Hawaiian Language Engravings

Displaying 1 - 37 of 37
Title Date Format
Aferika 1840 Engravings
Aina Moana 1840 Engravings
Amerika Akau 1840 Engravings
Amerika Hema 1840 Engravings
Amerika Huipuia 1840 Engravings
Animal skeletons 1835 Engravings
The Appearance of the Three Hills formed by the late eruption 1840 Engravings
Asia 1840 Engravings
Bread Fruit Tree, The Banana, The Bamboo 1838 Engravings
Diamond Hill as seen from Honolulu 1838 Engravings
Europa 1840 Engravings
Female Seminary 1840 Engravings
Grave of Mr. McDonald 1840 Engravings
Hana Ma Maui 1843 Engravings
Hawaiian Costume 1840 Engravings
Hilo, Hawaii 1840 Engravings
Holden 1838 Engravings
Honolulu as seen from the foot of Puawaina Punch-Bowl Hill 1837 Engravings
Ka Palapala ho ka Poepoe 1840 Engravings
Kaluaaha ma Molokai 1838 Engravings
Kamehameha 1840 Engravings
Lahainaluna 1840 Engravings
Maui seen from the anchorage at Lahaina 1838 Engravings
Mission House, Hana 1838 Engravings
Mission Houses, Honolulu 1837 Engravings
Mission Seminary 1838 Engravings
Na Mokupuni o Hawaii 1839 Engravings
Na Mokupuni o Hawaii 1840 Engravings
Na Mokupuni o Hawaii Nei 1837 Engravings
Na Muliwai 1840 Engravings
The Night-Blooming Cerius 1840 Engravings
Oahu Charity School 1838 Engravings
Temperance Map 1843 Engravings
View of a stream of lava as it entered the sea at Nanawale 1840 Engravings
View of Kailua, Hawaii, 1836 1839 Engravings
View of the bay of Kaawaloa 1840 Engravings
View of the countryback of Kailua 1836 Engravings

Hawaiiana at the American Antiquarian Society includes an assortment of more than thirty rare engravings produced by students at the Lahainaluna Seminary on the island of Maui. An intaglio press was introduced at this institution about 1834 and was used to teach students the skills of copperplate engraving and printing. The students produced maps, landscape views, portraits, and depictions of native floral.

The News Media and the Making of America, 1730-1865

The history of America has always been intimately entwined with the history of communications media—and that has always been changing. This exhibition broadly explores the interconnectedness of American news media, in all its formats, with changes in technology, business, politics, society, and community from 1730 to 1865.

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Reclaiming Heritage: Digitizing Early Nipmuc Histories from Colonial Documents

This online exhibition effectively creates a digital archive of several Algonquian-language printed books and pamphlets, or wussukwhonk as they are called in the Nipmuc language. The manuscript collections featured here include town records, land deeds, and account books.

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Original Meanings: Politics and Ideas in the Making of the Constitution

Twenty-eight years after he published Original Meanings, Jack Rakove reflects on how debates over deciphering the original meaning of the Constitution’s many clauses now dominate American constitutional jurisprudence. He proposes that while one might assume such inquiries would be inherently historical in nature──asking what the framers of the Constitution intended particular clauses to mean, or what its ratifiers or early commentators understood these provisions to imply──the application of these inquiries today has in fact taken another course.

Domestic Impressions: The Visual and Material Culture of the American Family Home, 1750-1890

Led by Katherine C. Grier

The Center for Historic American Visual Culture (CHAViC) encourages and facilitates the use and understanding of popular images by scholars in a variety of disciplines including American studies, gender studies, history, art history, literature, and theatre. The 2013 Summer Seminar, Domestic Impressions: The Visual and Material Culture of the American Family Home, 1750-1890 will be held July 7-12, 2013 at the American Antiquarian Society, 185 Salisbury Street, Worcester, MA.

Picturing Reform: How Images Transformed America, 1830-1880

The Center for Historic American Visual Culture (CHAViC) facilitates the use and understanding of popular images by scholars and their students in many disciplines — American studies, history, art history, and literature. Sessions at this summer seminar will focus on the history of print production in the eighteenth and nineteenth  centuries; interpreting portrait paintings, prints, and photographs; "reading" illustrations in popular journals; and related topics.