Times Square in Midtown Manhattan has been the focus of New Year’s Eve for New Yorkers for more than a hundred years. For the century before that, the celebration was synonymous with Lower Manhattan, and Trinity Church Wall Street.
Trinity Church Wall Street always puts up a crèche for Christmas, usually inside the church, as well as at St. Paul’s Chapel. Since in 2020 everything is different, the crèche is outside.
The season of Advent is always a time of reflection and anticipation of Christmas, that major feast of the Church, and a holiday that tends to permeate the culture of much of the world.
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...
Most of us are certainly not trained archivists, yet we all tend to collect and save certain items that are important to our personal or family identity. So we can all benefit from expert advice on preserving those treasures. Watch the latest episode of Ask Trinity Archives with archivists Joe Lapinski and Marissa Maggs.
Does a device as simple to use and as ubiquitous as a scanner provide the path that brings historical artifacts into the digital age? Good question. The answer is more complicated than you might think. Watch the latest episode of Ask Trinity Archives with archivists Joe Lapinski and Marissa Maggs.
While Trinity is certainly a parish with history and influence, congregation members consider it, for a variety of reasons, first and foremost, their church family.
If we could somehow be transported back in time to a Sunday morning in either the late 18th or early 19th century, how likely is it that we would see Alexander Hamilton sitting in a pew during a worship service?