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The shiny, metallic patch on this bee orchid (Ophrys speculum) mimics the gleaming abdomen of a female bee. It is commonly known as the mirror orchid. Photo by Aric Allen.
Verso

Bee Mine?

Feb. 9, 2022

The story of pollination seems pretty basic: Plants provide incentives—most often sustenance in the form of nectar and pollen—to entice various animals to transport pollen from flower to flower.

The cover of a diary, partially torn, with cursive writing.
Verso

An American in London on the Eve of Revolution

Jul. 3, 2023

The Huntington holds the diary of a merchant written during his time in London from December 1768 to April 1769. It offers a rare first-hand account of an American colonist’s experiences in London, just as relations between Britain and North America were deteriorating. 

William Martyns Historie, and Lives, of the Kings of England
Verso

Better than Bacon

Jul. 6, 2016

Last February, a bookseller contacted me about a book he had taken on consignment. Its owner believed it came from the library of Sir Francis Bacon (1561–1626), the statesman, scientist, and (for a time) alleged author of the Shakespearean plays.

Snark, the vessel on which the Londons and their crew attempted an around-the-world trip, at anchor in Apia, Samoa, 1908
Verso

Jack and Charmian’s National Park Adventures

Jul. 22, 2016

In commemoration of the centennial of the creation of the National Park Service, The Huntington is mounting two related exhibitions. The first part, "Geographies of Wonder: Origin Stories of America's National Parks, 1872–1933," is on view through Sept. 5, 2016.

Chinese woodblock print of a bird
Verso

Chinese Poetry, Painting, and Gardens

Sep. 15, 2016

Sometimes an object comes along that has so many ties to an institution's collecting areas, it's hard for curators to pass it up. That's what happened in 2014, when The Huntington acquired the Ten Bamboo Studio Manual of Calligraphy and Painting

Henry Meigs
Verso

Of Rats and Men

Mar. 27, 2019

In the spring of 1838, Henry Meigs (1782–1861)—a veteran of the War of 1812, former U.S. Representative, and a successful lawyer—discovered that he was sharing his house

William Allison Sweeney, History of the American Negro in the Great World War, 1919, Cuneo-Henneberry, Chicago. This photo in Sweeney’s book shows troops arriving in France. The Huntington Library, Art Museum, and Botanical Gardens.
Verso

The Library Tells the Story of “Nineteen Nineteen”

Jan. 2, 2020

Once asked by the press if he planned to write a memoir, the famously private Henry E. Huntington demurred.

Author Octavia E. Butler, 1986. Photo by Patti Perret.
Verso

Telling Her Stories

Apr. 6, 2017

The Huntington is launching the first major exhibition on the life and work of award-winning science-fiction writer Octavia E. Butler (1947–2006), whose literary archive resides here. She was the first science fiction writer to receive a prestigious MacArthur "genius" award and the first African American woman to win widespread recognition writing in that genre.

Collage of Verso article images from 2022
Verso

Reflecting on 2022 at The Huntington

Dec. 27, 2022

As 2022 draws to a close, we invite you to look back at some of our favorite Verso stories from the past year. Below is a selection of posts, one from each of the past 12 months, highlighting what makes The Huntington such a remarkable place.

Picture of a flying machine, powered by geese, in Francis Godwin’s The Man in the Moone, 1657, one of the books read by the lunatic Doctor Baliardo in Aphra Behn’s play The Emperor of the Moon, 1687. The Huntington Library, Art Museum, and Botanical Gardens.
Verso

“This reading of Books is a pernicious thing”

Apr. 13, 2021

In 1984, The Huntington organized and hosted the first of a series of meetings of local feminists. As a brochure in the Library’s archives explains, these seminars, scheduled to take place five times a year, aimed to “further academic research on material by and about women

Amorphophallus titanum, or Titan Arum
Verso

Titanic Mysteries

Jul. 5, 2022

In the botanical world, the Amorphophallus titanum, or Titan Arum, has been an A-list celebrity. The Huntington first acquired one in March 1999, and five months later, the Scott Gallery Loggia was the site of the first recorded flowering of Titan Arum in California.

Portrait of John Ogilby from 1663
Verso

John Ogilby’s English Restoration Fantasy

Mar. 28, 2018

John Ogilby was born in Scotland in 1600, died in London in 1676, and was, at various points in between, a dancing master, a theatrical impresario, a translator of Virgil and Homer, and a widely read geographer.

Print detail of early Californian gold miners
Verso

California Gold Rush Landscapes

Aug. 19, 2020

In January of 1851, John R. Fitch, a gold prospector, penned these words to his brother: "The wear and tear of the mines is very great."

Kelly Fernandez, head gardener of the Herb Garden and the Shakespeare Garden, harvests bundles of flax from The Huntington’s Herb Garden. Photo courtesy of Kelly Fernandez.
Verso

A Fascination with Flax

Dec. 9, 2020

When Kelly Fernandez, head of the Herb and Shakespeare gardens, revived The Huntington’s Fiber Arts Day program in 2013 and saw expert craftspeople dyeing, spinning, and weaving fibers into incredible textiles, she couldn’t help but be intrigued.

A waterfall cuts through a crevice in a tall mountain range, disappearing behind a forest of trees.
Verso

Another West: Ecologies of Photography

Feb. 27, 2024

An exploration of photography’s ecological dimensions provides an opportunity to reexamine the role that photography has played in documentation as well as environmental degradation. By examining photographs other than those of classic Western landscapes, we reconsider how Indigenous persons and settlers perceived and interacted with the environment.

Pictured on the front page of The Huntington's April/May 1970 calendar was a serene view of Lake Windermere in England's Lake District, where Wordsworth was born. Watercolor sketch by Francis Towne, 1786.
Verso

The Year Was 1970

May 13, 2020

The Huntington's bimonthly newsletter has been in print for more than a half-century.

Detail of Preserve Co-Operation poster from 1917 designed by Carter Housh
Verso

A Resurgence of Victory Gardens

Jul. 1, 2020

In an effort to increase self-sufficiency and reduce trips to the grocery store during our current pandemic, a growing number of people are adding vegetable and herb gardens to their own yards.

An open book with four columns, filled with accounting notes.
Verso

Library Collectors’ Council Acquisitions for 2024

Apr. 23, 2024

The Huntington has acquired six extraordinary collections through the generosity of the Library Collectors’ Council, a group of supporters who help fund the purchase of new items to add to the Library’s holdings.

Hear and Now at The Huntington logo
Videos and Recorded Programs

Hear and Now at The Huntington

Mar. 31, 2021

Hear and Now is a new podcast that connects the incomparable library, art, and botanical collections at The Huntington with the wider world.

Kevin Dawson looking at a book.
Verso

For Some Enslaved Africans, Water Was a Savior

Feb. 7, 2023

Currently on fellowship at The Huntington, I have been using my time to conduct research for my second book about how enslaved Africans in the Americas re-created and re-imagined African maritime traditions, including swimming, diving, surfing, boat-making, canoeing, and fishing.