Showing posts with label #museums. Show all posts
Showing posts with label #museums. Show all posts

Friday, September 24, 2021

7 Questions with Melissa Sullebarger, Curator of Education at the Henry B. Plant Museum, Tampa

 



    Melissa Sullebarger considers herself a native of Tampa, FL, despite the minor detail of having spent the first several months of her life in upstate New York. She began working in informal education at 15 years old, teaching children about nature and history as a counselor at local summer camps. She has been working in the museum field since graduating college, when she took on a part-time position at a living history museum and fell in love with museum work. Eight years and a MA in Museum Studies later, Melissa is the Curator of Education at the Henry B. Plant Museum of Tampa, FL. ( https://www.plantmuseum.com/ )



 

1.            How and when did you get hooked on history?

 

My parents were both big advocates for education both in traditional academia and as a form of casual entertainment. Every family vacation from a very young age included museums, historic sites, botanical gardens, aquariums… all kinds of informal education. My parents made a particular point of traveling around different parts of Florida as my brother and I were growing up—neither of my parents is originally from Florida, but after moving here when I was less than a year old they wanted us to grow up knowledgeable about our new home.

Growing up as the talkative youngest child in a family full of well-educated lively conversationalists may have also been a contributing factor. I wanted to participate! It was a strong early motivator both to learn and to get good at communication.

I didn’t truly recognize how much interest I had developed in history until I was working toward my undergraduate degree—initially an English major, I added History and became a double major due to the influence of several excellent history professors.

 

2.            What role does history play or has it played in your personal life?

 

A shared interest in history connects me to my family as well as my closest friends. My partner and I initially bonded as friends by watching documentaries together and discussing history as filtered through the lenses created by our respective experiences.

 

3.            How does history play a part of your professional life/career?

 

As a current Curator of Education and in my previous roles in museums, history has played an extremely prominent role in my work. Communicating history to the public via planned exhibits and programming, training docents, and writing physical signage and online content has made up a large portion of my work.

In a less direct sense, as someone who works inside a National Historic Landmark, I am surrounded by history both in the sense that the walls of my office are lined with books and binders full of research, and in the sense that 100 years ago, my office was a part of a suite of guest rooms in the Tampa Bay Hotel that served as temporary home to countless prominent people throughout the years of the Hotel’s operation.

 



4.            Why is studying/knowing history important ?

 

We all benefit from larger context and broader understanding of the world we live in, and we all benefit from more of us having that understanding. No moment is an island, every event or development in our modern world has roots throughout historical events, which in turn have their own genealogies through history. Knowing history, and continuously broadening our knowledge of history from multiple perspectives gives each of us a stronger understanding of the world we live in, and better prepares us to create a positive future.

 

5.            What is your favorite period or aspect of history to learn about and why?

 

This question is a real challenge—the answer changes constantly. My work over the past decade both in my current and previous positions has been very focused on Reconstruction Era-1910s Florida, and it is a region and era that I have loved studying and bringing to the public. In many way it is an era in which Florida accelerated rapidly into “modernity.”

My first historic love was ancient and classical Mediterranean history, in my case with a particular interest in Egypt and the Phoenicians. I also have a strong interest in 20th century American sociocultural history, I’m fascinated by the shifted forms of Americana throughout the decades.

 

6.            What is the history of the Henry B. Plant Museum?

 

The Henry B Plant Museum occupies the first-floor south hallway of the enormous minaret-topped brick building in downtown Tampa. The structure and 150 acres of the land surrounding it (most of which is now the University of Tampa campus) were once the rail and steam tycoon Henry Plant’s most elaborate all-inclusive winter hotel—the Tampa Bay Hotel. The Hotel opened in 1891 and in 1898 became the staging point for US military forces fighting in the Caribbean theaters of the Spanish-American War. The hotel was purchased by the City of Tampa in 1905 and continued operating as a hotel until 1932, when the costs of operation became too high in the face of the Great Depression.

 

7.            What do you hope visitors to the Plant Museum learn and take away with them?

 

The Henry B. Plant Museum holds the distinction of accreditation by the American Alliance of Museums. Its mission is to interpret the Tampa Bay Hotel and the experiences of the diverse individuals who contributed to its success. The Museum ignites thought and transports visitors to another era through exhibits and innovative programs, so that they may be educated and inspired by the lifestyles, times and experiences of Florida’s early tourist industry. Visitors are immersed in the opulence of the 1891 Tampa Bay Hotel and its rich history.

 


Friday, May 7, 2021

7 Questions With Kim Campbell, Director of Interpretation and Preservation, Coastal Georgia Historical Society


 Kim Campbell is the Director of Interpretation and Preservation with the Coastal Georgia Historical Society and has managed the World War II Home Front Museum since September2018. In this capacity, she supervises daily operations on-site, assists with educational and interpretive programming, and helps maintain the Society’s historic buildings. Campbell previously served as the Director of Preservation Field Services at Historic Macon Foundation from July 2017 to September 2018 and was the Preservation and Education Coordinator at the same organization beginning in November 2014. Before moving back to Georgia, Campbell worked as a National Register of Historic Places contractor for the Historic Columbia Foundation. She holds a master’s degree in public history with a concentration in historic preservation and a certificate of museum management from the University of South Carolina, as well as a bachelor’s degree in history from Mercer University in Macon.  Campbell is a published researcher, most recently in the National Council on Public History essay collection Preserving Place and in the South Carolina Historical Quarterly. Campbell also researched and wrote the material for the National Register of Historic Places listing for the James and Olive Porter House. For more information about the World War II Home Front Museum, see their web page https://www.coastalgeorgiahistory.org/visit/world-war-ii-museum/ 


1.         How and/or when did you get you hooked on history?


I don’t really have many memories of a time when I wasn’t interested in the past. One of my first distinct memories of engaging with history was on a field trip to the Ocmulgee Mounds in Macon, Georgia as a second grader. I was fascinated by the idea that I was literally walking where people had been hundreds and thousands of years before and was so curious about their lives. I still feel that historic places offer people today a tangible connection to the past that makes history feel real in a way almost nothing else can.


2.         What role does history play or has it played in your personal life?


While I largely research and present local history professionally, I engage in a much wider range of historical topics in my personal time. In the past year, I’ve read histories on everything from the role of fast foot in civil rights (I highly recommend Franchise: The Golden Arches in Black America by Marcia Chatelain.) to a book about the Pharaoh Hatshepsut, a woman who ruled Egypt in her own right. I’ve also watched documentaries about subjects from videogames to Malcolm X.

 

Besides providing entertainment, the practice of history informs how I navigate everyday life. Knowing how to research a topic and sort through whether or not a source is reliable are both really helpful skills in navigating the largely digital world we now live in.


3.         How will history play  a part of your professional life/career?


I’m a practicing public historian, so I’ve built my career around researching history and then interpreting and presenting it to as many people as possible, with a particular emphasis on reaching people outside of the academy. Essentially, my career doesnt exist without history.


4.         Why is studying/knowing history important?


Imagine for a moment that you are dropped into a moving car and told to drive to a particular town. In order to navigate to where you want to go, you have to figure out where you are, and since you’re still moving, the best way to figure out where you are is to learn where you’ve already been. History is a lot like this car scenario; you can keep moving forward without bothering to figure out how you got to where you currently are, but the chances you’ll successfully find where it is you want to go without that information are pretty slim. We have to understand our past in order to make informed decisions for how to create an equitable and just future.


5.         What is your favorite period or aspect of history to learn about and why?


As a public historian, my work often has me study a topic briefly, interpret that history for a specific audience, and then move on to the next topic. The one subject I consistently return to though is memory. Memory is the public perception of history, and we can study it through monuments, novels, historic markers, films, and many other aspects of popular culture. In addition to sometimes having fun source material to examine, memory also gives me a view of what someone like myself may have presented to the publics of the past.


6.         How did the WWII Home Front Museum come into existence?


From 2006 to 2016, the Coastal Georgia Historical Society operated the Maritime Center at the Historic Coast Guard Station on St. Simons Island. That museum had exhibits on subjects like the Coast Guard, archeology, marsh ecology, and World War II. When the Society updated the exhibits in our other property the St. Simons Lighthouse Museum, we discovered that the World War II story in our community was far too large to fit on a single panel in that exhibit on St. Simons Island history. By 2016 it was time to update the Maritime Center, and since the Coast Guard played a major part in Glynn County’s World War II story, we decided this was the best home to share this narrative.






7.         What is the main story your museum aims to tell?


The World War II Home Front Museum brings to life Coastal Georgia’s extraordinary contributions to winning World War II. Through immersive galleries and interactives we tell the stories of ordinary Americans doing their part to win the war. While the details of our story are specific to this area, the overarching narrative of sacrifice and participation in the war effort played out in countless small towns, large cities, and rural farms across America.







Monday, February 8, 2021

7 Questions with Terri Lipsey Scott, Executive Director of the Dr. Carter G. Woodson African American Museum

 


Terri Lipsey Scott moved to St. Petersburg, Florida in 1981. She served as a city administrator for 37 years, and now serves as the Executive Director of the Carter G. Woodson African American Museum. She is an active community advocate for equity and fairness.




 1.      How and/or when did you get you hooked on history?

A native of Savannah, Georgia, history piqued my interest when studying the life of Harriet Tubman in grade school, and her tenacity as the conductor of the underground railroad.  I decided after reading her courageous story, I too wanted to lead, direct and deliver my people from injustices with the knowledge of what was available for their deliverance.

2.      What role does history play or has it played in your personal life?

Heroines like Harriet Tubman, Shirley Chisholm, Amelia Robinson, Daisy Bates, Claudette Colvin impressed upon me, and motivated me into believing that change can only occur if you have courage to make it so. Always wanting to be a change agent for justice, those previously mentioned provided me the courage to persevere.  
Dr. Carter G. Woodson


 
3.      How will history play  a part of your professional life/career?

As stated, history has shaped my life and decisions made as a professional. Those in history became my role models for who I wanted to become and the change I wanted see for my people,

4.      Why is studying/knowing history important?

My favorite quote is that of Dr. Carter G. Woodson: "If a race has no history, if it has no worthwhile tradition, it becomes a negligible factor in the thought of the world, and it stands in danger of being exterminated." My mantra - my truth.

5.      What is your favorite period or aspect of history to learn about and why?

The survival of the Black race from Africa to America.  The story of African Americans is complex, comprehensive, and calculated. It's a story of submission, survival, and success. The story is ever evolving with many twists and turns - but always - African American people RISE.

6.      What is the mission of the Dr. Carter G. Woodson African American Museum?

The mission of the Dr. Carter G. Woodson African American Museum is to preserve, present, interpret and celebrate African /American history all while bringing together all races, creeds and cultures to become students of untold African American contributions,

7.      What can visitors expect when they visit the museum?  

Since March of 2020 due to COVID19, the Woodson has remained closed.  Our programming has all been moved to a virtual platform. The installation of Florida's first Black Lives Matter street mural is the welcoming mat and the museum's outdoor exhibition.  The mural has become a tourist destination for folks from far and near and we encourage the participation and engagement of all without the travel -  through our virtual programming until we open again.    The museum will always have on display the work of talented artists, a library filled with African American authors and curated stories by staff.  The Woodson also has the most beautiful Legacy garden anchored by oaks of more than 100 years.