A recent review in the philadelphia enquirer says this exhibition has love, death, and psychodrama. It goes on to examine a wealthy irish noble man who is part kickens with a spritz of Yankee Doodle into there is no doubt that his story from his traumatic head wound, to the demise at the hand of his own tenants is a cracking good tale, but it is more than love, death, and psychodrama. We see the entanglements of the 18th century and the global interconnectedness of the American Revolution. We find a story at the age of revolutions and also a story of today. A story of who we are and how we got here, and what the past means to us as a people or as nations. But we also find a detective story. A decades long mystery that started with two regullatively obscure paintings that had 22 works of art. One of the greatest mysteries of the past year, and my job brings me many, many joys on a regular basis, but one of the greatest has been watching this exhibition evolve and witnessing matts excite
Well, its incredibly exciting to welcome my friend of nearly 30 years now Joanne Freeman who i got to know running the streets of charlottesville when we were both young graduate students. It was already apparent at the time that there were a lot of smart people, i dont know how i got in, but joanne was already sort of head and shoulders above her colleagues, just had an incredibly sharp mind, was already talking about this founding father guy Alexander Hamilton, who most of us were like, come on, thats sort of boring. But lots of pressient things about joannes work as a scholar. Her first book affairs of honor published in 2001, does this sound relevant today, arousing exploitation of the distopian political culture. She was gone on to edit hamiltons writing. I hope joanne with tell us about how close to being a lifelong passion for Alexander Hamilton, shes add, was it the eighth grade. 14 years old she sent me a picture of her essay which she has preserved about the duel. This is som
The five-mile natural coastal shingle between Heacham and Snettisham has shifted inland, with the Environment Agency (EA) assessing to see whether a so-called trigger point has been reached.