Selma to Montgomery Civil Rights March (1965). Behind the children, a singing Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. and his wife, Coretta Scott King. From the Jack T. Franklin Photography Collection of the African American Museum in Philadelphia. |
Save America’s
Treasures was a U.S.
federal government program administered by the National Park Service in partnership
with the President’s Council on the Arts and the Humanities, the National
Endowment for the Humanities, the National Endowment for the Arts, and the Institute of Museum and Library Services. Beginning with the first competitive round of
funding in 1999 and continuing for twelve years, Save America’s Treasures offered matching grants for preservation
of historic structures, artifacts, documents, and works of art.
I first became acquainted with the Save America’s Treasures program through my work as Director of
Development at the Conservation Center for Art and Historic Artifacts in Philadelphia . At the Conservation Center ,
we have been honored to work on 30 Save
America’s Treasures projects. Every
one of these projects has been exciting and inspiring. Through this blog, I hope to learn about 1,200
more exciting and inspiration projects—and, of course, to celebrate the 30 that
I already know.
I’ve decided to organize this six-year tour into
geographical clusters of six to 15 sites.
In some cases, the cluster will be as small as a city neighborhood. In other cases (the Alaska cluster comes to mind), the cluster
will encompass a vast region.
Our first cluster covers 15 sites in Philadelphia .
I’m arbitrarily starting with Philadelphia
because it’s my hometown city and because it allows me to launch the entire
series with the preservation of the handwritten draft of the United States
Constitution at the Historical Society of Pennsylvania. It feels like an appropriate starting point.
After our swing through Philadelphia ,
we’ll shoot down to Richmond , Virginia
for a tour of their treasures, then off to southern California —an inviting place to visit in
mid-February.
I invite you to join me.
It should be fun.
Hi Lee,
ReplyDeleteGreat effort! You might be interested in my tours of cultural heritage institutions on my blog Here and There (you'll have to google it or me because I can't put the url into the comment field without it bouncing back).
Deb Schiff
Thanks Deb! That's weird about the bounce back. Let me try:
ReplyDeletehttp://hereandthere123.blogspot.com/
Love your blog! I'll add it to my blogroll on my other blog, 21 Essays (it'll go in with the history roll of honor).
http://21essays.blogspot.com/
Lee