• The History of Paper Money in Connecticut

    Connecticut Museum of Culture and History 1 Elizabeth St, Hartford, CT, United States

    We invite CMCH members to join us for a brown bag talk exploring the beginnings of paper money in the American Colonies with a focus on the Colony of Connecticut, which began its paper money in 1709 and tracing the development of this currency thru the American Revolution to 1780.

  • The History of Paper Money in Connecticut

    Connecticut Museum of Culture and History 1 Elizabeth St, Hartford, CT, United States

    We invite CMCH members to join us for a brown bag talk exploring the beginnings of paper money in the American Colonies with a focus on the Colony of Connecticut, which began its paper money in 1709 and tracing the development of this currency thru the American Revolution to 1780.

  • Debating Democracy in the Revolutionary Age

    We invite CMCH members and visitors to bring a lunch and join us for a noontime talk by Dr. Kari Winter, NERFC fellow, about political debate in the Revolutionary Era in Connecticut.

  • Debating Democracy in the Revolutionary Age

    We invite CMCH members and visitors to bring a lunch and join us for a noontime talk by Dr. Kari Winter, NERFC fellow, about political debate in the Revolutionary Era in Connecticut.

  • Liverpool, Slavery, and the Atlantic Cotton Frontier 1763-1833

    Connecticut Museum of Culture and History 1 Elizabeth Street, Hartford, CT, United States

    We invite CMCH members and visitors to join us for a brown bag lunch talk with Alexey Krichtal, a New England Regional Fellowship Consortium (NERFC) scholar who is researching how the cotton trade affected mariners, merchants, and enslaved people throughout the Atlantic world.

  • Liverpool, Slavery, and the Atlantic Cotton Frontier 1763-1833

    Connecticut Museum of Culture and History 1 Elizabeth Street, Hartford, CT, United States

    We invite CMCH members and visitors to join us for a brown bag lunch talk with Alexey Krichtal, a New England Regional Fellowship Consortium (NERFC) scholar who is researching how the cotton trade affected mariners, merchants, and enslaved people throughout the Atlantic world.