Saturday, February
16, 1:00-4:00 p.m.
Atwater Kent Museum of Philadelphia
15 South 7th Street (between Market and Chestnut
streets)
program fee: Adults, $15; under 18 years, $10. Members discount:
Adults, $10; under 18 years, $8. Refreshments included at the Powel
House. Rain or shine. Space limited; reservations recommended, call
215. 685.4832.
In partnership with Independence National Historical Park
(INHP), AKMP Historian Cynthia Little guides participants on a private tour of
George Washington's Philadelphia. Starting at AKMP with an orientation,
including the display of Washington memorabilia and portraits from the
collection, the tour visits central national park sites, including the President's
House, Independence Hall and Congress Hall and the Second Bank. There a
curatorial tour of the portrait exhibition highlights people who were part of
Washington's Philadelphia.
At the INHP archaeology laboratory the significant findings from
the President's House excavation related to the enslaved Africans who were part
of the Washington household are on view. Michael Coard,
member of the Presidents' House Committee and spokesperson for Avenging the Ancestors, discusses the meaning of the excavation
and the revealed history for the African American community. At Old St.
Joseph's Church participants learn about the French refugee and Caribbean
Catholic community of the 1790s. The final stop is the Samuel and Elizabeth
Powel House on 3rd Street, where George and Martha Washington often
socialized. The tour concludes with refreshments and discussion.
Timed to coincide with the Presidents' Day holiday, the program
is part of a ten-day focus on Philadelphia's tenure as the United States
capital, including a special display of objects and portraits associated with
George Washington, including the presidential desk. Public hours:
1-5 p.m., February 9-10, 13-18. For information about this and other
programs, visit www.philadelphiahistory.org or call
215.685.4832.
Philadelphia: The
Capital City, 1790-1800 is sponsored by Fox Rothschild LLP and supported by the
Pennsylvania Humanities Council and the National Endowment for the Humanities' We
the People initiative on American History.