younger.

Friends of the Susan B. Anthony Museum & House Announce Spring Luncheon Speaker

Jim Memmott will speak at the Friends' Spring Luncheon on May 2, 2014.
Jim Memmott will speak at the Friends’ Spring Luncheon on May 2, 2014.

Jim Memmott, a retired reporter and editor, writes the weekly “Remarkable Rochester” column for the Democrat and Chronicle, focusing on the connections between Rochester’s past and present and on the people who have made significant contributions to the area.

A native of Little Valley, N.Y., and a graduate of Hamilton College and the University of Minnesota, Memmott, 72, taught English for nine years at St. Lawrence University in Canton, N.Y., before joining the Times-Union in Rochester in 1980 as a reporter. He went on to be a general assignment reporter, executive city editor and managing editor at the Times-Union and later managing editor and senior editor at the Democrat before retiring in 2007.
 
He teaches journalism at the University of Rochester and lives in Geneseo with his wife, Cindy.
 
Memmott will speak on “Giving Them Their Due: Finding Rochester’s Other Great Women”. The luncheon is scheduled for Friday, May 2, 2014 at 11:30am.
 
To reserve your seat for this event, please visit our website.

 

2014 Susan B. Anthony Annual Birthday Luncheon

LouiseKnight
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: Tuesday, December 3, 2013
CONTACT: Ellen K. Wheeler, (585) 279-7490, ext. 15, Director of Public Relations & Communications

National Susan B Anthony Museum & House announces annual birthday luncheon speaker!

Rochester, NY—The National Susan B. Anthony Museum & House proudly announces that its keynote speaker for the Annual Susan B. Anthony Birthday Luncheon, to be held Wednesday, February 12, 2014, is Louise W. Knight, author, lecturer, and historian.

In making the announcement, Anthony House president and CEO Deborah L. Hughes shared that the theme of the 2014 luncheon is “Up and Doing.” It’s a subject Louise Knight knows very well, as she is the author of two biographies on Jane Addams, one of the late 19th-century and early 20th-century activists in moving public perception and attitudes. Prominent in the battle for woman suffrage and a friend of Susan B. Anthony, Addams is perhaps best known as the co-founder of Hull House, the nation’s first settlement house. Knight will focus on Addams’s and Anthony’s ideas about democracy and how each of them put those ideas into action— “up and doing”—for the causes they held dear.

In addition to her Addams biographies, Louise Knight’s writing has been published in the New York Times, the Wall Street Journal, the Chicago Tribune, and the Women’s Media Center website. She is currently working on a book about Angelina and Sarah Grimke, two abolitionists and women’s rights advocates of the 1830s.

The Susan B. Anthony Birthday Luncheon is held each year in mid-February to celebrate Susan B. Anthony’s February 15th birthday, to honor contemporary women who continue her legacy, and to raise awareness of the education and inspiration programs that take place at and through the National Historic Landmark on Madison Street. The luncheon takes place at the Rochester Riverside Convention Center.

Annual Birthday Luncheon Photos

Anthony House President Deborah L. Hughes and U. S. Ambassador Dr. Suzan Johnson Cook at the podium.

Presenting sponsor and 2013 corporate partner, Kitty Van Bortel, challenges the crowd to “DO ONE THING.” 

11 year-old Za’Aisha Mizell tells the audience what Susan B. Anthony means to her.

Ambassador Cook gives the keynote address at the Annual Susan B. Anthony Birthday Luncheon

News 10 NBC’s Janet Lomax serves as emcee for the luncheon.

Rochester Mayor Tom Richards greets the crowd.

Board chairperson Jennifer Martlew presents the Anthony House report.