The Historic Happenings Blog of the Township of Ocean Historical Museum relates events being conducted by historical organizations within the State of New Jersey.
Monmouth County - Brielle - Vintage Base Ball: Monmouth Furnace vs. NY Mutuals
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Take me out to the Ball Game! Come join us for Vintage Baseball (played by 1864 rules!). FREE FOR ALL!
Chris Brune: 1890s in Music, Story & Poetry Lecture: The 1890's in Music, Story, and Poetry Join us on Wednesday, November 14th as we continue celebrating the Strauss Mansion's 125th anniversary year. Storyteller and performer, Chris Brune shares stories, songs and information in the style popular in the 1890's. Brune will be playing music in various styles and instruments and giving recitations and readings of classic American literature. Admission is free to all. Refreshments served. Strauss Mansion Museum 27 Prospect Circle Atlantic Highlands, NJ, 07716 Email: ahhistoricalinfo@gmail.com Phone: 732 291 1861
Thursday, February 27 – Mercer County Princeton Preservation Group to Meet on February 27 about Papyrus Ask anyone on the street in Princeton what the Princeton Preservation Group is and you are likely to get a raised eyebrow and a guess that they are people who want to preserve the town. Actually, the Princeton Preservation Group (PPG) has been meeting several times per year since 1983 to hear lectures on a wide range of topics relating to the preservation of cultural artifacts, including books, manuscripts, artwork, furniture, photographs, tombstones, Lucy the Elephant, quilts, costumes, videotapes, and buildings, just to name a few. The “Princeton” in PPG’s name derives from its founder, the late Susan Swartzburg, Preservation Librarian at Alexander Library at Rutgers. Swartzburg, a Princeton resident, taught a class in the Rutgers graduate librar...
Sunday, June 9 – Somerset County Save the Date for a visit with an 18th-Century Surgeon-Dentist Let us be clear: George Washington did not have wooden teeth. However, he did have dental problems through most of his adult life, as did many 18th-century folk of both high and low social class. There were no regular visits to dentists, with tooth brushing and flossing in between at that time. There weren't even dentists as we know them today. Dentistry was only just evolving as a separate profession through the eighteenth century. Barber-surgeons or surgeon-dentists provided many more services than our modern dentists. Toothbrushes were somewhat new, but rare for most people to use or even own. Germs were an unknown entity. On Sunday, June 9 at Rockingham, Marjory Wienkop will be in residence in the Dutch barn with a display of colonial-era surgeon-dentist instruments, related objects and much information on the real story of who took...