Join us for our next Think & Drink, A History of Protest: Civil Rights Movements in Seattle from the 1960s to 1980s, this Wednesday in Seattle.
The Port Townsend Public Library presents discussions and events as part of its month-long community read. Also upcoming: Speakers Bureau and grant-funded events around the state and Seattle’s first Think & Drink of 2014.
Join Speakers Bureau’s Hank Cramer for One Trail, Many Voices: Songs of the Oregon Trail in Spokane Tuesday. Also upcoming: grant-funded events and Speakers Bureau presentations all around the state.
The traveling exhibit on the Great Depression opens at The Kirkman House Museum Friday (Jan. 17). Also around the state, Speakers Bureau presentations and grant-funded Whatcom Reads events abound.
Join Speakers Bureau’s Janet Oakley for Tree Army: The Civilian Conservation Corps in Washington State, 1933-1941 in Bellingham and Seattle. Other Speakers Bureau presentations and grant-funded events abound as we begin 2014.
Speakers Bureau’s John Marshall presents Fire and Forests, East of the Cascade Divide throughout the north Puget Sound. Plus: Speakers Bureau presentations throughout the state.
Taranath presents The World in Washington: An Exploration of Literature and Our Lives in Lynnwood Tuesday (Oct. 8). Also check out Speakers Bureau presentations, Think & Drinks, and other events all around the state.
Humanities Washington’s evening of food, wine and words was a huge success in Spokane on Sept. 20. Now the fundraiser comes to Seattle, as authors read original works for our audience. If you’re not in Seattle, we have a slew of Speakers Bureau presentations and grant-funded events coming up – and there’s likely one in your area.
Traveling Exhibit opens Sunday (April 14) at the Jefferson Museum of Art & History; exhibit invites comparisons between the 1930s and today.
Programs from Port Townsend to Clarkston receive grant funding for a wide range of humanities projects, including a community reading program, civic boot camp and more.