Our first
speaker, Nat
Sheidley, shared some of the challenges and opportunities presented by his
work with the Bostonian Society and the
Old State House Museum.
The Old
State House Museum is at an interesting turning point: with its 300th
anniversary coming up next year, the Museum is working hard to become a more 21st
century, interactive and engaging, complex and vital part of Boston, New
England, and America’s presentation of its history, most especially of the Revolutionary
War and era. One of the best steps the Society has taken so far was hiring Nat
to be the director of public history and of the project, as he proved at the
Colloquium, sharing his thoughtful, multi-part approach to creating a “radically
inclusive” and very exciting museum and living history space.
As Nat
noted in his talk, the Old State House has a built-in population of visitors,
since it’s part of Boston’s Freedom
Trail, one of the most popular historic “sites” in America. While the proposed
changes will certainly make the museum a more complex and meaningful site for
all those visitors, however, they also are geared toward connecting the museum
more fully with all of the communities and experiences that constitute 21st
century Boston and New England. After all, as Nat argued eloquently, public
historic sites that don’t speak to those who live around them in the present
can become simply antiquarian—and he believes instead, as do I, that the past
has a great deal to say to the present and future.
Nat’s talk
was a great way to start our day off! Next talk tomorrow,
Ben
PS. What
do you think?
5/14 Memory Day nominee: Ed Ricketts,
the marine
biologist and philosopher
who helped change America’s
relationship to its oceanic and natural worlds and who served as the inspiration for the character “Doc”
in his friend John
Steinbeck’s Cannery Row.
No comments:
Post a Comment