Field Trips

Below are a list of the historic sites and libraries participants will visit during their week-long workshop in Philadelphia.

 
HISTORIC AND CULTURAL SITES:

National Constitution Center, America’s most interactive history museum, is located two blocks from the Liberty Bell on Independence Mall and is the only museum devoted to the U.S. Constitution and to understanding the interpretation and re-interpretation behind “We the People.” http://www.constitutioncenter.org

Walking tour of historic Philadelphia led by Poor Richard's Walking Tours, an educational organization staffed by University of Pennsylvania graduate students.

Independence Hall and the Liberty Bell form the heart of the National Park Service’s Independence Park. Workshop participants will have the opportunity to visit both. For more information visit: http://www.nps.gov/inde/

Elfreth’s Alley, founded in 1702, is one of the oldest continuously inhabited residential streets in America. Tour includes a stop at Elfreth's Alley Museum which is located in House 126 and built in 1755 by blacksmith and Alley namesake, Jeremiah Elfreth. The Museum has been restored and furnished to its c.1790 appearance and is the only house on Elfreth's Alley that is accessible to the public. http://www.elfrethsalley.org/

Reading Terminal Market opened its doors in 1892. The new Market was approximately 78,000 square feet and held nearly 800 spaces for merchants, each positioned in six foot stalls. The Market was laid out in a grid system similar to the streets of Philadelphia. http://www.readingterminalmarket.org/

The Philadelphia Bourse House – meaning a place of exchange – was brought to Philadelphia in 1890 by George E. Bartol, a prosperous Philadelphia grain and commodities exporter. While in Europe, Bartol visited the great Bourse in Hamburg, Germany. Upon his return to the United States, Bartol called together the most influential businessmen and merchants in the city, asking them to pool their resources to construct the city’s own business center. In 1891, The Philadelphia Bourse Corporation was formed, with each member subscribing $1,000 to the project, by an issue of stock and mortgage. The Bourse motto was “buy, sell, ship via Philadelphia.”
http://www.bourse-pa.com/bourse_history.htm


LIBRARIES AND ARCHIVES:

Significant portions of other afternoons are reserved for archival research and writing to take advantage of four key Philadelphia archival repositories—the Historical Society of Pennsylvania, founded in 1824 and one of the oldest historical societies in the United States; the Library Company of Philadelphia, founded in 1731 by Benjamin Franklin as North America’s first subscription library; the American Philosophical Society, founded in 1769 as the first scholarly society for scientific study in North America; and the National Archives Mid-Atlantic Regional Office, whose historically significant federal holdings date from the 1790s.

http://www.librarycompany.org
http://www.hsp.org
http://www.amphilsoc.org
http://www.archives.gov/midatlantic/