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Arthur Glaser

Educator/ Historian
Sen. John Heinz History Museum/ Allegheny Observatory
Elementary (9 to 12 years old), Middle School (13 to 15 years old), High School (16 to 18 years old), Adults, Post-Secondary
Science, Social Studies, Arts :

Arthur Glaser's collections

 

Charles Messier: Comet Ferret

<p>Charles Messier was an eighteenth century astronomer whose specialty was searching for comets. He observed at an observatory atop the Hotel Cluny which was financed by the French Navy.</p>
Arthur Glaser
24
 

Edward Hicks early American Folk Artist

<p>Edward Hicks' paintings reflect the same quality and style. More advanced in technique than Grandma Moses but still simple if compared to the work of the Hudson Valley School.</p>
Arthur Glaser
24
 

Sorting through astronomical nebulae.

<p>At the turn of the nineteenth century, astronomers using basic telescopes recorded the existence of an amazing collection of nebulae. These appeared as different types of fuzzy gray material. At that time, technology did not exist to separate the nebulae into different categories. This mini lab has selected representative types of each nebulae and the characteristics of each.</p>
Arthur Glaser
8
 

Jamestown: Challenge for Survival

<p>The early years in Virginia's first colony were fraught with starvation and illness. Many of the Jamestown colonists were not "survivors". Most were gentlemen searching for gold and riches and had no experience living in the wilderness. America was a challenge: the forest primeval had never been cut, there was no available farmland, few had experience at fishing or hunting and gathering. Our story about tells about the ultimate in desperation.</p>
Arthur Glaser
31
 

George Catlin: Indian Portraiture

<p>During the 1830s, George Catlin and his team produced over five hundred images of native American life on the western plains. Nearly half of his work consisted of exquisite portraits of Indians of many different tribes. Some tribes like the Hidatsa disappeared before any other visual representation of them could be made.</p>
Arthur Glaser
25
 

George Catlin: Lives of the Plains Indians

<p>Long before the camera went west, artists like George Catlin were preserving the images of the native Americans on the western plains. Catlin's paintings are numerous and divide into two genre: the group activities and portraiture. This learning lab focuses on group activities of many plains indians including hunting, traditional dances, and recreation.</p>
Arthur Glaser
32
 

Journey of the Vin Fiz

<p>The Vin Fiz was the first aeroplane to cross the United States from coast to coast. At a maximum speed of 51 mph and many in flight set backs, the Vin Fiz made the crossing in over 84 days.</p>
Arthur Glaser
26
 

Albert Bierstadt and the Lure of the West

<p>Easterners heard many stories about the dangers of traveling to the American west. Accounts of the great American desert as an almost impossible place to cross caused many to rethink leaving home. Albert Bierstadt and painters of the Hudson River School traveled the west and sent back their impressions of the landscape and wildlife.</p>
Arthur Glaser
13
 

Samuel Langley, Solar Scientist

<p>Samuel Langley was the director of the Allegheny Observatory very near the city of Pittsburgh. Langley focused his telescope on the sun each clear day hoping to find its secrets and energy output.</p>
Arthur Glaser
21
 

Captains of Industry

<p>In the late 19th and early 20th centuries, powerful entrepreneurs dominated American industry. These individuals were both creative and insightful in the creation of American corporations that monopolized many facets of distribution and production. While each of these individuals was unique, they shared qualities that made them successful in American capitalism.</p>
Arthur Glaser
24
 

George Washington's First Military Encounter

Governor Dinwiddie of Virginia sent George Washington and a contingent of Virginia militiamen to secure the forks of the Ohio from the French. Before the Virginians arrived at the forks, they encountered French and Indian allies in the wilderness of southwestern Pennsylvania. The encounters there sparked what eventually became a continental war and later a world war.
Arthur Glaser
29
 

Famous Pennsylvanians on U.S. Postage

This lab has a collection of postal commemoratives that honor Pennsylvanians from the colonial period to the present day. These honorees represent science, art, industry, sports, politics, finance and many other fields.
Arthur Glaser
27