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The production company also entered into a credit facility with JPMorgan Chase for borrowing in connection with new film, TV ...
Multi Oscar winning producer New Regency has entered into a partnership with Los Angeles investment firm Shamrock Capital, ...
Autograph letter to Cassandra Austen, Bath, June 2, 1799. The Morgan Library & Museum, purchased by J. P. Morgan Jr., 1920. “Jane’s letters are as close as we can get to Jane the person,” he ...
There’s a reason this celebrated librarian’s life was not an open book The Morgan Library & Museum surveys the astonishing life and career of its founding director, Belle da Costa Greene.
When banking magnate J.P. Morgan sought a librarian in 1905, his nephew Junius Morgan recommended Greene, who had been one of his co-workers at the Princeton Library.
After Morgan's death in 1913, Greene continued as the librarian of his son and heir, J.P. Morgan Jr., who would transform his father's Library into a public institution in 1924.
Belle da Costa Greene in the West Room of J. Pierpont Morgan’s Library, circa 1948–50. The Morgan Library & Museum Charles Dickens, "Our Mutual Friend," autograph manuscript, 1865.
It’s a 100th-anniversary show for the distinguished library and art museum based on the collection of the Gilded Age mogul J. P. Morgan.
Where Morgan spent over $200,000 in 1896 to purchase the Gutenberg, Trump has pocketed over $300,000 in royalties from hawking his. Clearly, Trump would rather sell a book than read one.
Hilton Als writes about Belle da Costa Greene, a librarian to J. P. Morgan and at the Morgan Library & Museum, who passed as white, despite her Black parentage.
For example, on Nov. 13, 2024, a user on X posted (archived), " J.P. Morgan funded the building of the Titanic, and cancelled ...
One striking object on display is a beautiful man’s ring, which Greene came across in the desk of J.P. Morgan Jr. (“Jack”) after his passing. The ring’s intricate design and intriguing backstory ...