Imperiled Promise: The State of History in the National Park Service, a joint report between the NPS and the OAH was released a couple of weeks ago. Since then, it has been mentioned on Twitter, other blogs, on the OAH\u27s website, and it figures to be the topic of much discussion when the NCPH and OAH meet up in Milwaukee this weekend for their annual conference. I\u27ve read the report several times now, and I have been mulling over it for some weeks. I felt now would be a proper to time to throw a couple of my reactions out there as well
This first of two closing sessions explored the current state of Civil War interpretation/preservati...
When I first read Freeman Tilden’s “Principles of Interpretation”, I was surprised to find that prov...
July 1st through 3rd, 2013 marked the 150th anniversary of the Battle of Gettysburg. There were an e...
Examining Narratives of Public History In 1990s, the National Park Service (NPS) shifted its focus f...
It is important to continually ana-lyze the interpretation that NPS gives to the public, and the fac...
It\u27s been five years since I was living in DC and working at the Lincoln Cottage. I don\u27t ofte...
Unlike many other historic sites, Andersonville does not fit neatly into any one box. It is not a ba...
The battle anniversary loomed in the waning days of June. And Gettysburg was preparing. Aside from t...
About seven months ago, I was asked during an interview for my current internship what I thought the...
This paper examines the controversy surrounding the location and proposed interpretive plan for Inde...
This piece was written for NAI\u27s annual workshop this coming fall, but not everyone will have the...
Since July 1863 historians have written a great deal on the three-day Battle of Gettysburg, but have...
This Issue: Paha Sapa: Ancestral Homeland of the Lakota Federal Historic Preservation Tax Credits He...
abstract: This thesis examines the evolution of the interpretation of the battle of Gettysburg, as w...
Back at the beginning of the summer, I was asked by the College to write a piece on the history of t...
This first of two closing sessions explored the current state of Civil War interpretation/preservati...
When I first read Freeman Tilden’s “Principles of Interpretation”, I was surprised to find that prov...
July 1st through 3rd, 2013 marked the 150th anniversary of the Battle of Gettysburg. There were an e...
Examining Narratives of Public History In 1990s, the National Park Service (NPS) shifted its focus f...
It is important to continually ana-lyze the interpretation that NPS gives to the public, and the fac...
It\u27s been five years since I was living in DC and working at the Lincoln Cottage. I don\u27t ofte...
Unlike many other historic sites, Andersonville does not fit neatly into any one box. It is not a ba...
The battle anniversary loomed in the waning days of June. And Gettysburg was preparing. Aside from t...
About seven months ago, I was asked during an interview for my current internship what I thought the...
This paper examines the controversy surrounding the location and proposed interpretive plan for Inde...
This piece was written for NAI\u27s annual workshop this coming fall, but not everyone will have the...
Since July 1863 historians have written a great deal on the three-day Battle of Gettysburg, but have...
This Issue: Paha Sapa: Ancestral Homeland of the Lakota Federal Historic Preservation Tax Credits He...
abstract: This thesis examines the evolution of the interpretation of the battle of Gettysburg, as w...
Back at the beginning of the summer, I was asked by the College to write a piece on the history of t...
This first of two closing sessions explored the current state of Civil War interpretation/preservati...
When I first read Freeman Tilden’s “Principles of Interpretation”, I was surprised to find that prov...
July 1st through 3rd, 2013 marked the 150th anniversary of the Battle of Gettysburg. There were an e...