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2021 Projects
Mapping LGBTQ+ DC聽Spaces, 1969-2003
Partner: The People鈥檚 Archive, DC Public Library
In partnership with the , and working with community members, students created interpretation and mapping for LGBTQ+ social, political, and cultural spaces between 1969 to 2003, using three digitized collections: Washington Blade, Women in the Life, and Blacklight.
What Lies Beneath: Documenting the History of Columbian Harmony Cemetery
Partner: Prologue, DC
Working with and descendent communities, students built a pop-up exhibit and accompanying website on Columbian Harmony Cemetery, a historically African American burial site founded in 1825. The cemetery was moved three times over the course of its existence and was ultimately demolished in the 1960s to make way for the Rhode-Island Brentwood Metro Station.
Documenting DC Public Educators鈥 Pandemic Experience
Partner: Sumner School Museum and Archives
As part of a collaboration with the , students invited teachers in the DC area to document their experiences with teaching during the COVID-19 pandemic.
Interpreting the Carnegie: Activating the History of a Historic Landmark Property
Partner: DC History Center
Students worked with the to virtually engage the public in the history of the and the cultural heritage of local Washington D.C.
Historic Context Study on the History and Heritage of the Chinese Community of Washington, DC
Partner: 1882 Foundation
Students collaborated with the to conduct research for the first historic context statement for Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders (AAPI) in Washington, D.C. The focused on identifying partnerships and resources to prepare a profile and digital archive of the Chinese Community Church and its historical significance to the Chinese American community and around D.C.'s Chinatown.
DC聽Preservation League: 50 Years of Activism, Preservation, and Hope
Partner: DC Preservation League
Part of the 's 50th anniversary celebration, this project looks at the history and legacy of the "" List over the last 25 years. Students conducted research on nine selected properties, interviewed preservationists, and created a short film and interpretive material about this critical activism.
Mapping Heurich Household Staff
Partner: Heurich House Museum
In partnership with the , students created a digital map of household staff dwellings in the early 20c. This project furthers the understanding of work environments for immigrants and people of color in the 20th聽and early 21st聽centuries in DC.
Featured Practicum Projects
Shepherd Park: Cultivating the 鈥淕arden of Diversity鈥 (2019)
Partner:
On April 14, 2019, neighbors gathered outside the neighborhood library to explore Shepherd Park鈥檚 activist history and share their individual experiences. They mapped their neighborhood memories on the side of the Humanities Truck, told their stories through oral histories, and reminisced on their common past through an exhibit. Moving forward, Shepherd Park residents are committed to building on their activist legacy and using the lessons of the past to shape their future. Check out this of the event!
Mapping Whiteness in Late 1960s Washington, DC (2018)
Partner:
Working with Public History Practicum students studied the presence, practice, and projection of whiteness in Washington, DC during the late 1960s and聽聽to share their project with the public. This practicum project helped to expand on 聽鈥檚 goal to amplify the art,聽activism, architecture & everyday life that made 1968 an extraordinary year in DC.
Reno City: Finding Reno (2019)
Partner: Neil Flanagan
Tenleytown鈥檚 Fort Reno Park was once home to Reno City, a thriving African American community. Finding Reno explored the story of Reno City and the daily lives of its residents. On the evening of April 27th, the public was invited to participate in the remembrance of the community by investigating historic images from the town and contributing to a conversation about the history and legacy of Reno City.
Visit this site to (plus others!), read students鈥 reflections working on them, and more.
Select Past Projects
Documenting the Schools and People of Education Hill (2020)
Partner:
小蓝视频 Public History students worked with the to document the history of schools on 鈥淓ducation Hill鈥 (Young, Browne, Spingarn, and Phelps.)
Urban Planning in Chinatown and the 1882 Foundation (2020)
Partner:
For this project students documented the history of urban planning, community resilience, and resistance in DC鈥檚 Chinatown neighbourhood.
African Liberation Day (ALD) and Pan-African Roots (2020)
Partner: Pan-African Roots
Students partnered with Pan-African Roots to further document the history of African Liberation Day and its connection to DC鈥檚 Malcom X Park which became a global epicentre for ALD celebration, protest, and march.
Cleveland Park: Site of Imagination (2019)
Partner:
In Spring 2019 Public History grads joined the Cleveland Park Farmers Market and gave visitors an opportunity to learn about the history of the Park & Shop and development in Cleveland Park.
小蓝视频 Archives: An Activist Tradition: 小蓝视频 and WCL鈥檚 Founding Women (2019)
Partner: 小蓝视频 Archives
小蓝视频 Public History grads invited the 小蓝视频 community to meet 小蓝视频 and WCL鈥檚 founding women and to discover how their tradition of activism continues.
Building Cleveland Park(2018)
Partner:
小蓝视频 Public History Grads worked alongside the Cleveland Park Historical Society to produce videos about the Cleveland Park neighborhood's unique architectural history. The Society now features their videos online.
Unreeling NPR History (2018)
Partner:
In partnership with 小蓝视频 Public History alumna and NPR Public Historian Julie Rogers, Public History Practicum students worked to preserve and increase educational access to NPR's audio shows, creating a project and presentation for National History Day.
Sharing History at Dupont Underground (2018)
Partner:
Public History Practicum students designed and constructed a website, brochure, and onsite panel to share this nonprofit arts and cultural organization鈥檚 history.
Treasures of the Smithsonian, Spring 2017
Partner:
Public history students produced a set of 17 large flashcards for the National Museum of American History , which highlight 10 famous artifacts and link them to less familiar artifacts in the museum. Volunteers use these flashcards to engage museum visitors in historical thinking and to orient them in the museum to encourage exploration.
The Bill of Rights and National Parks (2017)
Partner:
Working with the National Park Service practicum students designed and implemented a website connecting various National Park sites to the amendments of the Bill of Rights. By drawing connections between each amendment and specific sites, the team worked to help navigation and to allow for the public to better understand the parks.
Community Documentation Initiative Blog (2016)
Partner:
Students collaborated with the Anacostia Community Museum to write twelve blog posts for the Smithsonian Anacostia Community Museum鈥檚 Community Documentation Initiative blog. The blog posts drew upon research in newspapers, photographs, and secondary literature in order to document the history of neighborhood change in DC's Latinx community.
Three Stars, Two Bars, One City (2015)
Partner:
Partnering with the Historical Society of Washington this practicum team researched and wrote a school program for 12th graders answering the question: 鈥淲ho鈥檚 a Washingtonian?鈥 The program introduced students to the history of DC using archival and three-dimensional objects in the Society鈥檚 collections, and incorporated multimedia elements, such as this introduction video.
How Do You Fix a Broken Heart? (2015)
Partner:
For this project, students researched and scripted a public program exploring the history of innovation through artificial hearts. Their program debuted at the National Museum of American History on July 1, 2015 as part of the Wallace Coulter performance stage, and the presentation was publicized in a Smithsonian Magazine article on the museum's collection of artificial hearts.
Marian Anderson, The Lincoln Memorial, and Constitution Hall (2014)
Partner:
What can we understand about race relations in World War II-era America from Marian Anderson's Lincoln Memorial concert and the surrounding controversy? For this project students developed a web-based audio program exploring how Anderson's concert and the people behind it challenged American conventions about race and acted as an important precursor to the Civil Rights Movement.
Arlington National Cemetery: Wayside Exhibits (2009-2010)
Partner:
Over the course of two semesters, 小蓝视频 Public History students helped the National Park Service to develop an interpretive plan for Arlington National Cemetery. Combining archival research with lessons in graphic design, students designed a series of wayside exhibits to educate visitors about the important, though often unmarked, sites and memorials scattered across the cemetery's 624 acres.