Guide to this Blog

Welcome to your (brief) guide to The Historical Society Project Blog. I hope this will help answer any questions you may have about how this blog works or at least save you a few minutes of aimlessly searching on this website. ~ Regina

Posts:

All of the posts made to this blog will appear in the main feed on the Home Page. The most recent post will appear first. You can manually click to older posts using the navigation arrows towards the bottom of the page.

You can also search for other posts in the blog by using the “Browse Posts” menu in the navigation bar. Here you have a few choices in which to browse:

All posts — to view all of the posts made to the blog for your expansive browsing pleasure.

By Date — for browsing posts by the dates they were posted.

By Subject Tag — for reading posts about a particular topic, person, subject, etc.

Series:

Series are groups of posts about major themes that I want to explore in-depth. The posts in a series are intended to build on one another like chapters. Not all posts in a series will occur consecutively, so use the “Featured Series” menu in the navigation bar to follow along or revisit older posts in a series.

Resources:

Coming soon!

Project Contributors:

If you like the content shared here, please look at this page for the people and organizations that have given their time and talent to The Historical Society Project. I couldn’t do this without them. I will update this page as the Project progresses.

The Author:

Learn a little about me on this page.

How to follow The Historical Society Project:

Get notified when new material comes to this blog by subscribing to its newsletter. Scroll down and submit your email in the box at the bottom of the page.

You can also connect with me, Regina Carra, on LinkedIn.


About tHIS blog

The Historical Society Project explores the stories behind the history we keep in museums, our communities, and ourselves. It features the history, people, and activities of New York’s Livingston County Historical Society (LCHS). It is researched and written by Regina Carra.

The perspectives shared on this blog belong to the author and do not necessarily represent the beliefs of any project contributor or the author’s employers.