Tuesday, October 15, 2019
Tuesday, September 17, 2019
Friday, July 5, 2019
July & August 2019 Events
Downtown Historic Churches Walking Tour
Saturday, July 27 – 10:00 a.m.
Corner of Capitol and Ottawa at Central United Methodist Church
You asked and we’re responding! After many requests, HSGL
is refreshing our walking tour of downtown historic churches. The
tour will include some of Lansing’s oldest congregations and most
beautiful historic buildings, including Christ Community Church
(formerly First Baptist), Central United Methodist Church, St.
Paul’s Episcopal Church, St. Mary’s Catholic Cathedral, First
Presbyterian Church, the former Christian Science Church (at 505
Seymour) and we’ll finish at the old St. Paul’s German Evangelical
Church, located at Walnut and Genesee. We’ll be talking about a
variety of topics, including architecture, the relationship between
churches and the capitol, how churches benefited from the local
auto industry, and the evolution of a German congregation during
World War I.
Pave the Way: Intersection of I-496
and Education
Saturday, July 27 – 11:00 a.m.-3:00 p.m.
EC3 Educational Child Care Center (former Main Street
School), 1715 W. Malcolm X Street
changing dynamics of education in Lansing during the 1960s,
including desegregation of schools and busing. Former teachers
at Main Street School will participate in a panel discussion, and
the Pave the Way Project will collect ephemera, photographs and
video memories, along with hosting a curated bus tour of the
I-496 route. Anyone who went to school at the Main, Lincoln,
Michigan, Kalamazoo and Sexton schools are invited. Also
during the event, the presentation of the Morris-Peckham Award
will be made, honoring Adolph Burton and Kenneth Turner for
their work preserving local history.
A Pave the Way Tour of Important
West Side African American Homes
Thursday, August 22 – 7:00 p.m.
Sexton High School, 102 McPherson
HSGL will be hosting a walking tour on the West Side
focusing on African American history as it relates to the Pave theWay project. The tour will include the homes of the Letts family
(of Letts Bridal), the McGuire family, doctors, dentists, lawyers,
elected officials, and others. The tour will provide insights into a
tight knit African American neighborhood created as the result of
the I-496 construction. The tour is in cooperation with the West
Side Neighborhood Association.
Wednesday, May 29, 2019
June Events
Lansing Juneteenth Celebration
Thursday, June 13 - Saturday, June 15
Various locations, see below.
HSGL is participating in the 26th annual Juneteenth Celebration. Juneteenth commemorates the end of slavery in the United States. The three-day celebration includes a Thursday kick-off at Lansing City Hall where HSGL will present its annual history award to two individuals who have significantly contributed to the preservation of Lansing's history during the last year.
In addition, under the auspices of Pave the Way: The I-496, HSGL will be gathering stories from neighborhood residents whose lives were disrupted and forever changed by the construction of I-496. Pave the War is a joint project of HSGL, the City of Lansing and the National Parks Service.
Juneteenth events include:
Opening Ceremony: Thursday, June 13, 5:30 - 7:30 p.m.
Lobby of City Hall
Commemorative Negro League Baseball Game and entertainment: Friday, June 14, 3:00 p.m.
St. Joseph Park
Parade, festivities, food and merchant vendors, health fair, music and exhibits: Saturday, June 15, with parade beginnings at 10:00 a.m. at Letts Community Center and marching to St. Joseph Park on Lansing's Westside.
MSU Sorority Row
A Walk Through Women's Greek History at MSU
Thursday, June 27 - 7:00 p.m.
Tour Starts at the Corner of M.A.C. Ave and Burcham, East Lansing
In 1870 the State Agricultural College officially opened its doors to female students. In the years since, the MSU campus and East Lansing have been home to increasing numbers of female students who've studied everything from domestic science to music, engineering, and agriculture.
As the decades have passed, MSU women have found community, support, and sisterhood through the Greek Sorority system. HSGL will go walking down M.A.C. - known to many as Sorority Row - where we will discuss women's history, traditions, scholarship, service, and architecture. Among the sororities we'll be featuring are Alpha Chi Omega, Zeta Tau Alpha, Kappa Kappa Gamma, Alpha Phi, Kappa Delta, Sigma Kappa, and Sigma Delta Tau.
Tuesday, April 30, 2019
Guardians of Detroit
Guardians of Detroit
By Jeff Morrison
Wednesday, May 22 - 7:00 p.m.
Library of Michigan, 702 W. Kalamazoo
Gargoyles, griffins, lions, and bears, cherubs, eagles, and praying monks - oh my! All these and uncountable more decorative figures adorn the buildings of Detroit, but until Oxford Michigan photographer and writer Jeff Morrison decided to photograph these incredible adornments they were undocumented and often overlooked.
Morrison, in his new book Guardians of Detroit: Architectural Sculpture in the Motor City, gives reads a close-up view of these incredibly, sometimes monstrous, figures with more than 770 photographs gracing the 350-page book published by Wayne State University Press.
Morrison attributes the large number of public adornments on Detroit buildings to "deep pockets, big egos, and men who wanted to build monuments to themselves" and sought out artists to complete the dream. Detroit certainly had its giants of industry, and the names on the buildings often tell the tale: Kresge, Fisher, Book, Buhl, and Whitney.
Ir you are interested in photography, architecture, Detroit, or the artists who created these decorative figures, you will want to join HSGL as Jeff Morrison shows photographs from and discusses his new book.
HSGL Annual Meeting - Vote for Nominees
Wednesday, May 22 - 6:30 p.m.
Library of Michigan, 702 W. Kalamazoo
The HSGL annual meeting will be held a half-hour before the start of the "Guardians of Detroit" program. Executive Board Members up for reelection are: Bill Castanier for President, Valerie Marvin for Vice President, Tim Kaltenbach for Treasurer, and Ron Emery for Secretary. Trustees up for re-election are: Joan Bauer, Jacob McCormick, Bob Rose, and Anne Wilson. Nominations can also be taken from the floor. Please come cast your vote.
Thursday, April 4, 2019
April and May Events
Downtown Lansing Walking Tour
Wednesday, May 1 – 6:00 p.m.
Begins/ends: Capitol Area District Library, 401 S. Capitol
The Office of Mayor Andy Schor, the Capitol Area District Library, and the Historical Society of Greater Lansing are joining hands to host the first walking tour of the season, focused on the south downtown area.
The tour will look at the former Arbaugh’s Department Store; the Bus Depot; the Lansing Women’s Clubhouse; the Midtown Apartments; and Reutter Park, Lansing’s oldest park, named for Lansing mayor and businessman J. Gottlieb Reutter. Also included on the tour are some elegant Victorian-era homes of famous and infamous Lansing residents. The tour will feature the homes of William Kerns, owner of the Kerns Hotel; the founder of Lansing Capitol Savings and Loan Association; an early Lansing alderman and vice president of the original Lansing Brewing Co; and a prominent Lansing attorney who was disbarred for “fraud, deceit and malpractice.”
The ABCs of DNA & Genealogy
by Jessica M.
Trotter
Thursday, April
11, 2019 – 7:00 p.m.
Library of
Michigan, 702 W. Kalamazoo
Everywhere
I turn, I hear people discussing their DNA results. But what can DNA testing
really tell you? Should you take a test? What tests should you take? What does
it all mean? DNA testing can be a powerful tool. Trotter’s presentation will
offer a layman’s overview on tests, testing companies, and how you can use your
results, as well as some of the pitfalls to DNA testing.
Jessica
Trotter is an Archivist with a Master of Science in Information, Archives and
Records Management Specialization from the University of Michigan—but works for
the Capital Area District Libraries in Collection Development by day. Trotter’s
background with DNA is as a genealogist and genealogy
instructor. She first tested her own DNA in 2012 in response to students asking
questions on DNA as testing prices came down, as well as out of
curiosity. She hoped it might help with a hard-to-trace line of formerly
enslaved African-Americans, but in retrospect it actually turned all of her
research on that line upside down.
Her
presentation on April 11 will look at the three major tests—Autosomal, Y-DNA,
and Mitochondrial DNA. She’ll discuss the major testing companies—including
Ancestry, 23 and Me, and MyHeritage. And she’ll walk the audience through what
the results look like and what you can do with that information.
DNA
is now an integral tool in genealogical research but not one to be taken
lightly. You have to know going in that you may find out secrets you didn’t
know about your family.
Antiquarian Book & Paper Show
Sunday, April 28 – 9:30 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.
Causeway Bay Hotel & Conference Center, 6820 S. Cedar Street,
Lansing
The 69th Michigan Antiquarian Book
and Paper Show is billed as “The Midwest’s Largest Book and Paper Show.” Items
for sale include: first editions, Americana, fine bindings, science fiction,
postcards, autographs, prints and maps, sheet music, posters, magazines,
Michigan history, children’s books, ephemera, photographs, rare books and more.
The show is sponsored by Curious Bookstore. Admission is $5.00 and parking is
free. For more information: curiousbooks.com/shows.html or call 517-332-0112.
Tuesday, January 8, 2019
February Event
Alois
Lang, Master Woodcarver
by
Tim Gleisner
Wednesday,
February 20 – 7:00 p.m.
Library
of Michigan – 702 W. Kalamazoo
Tim Gleisner, Head of
Special Collections at the Library of Michigan, will be discussing the life and
work of master woodcarver Alois Lang. Lang (1872-1954) was a Master Woodcarver
at the American Seating Company and
one of the artists responsible for bringing the medieval art of ecclesiastical
carving to life in the United States.
Lang was born in
Oberammergau, Bavaria, a town long
known for its excellence in wood carving. He was apprenticed to his cousin
Andreas Lang around the age of 14 and moved to the United States in 1890 at the
age of 19. Lang first found work in Boston carving elaborate mantelpieces for
Back Bay families. In 1903, Lang moved westward and joined the American Seating Company of Manitowoc,
Wisconsin, moving with the firm to Grand Rapids, Michigan, in 1927. There Lang became well known as a prominent ecclesiastical woodcarver. In 1946 the Michigan Academy of
Science, Arts, and Letters
presented him with a special award for his contribution to art in Michigan.
Lang’s
carvings can be seen in the following churches in Michigan: Christ Church,
Cranbrook, Bloomfield Hills; National Shrine of the Little Flower, Royal Oak; Saint
Paul’s Episcopal Church, Lansing; First (Park) Congregational Church, Grand
Rapids; Grosse Pointe Memorial Church, Grosse Pointe; and Hope Church (Reformed
Church in America), Holland.
Outside
of Michigan, Lang’s work is represented at: Rockefeller Chapel and Wicker Park
Lutheran Church, Chicago, Illinois; Christ Episcopal Church, Ottawa, Illinois;
The Emmanuel Lutheran Church, Rockford, Illinois; Christ Episcopal Cathedral,
Salina, Kansas; Christ Church, Boston, Massachusetts; Church of the Incarnation,
Great Falls, Montana; and All Saints Church, Pasadena, California.
Tim Gleisner has been
Head of Special Collections of the Library of Michigan for the last year.
Before that he worked as Head of Special Collections at the Grand Rapids Public
Library for 12 years. During that time Tim became acquainted with Alois Lang
and the furniture industry in Grand Rapids and West Michigan. Tim’s talk will
delve into how master artists like Lang helped to create an image for the
furniture industry of Michigan. Discover how this master woodcarver not only
changed the religious art here in Lansing, but in Michigan as a whole.
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