Discover Concord Logo
Toggle Mobile MenuToggle Mobile Menu
Subscribe
  • Home
  • Current Issue
  • Back Issues
    • Fall 2025
    • Spring 2025
    • Winter 2025
    • 2024 Back Issues
    • 2023 Back Issues
    • 2022 Back Issues
    • 2021 Back Issues
    • 2020 Back Issues
    • 2019 Back Issues
  • Browse Topics
    • Abolitionism in Concord
    • American Revolution
    • Arts & Culture
    • Celebrity Profiles
    • Civil War
    • Concord History
    • Concord Writers
    • First Nations People of Concord
    • Historic Sites in Concord
    • Parks & Nature
    • Patriots of Color
    • Things to See & Do
    • Transcendentalism
    • Trivia
    • Untold Stories of Concord
  • Plan Your Visit
  • Events
  • Purchase Subscriptions and Back Issues
  • Discover the Battle Road
  • 250 Collectibles
  • Trading Cards
  • More
    • About Us
    • Advertise
    • Contact Us
Toggle Mobile MenuToggle Mobile Menu
Home » Keywords » The Old Manse

Items Tagged with 'The Old Manse'

ARTICLES

Gary-GrahamMatt-Coch.jpg

History Inspires Fashion at The Old Manse

June 15, 2024
Marybeth Kelly
No Comments

Stories, if well-told, can inspire. Tours of historic sites, like those in Concord, are fertile grounds for inspiration. So it was for Gary Graham, an American fashion designer and artist who visited The Old Manse Museum in 2023.

I had the pleasure of introducing Gary to the museum in a tour, entitled, Flipping the Script: The Women of The Old Manse. What followed was the launch of his collection entitled, Tnumarya's Object Lessons of The Old Manse. The name is derived from Ralph Waldo Emerson who referred to his beloved Aunt Mary Moody Emerson with the anagram, Tnumarya.


Read More
Old Manse furniture

The Mystery of The Old Manse

March 15, 2024
Marybeth Kelly
No Comments

There’s nothing like getting wrapped up in a good cozy mystery. For the Agatha Christie lover, true crimes close to home are particularly enlivening. At Concord’s Old Manse Museum, home of the famous Emerson family and witness house to two revolutions, there lurks an unsolved puzzler.


Read More
FullSizeRender[1].jpg

Concord’s Literary Legacy Lives on in Independent Bookstores

June 15, 2023
Marybeth Kelly
No Comments

From the heights of Sleepy Hollow Cemetery, the bards surely look down upon their Concord with pride. The little hamlet, where the nation’s spark of independence was lit on April 19, 1775, brought forth a second uprising in the mid-nineteenth century. With the publication of “Nature” by Ralph Waldo Emerson in 1836, Concord launched a revolution of philosophy and literature that made Concord the center of political, literary, and social zeitgeist for over a century. 


Read More
The-Old-Manse.jpg

In the Footsteps of Ralph Waldo Emerson

June 15, 2023
Jeff Wieand
No Comments

Ralph Waldo Emerson lived in Concord for most of his life and probably explored almost every inch of it on foot. As he once said, “I go through Concord as through a park.” Today, we can follow in the footsteps of the “Sage of Concord.” 


Read More

Featured Stories

  • Cover Spring26.jpg

    The Spring Issue is Here!

    Patriots' Day is almost here, and this issue of Discover Concord brings you a list of events, the parade route, and much more to make your celebration special.  Also in this issue is an in-depth look at the new PBS documentary "Henry David Thoreau," a fascinating piece on how the Concord Lyceum came to be, and a look at how Massachusetts civilians on the homefront managed the challenging months of January - May 1776. Freedom's Way National Heritage Area is launching an exciting program you won't want to miss called "Declaring Independence: Then & Now" in more than 20 towns across Massachusetts. With two special fold-out inserts,  maps, lists of shops, and so much more, you'll want to get your copy early!
  • Mural.jpg

    West Side Story

    Concord Center takes justifiable pride in its history, but today great things are happening in West Concord. Innovation and self-reliance are nothing new on the west side of Route 2; they’ve defined the community for centuries. 
  • Concord-Town-Hall-1875-from-Concord-Library.jpg

    Established for Social & Mutual Improvement: The Concord Lyceum

    The Lyceum Movement started in New England in 1826, when educator and scientist Josiah Holbrook founded the first lyceum in Millbury, Massachusetts. Inspired by the classical Lykeios (Λύκειος) in Ancient Greece, where Aristotle taught, the movement was created to bring education to ordinary people through lectures, debates, and readings. Lyceums quickly spread across New England, fostering education, self-improvement, and civic engagement, and many towns soon formed lyceums of their own, including Boston in 1829 and Salem in 1830. By the 1830s, there were Lyceums across the country. 
©2026. All Rights Reserved. Content: Voyager Publishing LLC. Design, CMS, Hosting & Web Development: ePublishing
Facebook Instagram