Events
Working With Our Community
Early on, The Seward/Mapes Homestead Committee decided to be more than a building restoration effort. We are interested in American history and want to share our enthusiasm for the subject. Since 2013 we have sponsored educational programs, often in partnership with The Florida Union Free School District.
Seward: Lincoln’s Indispensable Man
October 24, 2013
Walter Stahr, author of an acclaimed new
biography of William Henry Seward,
presented a lecture and book signing event on Seward that drew an audience of over
130 people. Mr. Stahr had visited the area two years earlier to do research for his book and was pleased to have had the chance to visit the birthplace for the first time. Mr. Stahr’s book, like his earlier biography of John Jay, was widely acclaimed. Since his lecture event at the S. S. Seward Institute in 2013, the distinguished writer and historian has gone on to write biographies of Edwin M. Stanton and Salmon Chase. Visit his website at: walterstahr.com
“Yours For Humanity”: Abby Kelley Foster
September 18, 2014
Actress Lynn Lydick
portrayed courageous early feminist and civil rights
activist Abby Kelley Foster in a one-woman play. During her lifetime, Abby Kelley Foster followed the motto, “Go where least wanted, for there you are most needed.” A major figure in the national anti-slavery and women’s rights movements, she spent more than twenty years traveling the country as a tireless crusader for social justice and equality for all. The
following day Llynn performed at an assembly attended by 200
Warwick High School students.
A Far Cry From Freedom: Gradual Abolition in New York (1799 to 1826)
July 7, 2014
In an event co-sponsored by the Albert Wisner
Library in Warwick, New York, author
L. Lloyd Stewart lectured about his
genealogical research as an African
American descended from pre-colonial slaves as well as his book about Gradual Abolition in New York entitled “A Far Cry From Freedom”. In doing so, he shed light on the world William and Frances Seward were born into, when slavery existed in
New York. In doing so he heightened our appreciation of their early activism on behalf of
Emancipation. He also dispelled any notion that slavery was primarily a southern institution and exposed the odious underpinnings of New York’s “Gradual Emancipation” as it was implemented in our state from 1799 to 1827.
Civil War Medicine: Two Parts Guts. One Part Glory
March 19, 2015
Renown expert on civil War Medicine
Carloyn Ivanoff, gave a graphic lecture
on Civil War medicine emphasizing the
fact that the war’s doctors were quite
accomplished for their time, saving the
lives of many soldiers, including our own Capt. William E. Mapes.
Captain William Mapes and the 124th New York State Volunteers
May 27, 2015
As the second part of our series on the Civil War, and to honor Captain Mapes by dedicating a memorial plaque in his honor, noted “Orange Blossoms” historian and
author Charles J. LaRocca delivered a
lecture on Captain Mapes’ Regiment, service and feisty personality.
The Political Gymnasium: 19th Century Political Cartoons.
November 20, 2015
Professor Andrea J. Foroughi gave a presentation about the gender roles and social norms of 19th Century America as expressed through the art and political cartoons of the
period. William H. Seward, as well as president Lincoln, were often caricatured and derided.
Nurses, Soldiers, Spies and More… Meet the Women of the Civil War
June 22, 2017
Lecturer and re-enactor Yvonne Bigney proved to us that Civil War women were more than the demure, delicate belles depicted in “Gone with the Wind” and a lot of popular fiction. They were, in fact, soldiers, nurses, spies and a LOT more! The event was very well attended.
Ghosts of Gettsyburg Battlefield
October 27, 2018
Historian Carolyn Ivanoff presented “Ghosts of Gettysburg Battlefield”, an
overview and description of the horrific three day battle. Members of the audience were left to form their own conclusions about ghostly images caught on film.
In March of 2015, Carolyn presented a
program on Civil War medicine.
The Suffragettes
March 14, 2019
In 1848, the first women’s rights convention was held in Seneca Falls, New York. But it wasn’t until 1920 that the 19th Amendment was ratified, giving American women the right to vote. Our guest speaker, Carolyn Ivanoff, presented her program in period clothing to commemorate the titanic struggle for suffrage. Told through period photos, political cartoons and editorials, Carolyn’s presentation was as engaging as her previous presentations entitled Civil War Medicine and The Ghosts of Gettysburg.
Seward Day 2020
Unfortunately, we had to cancel the celebration of the 220th Anniversary of the birth of our native son William Henry Seward. Like everyone, we hope the pandemic will be history by 2021. We aspire to be an educational asset to the Village of Florida and Orange County, New York. Take a look at the many educational programs we have had in the past: