The historic Henry Street Settlement was founded in 1893 on the Lower East Side as a humanitarian endeavor and continues to provide social services to New Yorkers.
The Queens County Farm Museum is the oldest working historical farm, dating back to 1697, set on 47 acres of land now surrounded by cul-de-sacs and gridded streets.
The Bartow-Pell Mansion Museum in Pelham Bay Park is an illustrious late-19h century hideaway in the far reaches of the Bronx.
New York’s wealthiest citizens built mausoleums in Woodlawn Cemetery with grandeur that matched the 5th Avenue mansions they spent their living years in.
This place ticks all the boxes: both intimate & grand, great food, drinks, music and engaging exhibitions. Wherever you happen to be living or visiting in Paris, make this your hangout.
The Smithsonian National Museum of the American Indian is a valuable resource for advancing knowledge and understanding of the Native cultures of the Western Hemisphere–past, present, and future
It's a hike to get there, but the views are worth the effort. Just watch out for the hawks.
Exploring the Astoria Pool is like stepping back in time to the Art-Deco infused world of Robert Moses' New York City.
In the 1920s Frank Lloyd Wright was commissioned to design three high-rise towers to rise over the grave of Peter Stuyvesant.
A tour of ancient Glamis Castle in the East of Scotland: its secrets, its charms, its many ghosts.