Columbia University-trained historian and preservationist Michael Henry Adams will present “Seeking Harlem: Lost and Found” February 27 at Ohio Wesleyan University.

Adams will speak in Room 312 of the R.W. Corns Building, 78 S. Sandusky St., Delaware. The event is free and open to the public.

A native of Akron, Adams began his preservation career volunteering for Akron’s Stan-Hywet Hall and advocating against the demolition of several historically significant buildings. He moved to Harlem in the 1980s and is a co-founder and board member of Save Harlem Now!

A vocal advocate for preserving black history and culture, Adams also is the author “Harlem Lost and Found, an Architectural and Social History, 1765-1915” and “Style and Grace, African Americas at Home.”

He currently is working a book on lesbian and gay life in Harlem between 1915 and 1995. His field of special interest is revivalist residential architecture of the early twentieth century, exemplified by Gilded-Age country and town houses. Relating the involvement of women, gays, and people of color regarding such buildings is a particular pursuit and goal. Follow Adams on Twitter at @harlemhellion.

His presentation is sponsored by Ohio Wesleyan’s Fine Arts Department, Black World Studies Program, and Richard M. Ross Art Museum.


1808AM
Sign up here for 1808AM, our incredible weekday morning enewsletter, bringing you the latest Delaware County news -- for free!
You May Also Like

Ohio Wesleyan Creates New Scholarship To Honor Pioneering Student

Ohio Wesleyan University is honoring the legacy of former student Charles Thomas…

Faculty Exhibition Opens This Coming Week At the Ross Art Museum

Ohio Wesleyan University’s fine arts faculty will share their latest creations and…

Engage In Lifelong Learning At Ohio Wesleyan

By Cole Hatcher The Lifelong Learning Institute (LLI) at Ohio Wesleyan University…