Christmas with the Puritans: A Festive Virtual Program
Celebrate the holiday season by exploring the question: Did seventeenth-century puritans really hate holiday fun, or are they misunderstood?
Celebrate the holiday season by exploring the question: Did seventeenth-century puritans really hate holiday fun, or are they misunderstood?
Celebrate the holiday season by exploring the question: Did seventeenth-century puritans really hate holiday fun, or are they misunderstood?
Explore the remarkable life of Occramer Marycoo, an enslaved African who went on to become a long-standing pillar of Newport's First Congregational Church and one of early America's most important Black leaders.
Explore John Hancock’s Congregational roots and learn how he invoked religious traditions and provided land, bells, and building materials to meetinghouses across New England throughout his life.
Back by popular demand! Join us for an encore virtual tour of our new exhibition, Sacred Rebellion: Congregationalists in Revolutionary Massachusetts, featuring opportunities to view and discuss the exhibition with Kyle Roberts and Tricia Peone.
Explore the historical and theological foundations of Armenian Congregationalism, with a particular focus on how the community has persevered through crisis.
Learn the basics of physically and intellectually arranging a church’s archive through a combination of instruction, demonstration, and hands-on activities.
Celebrate twenty years of NEHH and the launch of our new digital exhibition, NEHH@20: Re-Examining Stories from New England Communities, with the curators.
Mark the 200th anniversary of the founding of the American Unitarian Association after a generations-long family quarrel within the Congregational churches of Massachusetts and reflect on the groups’ shared legacies of Congregationalism.
Explore accessioning, the process a church engages in when working with an archive to donate materials, and understand the basics of a gift agreement.
Explore the legacy of New England’s supernatural landscape, hear ghost stories drawn from Congregational history, and view rare books and manuscripts from the CLA’s collections.
Explore the legacy of New England’s supernatural landscape, hear ghost stories drawn from Congregational history, and view rare books and manuscripts from the CLA’s collections.
Learn how Massachusetts church records, digitized and made available through our New England Hidden Histories project, reveal a more realistic picture of the Indigenous-English Congregational experience.
This spotlight symposium, co-sponsored by The New England Quarterly and the Congregational Library & Archives, focused on the religious thinkers and ideas that shaped the American Revolution.
Hear the story of genealogy’s attraction and power for individuals, families, and institutions in eighteenth-century British America that shaped Early America and American society today.
Hear the editors of the most recent volume of Cotton Mather’s Biblia Americana reflect on the work of creating critical editions of important religious texts.
Class 5/5 | Join a small group of other church archivists and begin properly archiving your church’s collection with instruction and guidance from the CLA’s archivists.
Class 5/5 | Join a small group of history enthusiasts to discuss primary source documents, learn about religious life during the Revolutionary era, and conduct your own research project.
Class 4/5 | Join a small group of other church archivists and begin properly archiving your church’s collection with instruction and guidance from the CLA’s archivists.
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