The Colonial Williamsburg Foundation
How the Reverend W.A.R Goodwin and John D. Rockefeller, Jr. went about restoring Virginia's colonial capital.And how the Williamsburg of today was turned from a sleepy southern town into a city alive with the voices of history.
Integrates and discusses Edward Hicks' secular and religious concerns as they affected his artistic production, particularly the creation of his "Peaceable Kingdom" paintings.†
More than seven hundred museum-quality examples acquired by the Colonial Williamsburg Foundation during the past sixty years.
The most complete account of the Hennages' collecting journey
Mines the Colonial Williamsburg Foundation collection of clothing, acquired over the last seven decades, initially to accessorize the buildings but eventually to display them as objects of interest in their own right.†
Issues: 2000, 2001, 2005, 2006, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2015
Shows how fashion accessories evolved from the early 1600s to the early 1840s.
The Foundation's Annual report
Based largely on an unpublished monograph by Harold B. Gill, Jr., of the Colonial Williamsburg research staff.
The Flower and Fruit Arrangements of Colonial Williamsburg
A Guide to 160 Flowers, Shrubs, and Trees in the Gardens of Colonial Williamsburg
Rectangular form; patterned paper boards with tan ground bearing a grid of orange broken lines forming repeating diamonds in each of which is a green floral sprig; white leatherette trim at spine with gilt lettering: "The WILLIAMSBURG ART OF COOKERY -- Bullock"; handwritten ink inscription inside reads: " ? May/ Williamsburg. May 1\st/ 1950". Printer: - Dietz & Son
Focuses on the professional practice of medicine in Williamsburg between 1740-1775. Williamsburg's medical profession was dominated by men trained in the European tradition of medicine.
An account of his first official mission, made as emissary from the Governor of Virginia to the Commandant of the French Forces on the Ohio, October 1753- January 1754