In this podcast for Wealth of Wisdom, Winthrop Historian Heidi Druckemiller discusses the chapter she wrote for the book on how the story of your past can give your life meaning in ways that you can’t yet imagine.
A family’s story can have a profound impact on philanthropy. As family historians, we have found that many of our clients know at least a little bit about their past.
Clients often ask us, "Why don't we just digitize everything?" Winthrop's Digital Asset Specialist, David Kay, looks at what makes a successful digitization project.
It is one of those deals that makes all the business pages, but Winthrop History Advisory Board member Pankaj Ghemawat wants to take a broader view on how globalization effects "platform" companies.
Winthrop Group takes a moment this summer to reflect on the value of authenticity and offers 5 tips for engaging with history to strengthen your career.
In the recent article, “Let Go of What Made Your Company Great,” (Harvard Business Review, April 13, 2016), Vijay Govindarajan raises an excellent question: how is it possible for an organization to selectively forget the past in order to try new things?
The history of Pendleton Woolen Mills provides a case study of how an understanding of a company’s history, culture, and ownership has contributed to the firm’s survival
It’s become part of the conventional wisdom: The internet and globalization have combined to render almost every company vulnerable to greater competition than ever.
Working with the WNYC Archives, Winthrop archivist writes blog post for the 50th anniversary of Landmarks Law describing the Municipal Art Society's work in saving the past half century.
For many CEOs, the past is a powerful tool in public relations, marketing, and branding, where heritage resources become points of leverage over the competition. Historical materials are the building blocks; especially valuable are historical photographs, slogans, and logos.
With the recent passing of economic historian David Landes at age 89, the curtain has fallen on an academic career of extraordinary historical significance. One of the all-time greats, Landes produced several masterworks, including:
With the nomination of Janet Yellen, media coverage of stories that include the Federal Reserve System emerge daily. This, along with James Bruce’s just released documentary “Money for Nothing: Inside the Federal Reserve”, have ginned up what may be an unprecedented curiosity about the US central bank
As archivists committed to documenting our culture, we must find ways to capture those digital records. And in the fast-moving computer world, we need to intervene early in the life of documents or lose them forever.
In part one of this series, we discussed the critical need for preservation of our historical bridges and the records that document them. Today, we look at who keeps these records and how the documentation is changing.
The city, whose name evokes the romance of the exotic to American ears, is a quiet desert town today, but historically was a center of trade and culture. The legacy of that past is thousands of irreplaceable historical manuscripts. Long-term efforts to preserve and organize these texts were ongoing when Timbuktu was overrun by Ansar Dine
The launch last week of the Digital Public Library of America offers the public a chance to see 2.4 million archival items normally out of reach. This brings up the much debated topic of the role libraries and archives play in the digital age – specifically, do we need them in a publicly accessible physical space?
Bridges are at once thoroughly practical structures and icons of the American landscape. As a unique part of our infrastructure, they play a special role in transportation and history, and often have immense local historical importance.