This article describes how a Florida Humanities Council research grant allowed two humanities scholars, including the author, to uncover long-forgotten historical events associated with the structures located at Heritage Village in central Pinellas County. The article discusses strategies used during the research process and lessons learned
The Florida Public Archaeology Network (FPAN) developed the Heritage Monitoring Scouts program to pr...
Historic house museums and villages have been struggling for the last 25 years to sustain their oper...
For archaeological or historic preservation to occur, there must be public support for it. This res...
This article describes how a Florida Humanities Council research grant allowed two humanities schola...
Staff at Heritage Village submitted a grant to the Florida Humanities Council in 2002. At the time, ...
There are numerous ways in which cultural heritage can be preserved, such as: physical museums, virt...
This article presents the results of the Historic Coulterville Digital Preservation Project, an impo...
In 1866 the seat of Manatee County was moved to Pine Level, a newly-formed town in the wilderness of...
A central contemporary societal discussion in Denmark concerns settlements that have poor connectivi...
Annual Meeting, Journeys for the Junior Historian, Northeast Florida History, Nationals Register of ...
The town of St. Joseph, established in 1835, served as an important deep-water port for receiving an...
This collection of materials was received from the Florida Humanities Council (FHC), a non-profit or...
Historic preservation sites and museums are key institutions of public history and therefore an inte...
The New College Public Archaeology Lab program in regional heritage has expanded undergraduate exper...
I would like to provide a paper that examines aspects of a cultural heritage retrieval project calle...
The Florida Public Archaeology Network (FPAN) developed the Heritage Monitoring Scouts program to pr...
Historic house museums and villages have been struggling for the last 25 years to sustain their oper...
For archaeological or historic preservation to occur, there must be public support for it. This res...
This article describes how a Florida Humanities Council research grant allowed two humanities schola...
Staff at Heritage Village submitted a grant to the Florida Humanities Council in 2002. At the time, ...
There are numerous ways in which cultural heritage can be preserved, such as: physical museums, virt...
This article presents the results of the Historic Coulterville Digital Preservation Project, an impo...
In 1866 the seat of Manatee County was moved to Pine Level, a newly-formed town in the wilderness of...
A central contemporary societal discussion in Denmark concerns settlements that have poor connectivi...
Annual Meeting, Journeys for the Junior Historian, Northeast Florida History, Nationals Register of ...
The town of St. Joseph, established in 1835, served as an important deep-water port for receiving an...
This collection of materials was received from the Florida Humanities Council (FHC), a non-profit or...
Historic preservation sites and museums are key institutions of public history and therefore an inte...
The New College Public Archaeology Lab program in regional heritage has expanded undergraduate exper...
I would like to provide a paper that examines aspects of a cultural heritage retrieval project calle...
The Florida Public Archaeology Network (FPAN) developed the Heritage Monitoring Scouts program to pr...
Historic house museums and villages have been struggling for the last 25 years to sustain their oper...
For archaeological or historic preservation to occur, there must be public support for it. This res...