• HTA Lecture: “Parenting Styles”

    Copiah-Lincoln Community College 11 Co Lin Cir, Natchez, MS, United States

    Jackie Mardis, will present the 2026 Humanities Teacher Award lecture for Copiah-Lincoln Community College titled “Parenting Styles.” The lecture will take place on the Copiah-Lincoln Community College campus on March 25, 2026, at 12:20 p.m.

  • A Gathering of Waters: International Poetry & Culture: In Translation

    Part of the "A Gathering of Waters: The Power of Place & Pen in Mississippi's Literary Landscape" Program International Poetry & Culture: In Translation Thursday, March 26, 2026, 10 a.m. - 2 p.m. Location: Student Center Legacy Dining Hall and Ballroom Theme: “Mapping Mississippi: In Translation” Program Description: Translating the poetry of international poets who […]

  • HTA Lecture: “Selected Genres of Piano Literature”

    Alcorn State University 1000 ASU Drive, Lorman, MS

    Tony Gordon will present the 2026 Humanities Teacher Award lecture for Alcorn State University titled “Selected Genres of Piano Literature.” The lecture will take place on the Alcorn State University campus on March 26, 2026, at 1 p.m.

  • HTA Lecture: “From Museum to Music: The Appropriation of Fine Art in Album Covers”

    Northwest Mississippi Community College 4975 Hwy 51 N, Senatobia, 38668

    Lucia Nelson will present the 2026 Humanities Teacher Award lecture for Northwest Mississippi Community College titled “From Museum to Music: The Appropriation of Fine Art in Album Covers.” This presentation will explore the use of appropriated art in album cover design, analyzing how musicians and designers repurpose existing artworks to create new meanings through a […]

  • Read & Rise

    Katrina's Klassroom 1952 Simpson Hwy 149, Mendenhall, United States

    Read & Rise is a family literacy program that brings children and parents together through shared reading, culturally relevant books, including works by Mississippi authors, parent workshops, and creative activities. Each session features community reading circles, guided literacy activities, strategies for supporting reading at home, and free book distribution to help families build home libraries. […]

  • America250 Mississippi – Fashioning a Revolution: How Americans Bought, Fought, and Taught Their New Nation

    Columbus-Lowndes Public Library 314 7th St N, Columbus, MS, United States

    Fashioning a Revolution: How Americans Bought, Fought, and Taught Their New Nation March 31, 2026 @ 5:30 PM Columbus-Lowndes Public Library System downtown branch Free and open to the public. Adults Dr. Ural will discuss how America’s founding documents inspired Abraham Lincoln’s understanding of freedom, democracy, and citizenship during the American Civil War. Contact: Mona […]

  • America250 Mississippi – Civil War Era Mississippians Debate America’s Founding Principles

    Columbus-Lowndes Public Library 314 7th St N, Columbus, MS, United States

    Civil War Era Mississippians Debate America’s Founding Principles April 7, 2026 @ 12 PM Columbus-Lowndes Public Library System downtown branch Free and open to the public. Adults In this presentation, Dr. Ural, the Frank and Virginia Williams Chair for Abraham Lincoln & Civil War Studies at Mississippi State University and Co-Director of CWRGM, will share […]

  • America250 Mississippi – Colonial Brunch/Tea for All Ages!

    Columbus-Lowndes Public Library 314 7th St N, Columbus, MS, United States

    Colonial Brunch/Tea for All Ages! April 11, 2026 @ 10 AM-12 PM Columbus-Lowndes Public Library System downtown branch Free and open to the public. All ages Attendees will eat brunch, drink tea, and can bring their own teacups to show off while learning about manners and clothing from the 1700s from living history reenactor Jeanette […]

  • Speakers Bureau: “Spanish Dons in Colonial Mississippi: The Spanish roots of Mississippi’s Cotton Kingdom”

    Columbus-Lowndes Public Library 314 7th St N, Columbus, MS, United States

    Christian Pinnen presents: "Spanish Dons in Colonial Mississippi: The Spanish roots of Mississippi’s Cotton Kingdom" Spain has a short, but important part in Mississippi’s history. Between 1779 and 1798, Spanish administrators sought to wrangle profits and people in small outpost, most prominently Natchez, along the Mississippi River. Enforcing Spanish laws and customs in a polyglot […]

  • Speakers Bureau: “The American Revolution in the Gulf South”

    Columbus-Lowndes Public Library 314 7th St N, Columbus, MS, United States

    Max Grivno presents: "The American Revolution in the Gulf South" The history of the American Revolution along the Gulf South is seldom told. Although most of the Europeans who called the region were sympathetic to the British — or at least hoped to remain neutral — the conflict soon engulfed the territory of what would, […]

  • Spark! Places of Innovation exhibit in Utica 

    Utica Institute Museum 34175 MS-18,, Utica, MS, United States

    Spark! Places of Innovation exhibit in Utica Join MHC in Utica for the Spark! Places of Innovation tour of Mississippi! May 16-June 27, 2026 Utica Institute Museum at Hinds Community College Utica Campus 601-885-7110 | uticainstitute.org Exhibit hours: Across 2026-2027, the Mississippi Humanities Council presents Spark! Places of Innovation, a Smithsonian traveling exhibit touring Utica, Meridian, […]

  • Speakers Bureau: “Natchez in the Early American Economy”

    Winston County Library 301 W Park St, Louisville, MS, United States

    Dr. Susan Gaunt Stearns presents "Natchez in the Early American Economy" Dr. Susan Gaunt Stearns is an associate professor of history at the University of Mississippi. She currently teaches courses on US history, the history of the colonial and Revolutionary era America, the history of Mississippi, as well as graduate courses on historical methods and […]