05/16/2026
In honor of the United States Semiquincentennial, the Rare Book Department will be exploring items from our vast collection of Americana that reflect events, movements, trends, and voices from the past 250 years. Every month we will highlight one or two objects, from 1776 to 2026, on our social media.
We've made it to the Centennial!
On May 10, 1876, Philadelphia welcomed more than 100,000 people to the Centennial Exhibition of Arts, Manufactures and Products of the Soil and Mine–the first world’s fair in North America. The exhibition ran for six months and hosted 10 million visitors in Fairmount Park. The United States Centennial Commission constructed more than 200 buildings for the occasion with only two slated to remain when the fair closed: Horticultural Hall and Memorial Hall. A hurricane made the demolition of Horticultural Hall necessary, and the City tore it down in 1955, but Memorial Hall remains as the home of the Please Touch Museum.
The Women’s Pavilion was a late addition to the temporary structures. The Centennial Commission reallocated space in the main building and displaced the Women’s Department. Less than a year before opening, the Commission recommended to the Women’s Centennial Executive Committee that they raise funds for, plan, and construct a separate building for the exhibition of women’s accomplishments, which they did. With surplus funds raised, they published the National Cookery Book. In 2023, the Rare Book Department acquired a copy of this historic cookbook; an image of the Women’s Pavilion is on its cover in gold.