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Videos and Recorded Programs


Videos about The Huntington and previously recorded lectures, programs, and conferences.

Lecture

Why It Matters: Karen R. Lawrence In Conversation with Carla Hayden

Thu., Feb. 6, 2020

Huntington President Karen R. Lawrence speaks with Carla Hayden, Librarian of Congress, about why archives and libraries exist and why the work they do continues to be important.

Conference

The First Vision of Joseph Smith, Jr.: 200 Years On

Fri., Jan. 24, 2020
Rooted in The Huntington's substantial collection of Mormon history materials, this conference commemorates the 200th anniversary of Joseph Smith's proclaimed First Vision experience.
Lecture

Transformations of the Chinese Garden

Thu., Jan. 23, 2020

Hui-shu Lee, professor of Chinese art history at UCLA, reflects on two recipients of the Pritzker Architecture Prize—I. M. Pei and Wang Shu—and their instrumental reinterpretations of Chinese garden design for the modern and post-modern worlds.

Lecture

The Chinese in The Huntington Archives

Wed., Jan. 22, 2020

Mae Ngai, professor of history at Columbia University, explores The Huntington’s collections on the history of the American West, which includes some scattered references of the Chinese people, who were integral to California’s history but were not always visible through historical records.

Lecture

Thomas Cromwell: Getting Past the Myths

Tue., Jan. 21, 2020


Sir Diarmaid MacCulloch, emeritus professor of the History of the Church at the University of Oxford and Fellow of St. Cross College, introduces his ground-breaking biography of the self-made statesman who married his son to King Henry VIII’s sister-in-law, reshaped Tudor England and Ireland, and set the kingdom on a Protestant course for centuries.

Lecture

The Trials of Biddy Mason

Thu., Jan. 16, 2020

Sally Gordon (University of Pennsylvania) and Kevin Waite (Durham University) explore the role of the Mormon Church and the spread of slavery across the continent in the mid-19th century through the life of Bridget “Biddy” Mason.

Lecture

Centennial Paul Haaga Jr. Program on American Entrepreneurship

Mon., Jan. 13, 2020

Paul G. Haaga Jr., Huntington Trustee emeritus, chair of the board of NPR, and retired chair of Capital Research and Management Company, in conversation with Meg Whitman, CEO of Quibi, former president and CEO of Hewlett Packard Enterprise and eBay Inc., and 2010 Republican nominee for governor of California.

Video

Eavesdropping on the Gold Rush

Mon., Jan. 13, 2020

J. Goldsborough Bruff was a cartographer who got gold fever and went west to California in 1849. Like most everyone else, he found no gold, but he left behind something truly unique. And one hundred years ago Henry Huntington acquired it for the library.