Volume 4, No. 6: June 2007

MHC Grants in June 2007

"21st by 21" Projects

The following grants exemplify an initiative of the Missouri Humanities Council to transform the interpretive practices of museums and historic houses to modernized (21st century) techniques by the statehood bicentennial in 2021.

  • "Voices of the Missouri/Kansas Border"
    The MO/KS Border War Network of 19 history institutions will work together to create interactive web sites, podcasts, and virtual tours that would convey a variety of interpretations of the area's Civil War history. The Cass County Historical Society will manage this bold project with a grant of $16,108.
  • "Nodaway County Aesthetic Heritage Project"
    The historical museum in Maryville will engage the interest of the local population by creating exhibits and activities on three themes over a period of thirteen months. The emphasis in this program will be on the interaction of past and present, young and old in the collective aesthetic sense of place. The project will also engage people through an upgraded web site. The Nodaway County Historical Society will conduct the project under a grant of $5,576. The project is an outgrowth of two MHC charette workshops in the past eight months.
  • "Waverly Heritage Days"
    The Waverly Arts Council
    has been at work for the past two years on a rich local history project and a "virtual museum" for the internet. That project was the result of two charette workshops in 2005. The first phase of activity focused on Civil War history in Waverly. Capping that phase, the community will hold a festival centered on a reenactment of the 1858 wedding of General Joseph Shelby. The two-day living history festival will take place July 21-22 from 10:00 a.m. to 9:00 p.m. on Saturday and 10:00 a.m. to 6:00 p.m. on Sunday. A grant of $4,455 supports the project.
  • "Dred Scott Exhibit and Public Programs"
    The Blackworld History Museum
    in St. Louis will refashion and upgrade its Dred Scott exhibit, which was one of the original displays when the museum opened ten years ago. The museum is adding Attorney Field to the interpretation to provide a more balanced presentation of the story and to encourage viewers to consider the broader, long-term implications of the historic case and its relevance to current issues of citizenship. A grant of $8,000 supports the project.
  • "Where the Wilson Meets the James" (A Virtual Museum)
    Missouri State University's Center for Archaeological Research will create an internet museum using archaeological research, artifacts, and historic documents to tell the story of the people, cultures, and events that have left their mark on a piece of land southwest of Springfield where Wilson Creek flows into the James River. The web site will show the process of archaeology bringing light to those people who lived in or passed through an area known as Delaware Town. This area is associated with substantial, long-term prehistoric occupation as well as historic Osage, Delaware, and Cherokee Indians, Euro-American fur traders and early settlers, the White River Trace, the Trail of Tears, and the Civil War Battle of Wilson's Creek. A grant of $5,987 supports the project.
  • "The Oregon Trail" Living History Program at St. Louis Historic Houses
    The Etc. Senior Theatre company is an organization that researches and creates scripts for living history scenes. This project entails creation of a living history dramatization of the 1867 return of the American historian, Francis Parkman, to his friend Henri Chatillon. The activity will be presented for visitors at the Campbell House Museum and the Chatillon-DeMenil House Museum. A grant of $2,494 supports the project.

Locally-Designed Chautauquas

  • "A Taste of Chautauqua" is a "starter" Chautauqua for Jefferson County. A one-day program on September 15 will feature Abraham and Mary Todd Lincoln, and we will provide details in our E-News. A grant of $6,000 to The Highway 30 Foundation supports the Chautauqua and its related local programming.

 


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Published monthly by the Missouri Humanities Council, a tax-exempt, non-profit organization affiliated with the National Endowment for the Humanities, a Federal agency.
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