Skip to main content

Board and Table Games: The Liman Collection Gift

Close
Refine Results
Artist / Maker / Culture
Date
to
Geography*
Classifications
Department
Collection Info
Board and Table Games: The Liman Collection Gift

The games that entertained Americans from the 1840s to the 1920s offer a fascinating window on the values, beliefs, and aspirations of a nation undergoing tremendous change. During this period the American home, no longer the heart of economic production, became the center of education, entertainment, and moral enlightenment. Middle-class families—with expanded leisure time as well as rising income levels—embraced leisure pursuits in the home and encouraged their children to play games that would develop skills and provide moral instruction. During the same period, advances in chromolithography made possible bold, richly colored games at affordable prices. New York City emerged as the leading center of American chromolithography and the hub of the nation’s vigorous board game industry. These games are among the more than 500 examples donated to the New-York Historical Society by Ellen Liman in 2000.

Sort:
/ 1
Filters
1 to 4 of 4
Crandall's Mammoth ABC Nesting Blocks
Charles M. Crandall
1880-1890
2000.241
Crandall's Great Acrobats
Charles M. Crandall
ca. 1875
2000.279
Crandall's Masquerade Blocks
Charles M. Crandall
ca. 1875
2000.282
Picture blocks
Charles M. Crandall
ca. 1900
2000.283
/ 1