Explore the true meaning of Trinity’s core value of compassion with five panelists who share their awe-inspiring stories from the U.S., Canada, and the U.K.
Grandma’s wedding photo. Your third-grade report card. Learn the basics of document care and organization from Trinity Archivists Joe Lapinski and Marissa Maggs, who also host the popular video series, “Ask Trinity Archives.”
Trinity Commons Knowledge Bites offer accessible and engaging conversations and learning opportunities for all ages on a range of topics, such as parenting, stress management, education, mindfulness, and mental health wellness.
Full Heart Full Bellies is Chef Millie Peartree’s latest venture and response to COVID-19. By feeding children disproportionally affected by the pandemic, Peartree is following her passion to share food that comforts others.
Dr. Tasha Golden, PhD, Senior Arts in Health Research Scientist at the International Arts + Mind Lab in the Johns Hopkins Brain Science Institute, works to advance the field of applied neuroaesthetics, which explores the impact of the arts, architecture, and music on the human brain and behavior. Join us for an enlightening look at the value of art as data and how we can use it to learn from youth voices.
We are living through a time of diverging national narratives. How do we come to understand who we are as a country? Hear from Colin Woodard, author...
What does it mean to be American in this fractured 21st century landscape? Who are our people? Emmy-nominated journalist Alex Wagner (Showtime's The Circus) explores how race, immigration, and politics shape our collective identity, drawing upon themes from her book, Futureface: A Family Mystery, an Epic Quest and the Secret to Belonging.
The Very Rev. Dr. Kelly Brown Douglas spoke with Elaine Weiss, author of The Women’s Hour: The Great Fight to Win the Vote, a riveting account of the final fight to ratify the Nineteenth Amendment in Tennessee in 1920.
When Kevin Tuerff and his partner began their flight from France to New York City on September 11, 2001, they had no idea that the world was about to change forever.
Sheila Walker, a black woman, and Chester Johnson, a white man, are both Arkansas natives, born in the same decade, with family ties to a race massacre that killed more than a hundred African Americans a century ago.