Archives

Fans of Downton Abbey are eagerly anticipating the U.S. premiere of Season 4 on Jan. 5, when the British television drama resumes with events unfolding in the early 1920s. A trip to Binghamton University Libraries’ Special Collections offers a glimpse ...

Abraham J. Briloff, 96, died Thursday, Dec. 12, in New York City, following a recent hospitalization. The Presidential Professor Emeritus of Accounting and Ethics at Binghamton University and professor emeritus of accounting at Baruch College City University of New York, ...

“Downton Abbey” season four premieres Jan. 5 on WSKG-TV, but you can have a sneak peek when you join us for a special ‘tea and talk’ — and a celebration of all things Downton — Thursday, Dec. 19 at the ...

Snow-bound: a winter idyl by American poet John Greenleaf Whittier is the Special Collections featured book for December 2013. Snow-bound is a long narrative poem Which takes place in what is today known as the John Greenleaf Whittier Homestead, which still ...

Special Collections and University Archives will be closed November 28-29 for the Thanksgiving Holiday. We will re-open at 10 a.m. on Monday, December 2. Safe travels and a very Happy Thanksgiving to all! ...

Of course these beanies will be added to the University Archives located in the Glenn G. Bartle Library! Are you interested in donating materials to the Binghamton University Archives? The Archives welcomes donations of publications, photographs, memorabilia and other materials. ...

By Katie Ellis| November 20, 2013 There is never a lack of information when President Harvey Stenger gives his semi-annual address to the full faculty. Since the last update, much has happened, beginning with the well-known visitors to campus: Tony Kornheiser, the ...

Friday, November 22, 2013 3:30 PM to 5:00 PM Location: LN-1106 (IASH Conference Room) “That Civic Military Spirit”: Militia Reform in Antebellum Pennsylvania” will be the topic of the Upstate Early American Workshop with John L. Dwiggins from the University of ...

Nineteenth century rare books, daguerreotypes, and twenty-first century digital imaging technology converge to help us glimpse the lives of people in the 1840–50’s. Todd Pattison remembers the first time a daguerreotype really caught his eye. “A friend who collects nineteenth century ...

Friday, November 15, 2013 3:30 PM to 5:00 PM Location: LN 1106 (IASH Conference Room) “Riots and Rebellion: Political Violence in Pennsylvania, 1783-1800” will be the topic of the Upstate Early American Workshop with Dave Houpt from the Graduate Center: City ...