FRIENDS OF JOHN JAY HOMESTEAD 

Post Office Box 148 • Katonah, New York 10536 • 914.232.8119

WELCOME

Visit

Virtual Tour

Join our Mailing List

Contact Us

Area Restaurants

Bus Directions

ABOUT

Our History

Board of Trustees

Friends Staff

Site Staff

Site Rental Information

LEARN

School Programs

Availability Calendar

Teaching Garden

Winter Break Mini Camps

Adult Lecture Series

History Adventure Days

Historical Essays

Scholarly Assistance

EVENTS

Past Events

Have Your Event Here

Event Calendar

GIVE

Membership

ArtsWestchester Challenge

Volunteer

John Jay Society

PRESS

Current Projects

Current Exhibit

Press Releases

Newsletters

PHOTOS

The Homestead Now

2010 Event Photos

2009 Event Photos

2008 Event Photos

LINKS

Business Friends

Other Friends

Scholarly Friends

ADULT LECTURES



Nigel Hamilton: American Caesars: Lives of the Presidents from Franklin D. Roosevelt to George W. Bush
February 17, 2011, 6:30pm
Nigel Hamilton is one of Britain's most distinguished biographers: a recipient of the Whitbread Prize for Biography and the Templer Medal for Military History. His books include The Brothers Mann; his official three-volume life of Field Marshal Bernard Montgomery, Monty; his two-volume biography Bill Clinton; and his bestselling JFK: Reckless Youth, which was made into an ABC miniseries.  MORE INFORMATION TO COME SOON.

Annette Gordon-Reed: Andrew Johnson

March 3, 2011, 6:30pm
Annette Gordon-Reed, a 2010 MacArthur Fellow, joined the Harvard faculty in July of this year as a Professor of Law at Harvard Law School and a Professor of History in the Faculty of Arts and Sciences. She is the author of the landmark book Sally Hemings and Thomas Jefferson: An American Controversy and co-author of Vernon Can Read: A Memoir with Vernon Jordan. The Hemingses of Monticello: An American Family, won the 2009 Pulitzer Prize in History, the 2008 National Book Award for Nonfiction, and was a Finalist for the 2009 National Book Critics Circle Award in Biography.
MORE INFORMATION TO COME SOON.

Jeff Shesol: Supreme Power:  Franklin Roosevelt vs. the Supreme Court

April 7, 2011, 6:30pm
A founding partner of West Wing Writers, a speechwriting and strategy firm, Shesol is the author of Supreme Power: Franklin Roosevelt vs. The Supreme Court, which reveals why understanding the Court fight is essential to understanding the presidency and legacy of FDR - and to understanding America in our own, contentious times. His previous book, Mutual Contempt: Lyndon Johnson, Robert Kennedy and the Feud That Defined a Decade, was a New York Times Notable Book of the Year and a Washington Post Critic's Choice.  MORE INFORMATION TO COME SOON
 



 
PAST ADULT LECTURES

Thursday, April 15th
Graham Russell Gao Hodges
David Ruggles: A Radical Black Abolitionist and the Underground Railroad in New York City.

Ruggles was of one of the best known "conductors" on the UGRR, and crucially tied together many branches of the abolition movement, radicalizing many participants; William Jay supported him financially, personally and professionally. Mr. Hodges has written and edited more than a dozen other books, including Root & Branch: African Americans in New York and East Jersey, 1613-1863; he is the George Dorland Langdon, Jr. Professor of History and Africana Studies at Colgate University.


The next lecture, on February 4, featured Barnet Schecter
discussing his book The Devil's Own Work: The Civil War Draft Riots and the Fight to Reconstruct America. During those riots, John Jay II, a prominent New York Republican, pleaded unsuccessfully with Lincoln to declare martial law and put down the violence which nearly destroyed the city.

Lectures are held in the Ballroom at John Jay Homestead State Historic Site at 7:00 p.m. (registration beginning at 6:30 p.m.), and followed by a short reception and book-signing. Reservations are recommended. Click here to download the PDF of the invitation. For more information about the lecture series, or to receive an invitation, please call the Friends office at (914) 232-8119; email friends@johnjayhomestead.org.

 



 
Farmerettes Lecture
November 12, 2009

On November 12, the John Jay Homestead hosted a capacity crowd for a lecture by Elaine Weiss, discussing her book Fruits of Victory: the Woman's Land Army of America in the Great War. As lecture Chair Melissa Vail said in her introduction, the crowd included descendants of Farmerettes' employers, descendants of the original Farmerettes, and current Bedford Farmerettes. They are all strong and autonomous women who work and care for the land. Members of every garden club that maintains a garden at the Homestead -- Bedford Garden Club, Hopp Ground Garden Club, the New York Unit of the Herb Society of America and Rusticus -- attended, along with members of the Bedford Farmer's Club, and volunteers from the Bedford Hills Historical Museum and the Bedford Historical Society. Thanks to funding from all these organizations, the program was free and open to the public.

Read more about this event...





 
Annual Goodhue Lecture by Henry Louis Gates, Jr.
October 2, 2009


The Goodhue Lecture, which took place on Friday, October 2, featured Henry Louis Gates, Jr., speaking to a capacity crowd on "Genetics and Genealogy in American and African American History." Dr. Gates spoke about his early fascination with his own ancestry, and noted that through DNA analysis he has traced his own heritage, discovering that his ancestry is barely more than half African.  "Imagine," he said, "the head of African American Studies at Harvard is nearly half white!"

Mr. Gates showed a portion of his PBS documentaries "African-American Lives I and II," co-produced by Peter Kunhardt and Dyllan McGee of Kunhardt McGee Productions. During the clip, he interviewed several renowned black Americans, chosen he said to represent different occupations and different shades of skin. All participants discovered surprises in their ancestry -- tragedy or heroism involving an ancestor, or an absence of traceable connection to an African tribe he or she had identified with.  One thing he has found out through the process of researching and creating this documentary is that "everyone is moved by finding an ancestor."

The talk was followed by a wine-and-cheese reception and book signing.  Guests stayed for another 45 minutes, visiting the period rooms, talking with each other, and waiting for Dr. Gates to sign their copies of In Search of Our Roots:  How 19 Extraordinary African Americans Reclaimed Their Past, his 2009 book summarizing the work presented in the documentaries.

The annual Goodhue Lecture is dedicated to the memory of Mary B. Goodhue, a former state legislator and Trustee of Friends of John Jay Homestead. Because of the extraordinary appeal of the speaker, the lecture, normally a members-only event, was open to the public.  The Scholars Committee, chaired by Melissa Vail, is organizing the upcoming lecture series scheduled for spring 2010. Please see Upcoming Lectures section above for lecture dates and other specifics.




 
2009 John Jay Lecture Series:
A New Look at Three American Presidents

Starting with Andrew Jackson, whose contributions to American history was discussed by David S. Reynolds, author and Professor of English and American Studies at the CUNY Graduate School, the 2009 lecture series included authors who have written books about Abraham Lincoln and Thomas Jefferson. Prof. Reynolds spoke on February 4th about his book "Waking Giants: America in the Age of Jackson." On February 15, Philip Kunhardt, a local resident who teaches history at Bard College spoke about his book, "Looking for Lincoln: The Making of an American Icon." Lastly, on April 1, Annette Gordon-Reed, a Professor at New York Law School and history professor at Rutgers, discussed her book "The Hemingses of Monticello: An American Family." The most exciting news is that Ms. Reed just won the National Book Award in non-fiction for her book on the Hemings family and Thomas Jefferson. It is undoubtedly a worthwhile read, so buy your copy.

All three of the lectures took place on Wednesday evenings in the Ballroom at the John Jay Homestead, starting with a reception and book signing at 6:30 p.m., followed by the lecture at 7 p.m. Ticket prices for all lectures are $15 for members; $20 for non-members. For more information on our future lectures, call (914) 232-8119, email friends@johnjayhomestead.org.





 
WITH SPECIAL THANKS TO THE SCHOLARS COMMITTEE:

Melissa Vail - Chair
Carol and Thomas Brier, John M. Greenwood, The Hon. Donald P. Gregg, Timothy B. Harwood, James F. Henry, Alexia and Jerry Jurschak, Brian F. Landry, Bonnie and Piers MacDonald, Silvia and Steve Ohler, Robert Saunders, Timothy P. Schieffelin, Roger G. Schwartz, John Stockbridge, Kate and Tom Terry, James E. Walker, III,
John and Caroline Walker

Interested in the authors that we had at our lecture series, but were not able to make it?
Coming to the next Book Club meeting but don't have your book yet?

See below to purchase those books and more of our favorites.





 




 
BECOME A MEMBER!

Membership
Membership Status
Name to be listed as:
Renewal increase Amount:




 

Friends
- P.O. Box 148, Katonah, NY 10536 - phone: 914.232.8119 - fax: 914.232.5974 - e-mail: friends@johnjayhomestead.org
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Site - P.O. Box 832 - 400 Jay Street, Katonah, NY 10536 - phone: 914.232.5651 - fax: 914.232.8085 - www.nysparks.com