Fraunces Tavern was a witness to history throughout the Revolutionary War. Among the many events that took place there, it served as a meeting place for the Sons of Liberty, a site for trials that were part of a process that led to the emancipation of thousands of Black Loyalists, and the setting for George Washington’s farewell to his officers. Two hundred fifty years later, Fraunces Tavern Museum is honoring this history with the exhibition, Path to Liberty: The Emergence of a Nation. Path to Liberty will be a chronological, multi-year exhibition telling the history of the American Revolution from 1775 to 1783, with a distinctive focus on what occurred in New York State and the surrounding areas.
Opening April 22, the first segment of the exhibition will focus on the years 1775 to 1776. Personal letters, artifacts, and works of art from the Museum’s permanent collection will paint a picture of the Revolutionary War’s early defining moments, such as the Battles of Lexington and Concord and the Declaration of Independence. This first segment will have a particular focus on the Battle for New York, including the Battle of Long Island (Brooklyn), the Battle of Harlem Heights, and the Battle of White Plains.
Through Path to Liberty, visitors to Fraunces Tavern Museum will be able to learn the stories of everyday people fighting for their beliefs. A letter from Nathan Hale to his brother Enoch, his last known letter before the British hanged Hale as a spy, will offer visitors perspective into a man willing to give his life for his country. Mrs. Murray Entertaining the British Officers, thereby Saving General Putnam’s Army, 1776 by John Ward Dunsmore, will demonstrate to visitors the role of a New York woman in helping to win the Revolution. A letter from quartermaster Sidney Berry to his wife after the Battle of Trenton, providing a transition into the next stage of the exhibition, will allow visitors insight into how soldiers communicated home.
Treasures from throughout the Museum’s 8,000-piece collection will be featured in the multi-year exhibition. This includes a number of recently conserved pieces, such as a John Mackie Falconer painting of the house said at one time to be where Thomas Jefferson wrote the Declaration of Independence and the Henry Hintermeister painting Retreat to Victory, depicting Washington supervising the evacuation of troops from Brooklyn following the Battle of Long Island (Brooklyn). The exhibition will also feature three-dimensional objects, such as a piece of the original wrought iron fence placed around Bowling Green, where a statue of King George III was toppled following a reading of the Declaration of Independence.
Path to Liberty: The Emergence of a Nation begins Fraunces Tavern Museum’s Liberty 250TM celebrations, a series of 250th-related programming and events, including a lecture series coinciding with key events featured in the exhibition. Sons of the RevolutionSM in the State of New York, Inc., owner and operator of Fraunces Tavern Museum, will celebrate the opening of Path to Liberty on April 21 at its annual Battles of Lexington & Concord Dinner (including the Fraunces Tavern Museum Book Award Presentation).
For more information, visit frauncestavern.com