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Communique Online
October 3, 2008
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Table of Contents:

Training Opportunities and Conferences
• Going Green
Webinar
• SOLINET Preservation Classes
Preparing for the Unexpected: Protecting Collections and Staff from Disaster
Programs
From Dark Pages Progressive Mysetery Play in Indianapolis
• Book Reading and Signing with Author Michael Martone in Fort Wayne
• Lincoln Monument Rededication Ceremony in Westport, Ill.
• 5th Annual Artists-in-Residence Program in Crawfordsville
Voices of the Land Presentation in Chesterton
Grave Robbing in Indiana Lecture in South Bend
• Sheridan Historical Society Field Trip to Vincennes
• Mordecai Peter Centennial Brown Event in Rockville
• Antiques Appraisals and Brown Bag Lunch in Scottsburg
• Annual Haunted Woods Trail in Fulton County
IHS News
• Indiana History Train
• Storytelling Arts Festival
Help
• Input Sought for Annual Senior History Day Proposal
Awards
• General Lew Wallace Study and Museum to Receive National Medal for Museum and Library
   Service at White House Ceremony
• Indiana State Historic Records Advisory Board Seeking Nominees for Governor's Award
Traveling Exhibits
Freedom: A History of US at the Nettle Creek Valley Cultural Center in Hagerstown
Hoosier Family Album at the Henry County Historical Society and Museum in New Castle
The Faces of Lincoln: Developing the Image at the Sullivan County Public Library in Sullivan
Job Opportunities
• Coordinator, Conservation Assessment Program with Heritage Preservation in 
   Washington, D.C.
• Multiple Positions at the College Park Aviation Museum in College Park, Md. 
On the Internet
• Saint Mother Theodore Guerin's Journal Now Available Online
• Henry Louis Gates, Jr. The Bondwoman’s Narrative Podcast
• FEMA Collection and Individual Object Eligibility Policy

Training Opportunities and Conferences

Going Green Webinar
This online seminar is a three-part series that will take place on Oct. 15, 22 and 29 from 1 to 2:15 p.m. each day.

The Webinar is about introducing the green revolution to your history museum or site, and is presented by Sarah Brophy, co-author of the recently released The Green Museum. Explore the green processes and apply hands-on principles and practices with a test case. Learn to identify and assess issues of going green within your own organization such as: what to consider when making decisions on how green to be and how to plan and make policy that will guide decision-making for other green projects.

The cost is $145 for members and $210 for non-members. There is a 10 percent discount for groups of five to 14, and a 15 percent discount for groups of 15 or more.

Register by Oct. 8.

For more information or to register visit https://www.aaslhnet.org/GoingGreen.htm

For questions contact Bethany Hawkins at hawkins@aaslh.org or (615) 320-3203.


SOLINET Preservation Classes
There are still seats available in the following upcoming classes:

Security Alert! How to Protect People, Property and Collections
This live online class will take place on Oct. 27 and 28 from 2 to 4 p.m.
The cost is $170 for members and $220 for non-members.
 
Preservation and Salvage of Audiovisual Materials
This live online class will take place on Oct. 28 from 10 a.m. to noon.
The cost is $100.

For more information or to register, visit http://www.solinet.net/ or contact Education Services at (800) 999-8558 or es@solinet.net.

These classes are funded in part by a grant from the National Endowment for the Humanities, Division of Preservation and Access.


Preparing for the Unexpected: Protecting Collections and Staff from Disaster
This conference is presented by the Conservation Center for Art and Historic Artifacts and will take place on Oct. 27 and 28 in Poughkeepsie, N.Y.

How can you prepare for a disaster? What can go wrong? What will you say to the press and public? Will your staff be safe during recovery efforts?

For museums, libraries and archives collections care staff, including curators, collections managers, conservators, librarians, archivists and stewards of historic house museums, and for staff responsible for the safety of collections, such as site and facility managers and security and safety staff.

Sessions:

  • Disaster Mitigation and Emergency Preparedness
  • Crisis Communication
  • Exercising the Plan (an interactive session)
  • Recovery of Paper-Based Collections (a hands-on interactive session)
  • Fire Safety: Risk Assessment, Detection and Suppression
  • Ensuring Health and Human Safety in an Emergency

The cost for this two-day program is $215 for both CCAHA and Lower Hudson Conference member institutions and $240 for non-members. Lunch will be provided both days. To encourage multiple staff members to attend, enjoy half-price registration for a second participant from the same institution! 

To register visit http://www.ccaha.org/education/program-calendar.

For more information, visit http://www.ccaha.org/ or contact the Conservation Center for Art and Historic Artifacts at (215) 545-0613 or pso@ccaha.org.

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Programs

Please confim events specifics with sponsoring organization, especially if traveling any distance.

From Dark Pages Progressive Mysetery Play in Indianapolis
This event will take place at 6:30, 7:30, 8:30 and 9:30 p.m. on Oct. 3, 9, 10, 11, 16, 17, 18, 23, 24, 25 and 30 at the Morris-Butler House located at 1204 N. Park Ave. in Indianapolis.

As far as we know, H.G. Wells, Jack the Ripper, Lizzie Borden, Queen Victoria, Dracula, Edgar Allan Poe and Arthur Conan Doyle never encountered one another at the Morris-Butler House – or any house for that matter. That's one reason people have found From Dark Pages such a delightful piece of macabre Victorian fantasy. Almost every Halloween since 1992, the always-new, ever-changing progressive mystery play has led audience members upstairs, downstairs, and all around the Morris-Butler House in search of the infamous serial killer Jack the Ripper. Along the way, visitors meet well-known historical characters from both life and literature.

Tickets are $10 per person for members and groups of more than 20 and $15 for non-members. Reservations are required.

For more information or reservations contact the Morris-Butler House staff at (317) 636-5409 or mbhouse@historiclandmarks.org.


Book Reading and Signing with Author Michael Martone in Fort Wayne
This event will be held on Saturday, Oct. 4, at 5 p.m. at the Fort Wayne History Center, located at 302 East Berry St. in Fort Wayne.

The event is free to the public.

Martone will be doing readings from his two new works which touch significantly on Fort Wayne, Double-Wide: Collected Fiction of Michael Martone, and Racing in Place.

Martone was born and grew up in Fort Wayne, Indiana, where he attended the public schools. He graduated from Indiana University with a degree in English. He is also a graduate of The Writing Seminars of The Johns Hopkins University. He edits Story County Books, and is a Professor of English and Director of the Creative Writing Program at the University of Alabama, where he has been teaching since 1996. He lives in Tuscaloosa, Alabama with the poet Theresa Pappas and their two sons, Sam and Nick.

For more information, call (260) 426-2882.


Lincoln Monument Rededication Ceremony in Westport, Ill.
This ceremony will be held on Saturday, Oct. 4, at 2 p.m. Eastern time at the west side of the Memorial Bridge in Westport, Ill., immediately across the Wabash river from Vincennes.

The Illinois Preservation Agency and the National Park Service have recognized an excellent opportunity to showcase a local chapter of Lincoln’s life story. The relief sculpture that marks the site of Lincoln’s journey from his boyhood home in Indiana to Illinois in 1830 was recently restored by the Illinois Preservation Agency. This restoration work, in conjunction with the national celebration of Lincoln’s 200th birthday, has prompted the desire for a rededication ceremony. 

The keynote speaker, Bernie Schmitt of VincennesVoice.com, will be speaking on Lincoln’s association with Vincennes and the local area. There will also be brief talks from representatives from the Daughters of the American Revolution, the Illinois Historic Preservation Agency, the Southwestern Illinois Convention and Visitor Bureau, and the National Park Service. 

Limited parking can be found at the Monument site. People are welcome to park in the George Rogers Clark NHP parking lot located on 2nd Street adjacent to the visitor center. There will be a shuttle service provided linking the two locations between the hours of 1:30 to 3:30 p.m.


5th Annual Artists-in-Residence Program in Crawfordsville
This event will take place on Sunday, Oct. 5, from 1 to 4:30 p.m. on the grounds of the General Lew Wallace Study and Museum, located at 200 Wallace Ave. in Crawfordsville.

The Artists-In-Residence program will feature eight artists and art educators from across Montgomery County who will gather to showcase their creative talents for the public.

Featured this year are the works of Rich Aldefer, a wood turner from Crawfordsville; Robert Gibbs, who will be creating a portrait of Lew Wallace in Crayola crayon; J. Nicholas Roudebush, a Wabash College student who will be throwing pottery on a wheel; and Michael Phelps, a self-taught watercolorist from Brookston.

Additionally, four art educators will give visiting children and their families the opportunity to create masterpieces of their own. Terry Lawrence will lead textured drawings; Kim Goebel will assist budding artists who want to create “underwater” images with ditto sheets; Stephen Morillo will instruct students in cartooning; and Becky Loudermilk will guide depictions of trees with “blown” paint trunks and branches.

Building on a very popular event from last year, another storyteller will be on the Study grounds for programs. Storyteller Rachael Matthews from the Indianapolis Children’s Museum will entertain with an assortment of tales suitable for the whole family.

For information visit http://www.ben-hur.com/ or call (765) 362-5769.


Voices of the Land Presentation in Chesterton
This event from the Westchester Township History Museum will take place on Sunday, Oct. 5, at 2 p.m. at the Westchester Library Service Center located at 100 W. Indiana Ave. in Chesterton.

Joel Greenberg, writer, naturalist, environmental consultant and research assistant at the Field Museum will read from his new anthology of regional nature reading, Of Prairie, Woods, and Water, accompanied by nature photographs and the music of singer/songwriters Tom and Chris Kastle.

This presentation is in memory of Dunes naturalist and conservationist Lois Howes (1914 to 1985).

For more information contact the museum at (219) 983-9715.


Grave Robbing in Indiana Lecture in South Bend
This talk will take place on Thursday, Oct. 9, at 7 p.m. at the Center for History in South Bend.

By the 1700s, British medical education required dissected bodies, leading to a small industry–grave robbing. During the late 1800s, Indiana medical schools, following the same tradition, required about 150 bodies annually, which were usually purchased from grave robbers. By the early 1900s, grave robbing led to criminal trials in Indianapolis and imprisonment of several of the "merchants." An end to the "big business" of grave robbing came as a result of legislation which allowed individuals to donate their bodies to science.

Walter Daly, M.D., will explore this topic in the presentation, Grave Robbing in Indiana. He will also discuss the centuries-old practice of using the bodies of criminals and the unclaimed for the study of anatomy. Daly is a pathologist, Dean Emeritus of the IU School of Medicine and retired director of the IU Medical Center.|

This presentation is part of a series of three gallery talks related to the exhibit, R.I.P. - Victorian Mourning Customs. As part of the program, attendees may visit the exhibit before and after the talk. R.I.P. - Victorian Mourning Customs explores the extravagant funerals and prolonged periods of mourning that were essential elements of Victorian grieving. Memorial photographs, mourning garments, funeral invitations and salesmen’s sample tombstones are shown. Gallery guides will be present to answer questions.

The lecture is free with the purchase of a museum admission, which is $8 for adults, $6.50 for seniors, $5 for youth ages 6 through 17 and free for members.

Doors open at 6 p.m.

Additional presentations in the R.I.P. lecture series include Mourning: It’s a Way of Life on Oct. 16 and The History of the Coroner on Oct. 23.

For more information, call (574) 235-9664 or visit http://www.centerforhistory.org/.


Sheridan Historical Society Field Trip to Vincennes
This field trip will take place on Saturday, Oct. 11.

Vincennes was once the capital of the Indiana Territory and the Sheridan Historical Society plans to explore its heritage attractions and enjoy its French nature still evident in structures and history during its fifth annual field trip.

The tour will include the George Rogers Clark monument, the Old Cathedral Church, the French House, the Indiana Territories Historic Site, and Grouseland, the home of William Henry Harrison. Passengers will have a choice of venues in the afternoon which include the Indiana Military Museum or Grouseland’s Festival of Quilts.

This year, the society is providing French violinists for a noontime serenade – a true taste of Vincennes heritage.

The cost is $90 per person and includes two meals.

Reservations can be made by contacting Donna Pickett at (317) 758-5765 or Connie Mossburg at (317) 758-4790.


Mordecai Peter Centennial Brown Event in Rockville
This event will mark the 100th anniversary of the Cubs last World Series win and will take place on Oct. 12 and 13 from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. each day at the Parke County Historical Society Museum, located at 503 W. Ohio St. in Rockville.

Authors Scott Brown and Cindy Thomson will be signing books about the great Cub pitcher who was also a Parke County native

Mordecai Peter Centennial Brown, also known as "Three Finger", "Miner", and "Brownie", pitched for the Chicago Cubs from 1904 to 1912, and again in 1916. The Cubs enjoyed their best years during Mordecai's tenure. He is a member of baseball's National Hall of Fame with a lifetime ERA of 2.06. He obtained the nickname "Three Finger" because he was missing the index finger of his pitching hand due to a childhood accident with a corn shredder. Some believe his mangled hand caused him to throw a curveball Ty Cobb once called "the most devastating pitch I ever faced."

Mordecai Brown was born in the coal mining town of Nyesville in Parke County.

For more information contact the Parke County Historical Society at (765) 569-2223.


Antiques Appraisals and Brown Bag Lunch in Scottsburg
This program will take place on Oct. 15 at noon at the Scott County Heritage Center located at 1050 S. Main St. in Scottsburg.

The event is free to the public. Those attending the event supply their own lunch and the museum will provide drinks and desserts.

Ever wondered if that old vase you picked up at an auction last summer is a valuable antique? Or maybe that old necklace that belonged to grandma? Lyman Goben may have your answer. Goben, who has appraised antiques for banks, insurance companies and individuals for the last thirty years, will be on hand to provide guests with appraisals of their own antiques. Due to space and time constraints, please bring only portable items (no large furniture please) and no more than two items per guest.

The museum provides the Brown Bag Lunch programs September through May each year on the third Wednesday of the month at noon. Each month features a different speaker covering a wide variety of topics and typically lasting about an hour. Coming up on Nov. 19, Andrew Rowden will present America’s Premiere Infantry Regiment. The programs are in the museum’s Michael L. Smith Room, which seats approximately fifty people. 

For more information call (812) 752-1050.


Annual Haunted Woods Trail in Fulton County
This event will take place on Oct. 17, 18, 24 and 25 from 7 to 10 p.m. each day on the grounds of the Fulton County Historical Society located four miles north of Rochester on U.S. 31.

The cost is $5 for adults ages 12 and up, $2 for children ages six to 11 and free for children ages five and under.

Children must be accompanied by an adult. For children there will be storytelling and games in the museum. Food will be available in the museum. Those going to the haunted woods will ride a tram pulled by a tractor to the woods at the south end of the grounds. There they will be given a guided walking tour of the haunted woods.

For more information call (574) 223-4436.

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IHS News

Indiana History Train
Don’t miss the train! The Indiana History Train visits Sullivan, Bargersville, New Castle and Evansville in October.

This fall, hop aboard the History Train and get a hands-on, close-up look at Hoosiers whose lives were touched by the Civil War. Three 65-foot refurbished freight cars will roll into four Indiana communities with a unique traveling exhibition, Faces of the Civil War, which explores Indiana and the Civil War. Hands-on activities and a Civil War-era actor/interpreter help visitors learn more about Indiana life during that era. Enjoy the film Well Done, Indiana and purchase Civil War-related items at the depot gift shop.

Stops:

  • Oct. 2 through 4: Sullivan
  • Oct. 9 through 11: Bargersville
  • Oct. 16 through 18: New Castle
  • Oct. 23 through 25: Evansville

The Indiana History Train is open Thursdays through Saturdays from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m.

To schedule group visits call (800) 447-1830 or e-mail welcome@indianahistory.org. The tour is free, but space is limited.

Visit www.indianahistory.org/historytrain for more information.

The 2008 Indiana History Train is made possible by a grant from the U.S. Institute of Museum and Library Services and a gift from Lilly Endowment Inc. The History Train is a partnership between the Indiana Historical Society and The Indiana Rail Road Company and is sponsored by BKD, LLP.


Storytelling Arts Festival
This event will be held from Wednesday, Oct. 8, through Saturday, Oct. 11, at Military Park and the Eugene and Marilyn Glick Indiana History Center in Indianapolis.

From campfire ghost stories to a grandfather’s memories, everyone has experienced the art of storytelling. An age-old global tradition, storytelling draws listeners into uncharted territory and unites them through common experience. Its simple magic has the power to transform everyday life. Hoosiers of all ages will have the opportunity to soak up stories from around the world at the four-day Printing Partners Hoosier Storytelling Festival in Indianapolis.

Visit http://www.storytellingarts.org/ for pricing information.

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Help

Input Sought for Annual Senior History Day Proposal
Paul North and the Indianapolis Consortium for Creative Aging and Retirement are seeking input on a proposal for an annual Senior History Day competition.

We have incredibly valuable resources of stories and histories living among us in our cities, towns and rural areas that are waiting to be told and collected. People over 55 are wonderful primary sources of history, and they need a format and some encouragement to share their stories. An annual Senior History Day competition, modeled on National History Day for students, could be a wonderful way to do just that.

A theme would be chosen for each year, and entries must be a personal history from the person’s own experience and life. For example:

  • Growing up in Indiana
  • War years experience
  • Work experience: (e.g. I invented … , I worked on … , I built … )
  • My life in a rural area/small town/city setting

Proposed categories (with specific guidelines to be determined) include:

  • Static displays (photos and artifacts)
  • Oral interpretations (storytelling)
  • Video/movie documentary (five to 10 minutes)

If you would like to give your feedback on this proposal, please respond to Paul North at paulnorth@sageconnect.org. Please include your name, address, phone number and organization, and note whether or not you think that an annual Senior History Day competition is a good idea, and whether you would like to help in developing the project. Also note any additional input you would like to provide.

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Awards

General Lew Wallace Study and Museum to Receive National Medal for Museum and Library Service at White House Ceremony
First Lady Laura Bush will award the General Lew Wallace Study and Museum the 2008 National Medal for Museum and Library Service, the nation's highest honor for museums and libraries, at a White House ceremony on Oct. 7.  

Each year, the federal Institute of Museum and Library Services, in coordination with the White House, presents the National Medal to five museums and five libraries that have helped make their communities better places to live. Each winning institution also receives a $10,000 award.

The National Medal is the nation's highest honor for museums and libraries that help make their communities better places to live. The General Lew Wallace Study and Museum is one of only five museums in the United States and its territories to receive the medal this year and only the second museum in Indiana to receive this award since its inception.

IMLS awards the National Medal to 10 institutions annually for outstanding community outreach programs. The General Lew Wallace Study and Museum received the award for its Lew Wallace Youth Academy, which incorporates Wallace's life story into lessons in problem solving, creating art, and serving others; its Taste of Montgomery County event that created an economic engine for small businesses in the Montgomery County area and brought new people to the museum's campus to celebrate local food and music; and its participation in the public forum "Build a Better Downtown." Additionally, the Museum has ensured the lasting legacy of General Wallace with the recent rehabilitation of his carriage house as an Interpretive Center complete with a state-of-the-art collections storage facility. Through exceptional educational programming, collaborations with local and state organizations, active collections care, and community development opportunities, the General Lew Wallace Study and Museum fulfills its mission to "celebrate and renew belief in the power of the individual spirit to affect American history and culture."

"We are deeply moved by this award. The museum staff and board have worked diligently to connect with our community and we believe we've made positive transformations in our members, program participants, and visitors.  To have this work commemorated with the National Medal is an incredible honor," said Cinnamon Catlin-Legutko, Director of the General Lew Wallace Study and Museum.

"By its example, the General Lew Wallace Study and Museum shows us the kind of influence and impact that museums can have on community life. Through its innovative programs and active partnerships, the Museum addresses the urgent and changing needs of the community it serves," said Anne-Imelda M. Radice, IMLS Director.

Additional information about the 2008 National Medal winners may be found at http://www.imls.gov/news/2008/092908.shtm.


Indiana State Historic Records Advisory Board Seeking Nominees for Governor's Award
Since the Indiana State Historic Records Advisory Board began in 2006, they have presented the Governor's Award on Statehood Day to individuals, either professional or volunteer, who have worked to preserve or promote Indiana's documentary heritage. 

Nominations are due by Nov. 3, 2008.

For more information visit http://www.in.gov/icpr/2352.htm or contact Maire Gurevitz at mgurevitz@icpr.in.gov.

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Traveling Exhibits

Freedom: A History of US at the Nettle Creek Valley Cultural Center in Hagerstown
In the Declaration of Independence, Thomas Jefferson based the colonists’ right to separate on the King’s denial of their freedom—their “inalienable rights to life liberty and the pursuit of happiness.” Yet for more than 225 years, the principle of freedom and our understanding of its implications have evolved. The debates, decisions and battles of our past shape the United States in which we live today. This exhibition invites viewers to read the words and see the images of men and women who arrived in this land either by choice or in chains, but who together forged this nation. Their words and images provide insight into the complexity of the past.


Hoosier Family Album at the Henry County Historical Society and Museum in New Castle
When first developed, photography was practiced largely by professional photographers. As evolving technology made it possible for the average Hoosier to own a camera, the subject matter of photographs became much broader. This exhibit examines how photography has been used to document everyday occurrences in Hoosiers' lives, such as vacations, holidays, education, religion, work, and romance. Some of the scenes represented in the exhibit are children in a Hartford City parade, a group of Brookville cyclists readying for a country ride, the Greenfield baseball team preparing for a game around 1918 and Christmas stockings hung by the chimney with care in an Indianapolis Woodruff Place home.


The Faces of Lincoln: Developing the Image at the Sullivan County Public Library in Sullivan
The Faces of Lincoln traveling exhibit is comprised of three independent parts, Developing the Image, Creating the Image and Idealizing the Image, each an exhibit unto itself.

This section of the exhibit takes a look at the history of photography using some of the best and most well-known images of Abraham Lincoln. Abraham Lincoln’s was the first photograph of a president seen by most Americans. Before the mid-19th century, images of our presidents were created in portraits, etchings and political cartoons; these formats continued to be popular in Lincoln’s time. But recent technological breakthroughs in photography also made it possible to create a “real” image on glass or paper and copy it in large numbers. Although other presidents had been photographed, most of those images were made on daguerreotypes that were not reproducible. The common appearance of Lincoln’s homely face, with his moles, wrinkles and unmanageable hair, and new technology that could easily copy his photographs for distribution made his image a popular one with Americans. The devastating national events of the Civil War during Lincoln’s presidency were also photographed. And, in the end, Lincoln’s assassination imprinted his image on the national memory.

These traveling exhibits are on loan from the Indiana Historical Society. For more information about the IHS traveling exhibit program, go to www.indianahistory.org/LHS and click on "Traveling Exhibition".

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Job Opportunities

National:

Coordinator, Conservation Assessment Program with Heritage Preservation in Washington, D.C.
The Coordinator of the Conservation Assessment Program is responsible for the planning and administration of a program that provides small and mid-sized museums with an assessment of their collections and historic structures by professional conservators and preservation architects. CAP is supported through a cooperative agreement with the Institute of Museum and Library Services, a federal agency.

The Coordinator oversees the day-to-day administration of the program including attracting applicants, reviewing applications, guiding program participants through hiring assessors and planning site visits, tracking program funds, and evaluating the impact of the program on the museum field. He/she develops and monitors the CAP budget and is responsible for regular reporting to IMLS. The Coordinator oversees publication of CAPabilities and Assessor Update, semi-annual newsletters. The Coordinator prepares publicity about the program and works with Heritage Preservation staff on internal efforts such as newsletters, publications, and other projects as assigned. Duties also include public speaking engagements at museum association meetings. The CAP Coordinator works under the direction of the Vice President of Collections Care Programs and supervises one program assistant.

Salary starts in the high 30s but may be higher depending on experience. Heritage Preservation provides an excellent benefits package and a monthly transportation stipend. Heritage Preservation does not pay relocation expenses.

Three years of administrative experience working in a museum, arts or historic preservation organization and a bachelor’s degree are required. A museum related graduate degree is highly desirable. Position requires strong written and oral communications skills; computer skills (Microsoft Office and FileMaker Pro); strong attention to detail; excellent organizational skills; and ability to work independently and take initiative.

By Oct. 10, 2008, please send a cover letter and resume to Kristen Laise, Vice President for Collections Care at jobs@heritagepreservation.org or Heritage Preservation, 1012 14th St., NW, Suite 1200, Washington, D.C. 20005. No phone calls please. Applications will be reviewed as they are received and interviews may begin before Oct. 10.


Multiple Positions at the College Park Aviation Museum in College Park, Md.

Part-Time Education Assistant
The College Park Aviation Museum is looking for someone with an interest or experience in education or museum education to assist us with programs, tours, working with teachers and other educators, scheduling and developing education activities and programs. This is a part-time position at approximately 25 hours per week and can be done during school hours (typically 9 a.m. to 1 or 2 p.m.).
 
All PT staff are required to work one weekend day per month as well as assist with scheduled seasonal programs. We are looking for someone who enjoys working with the public and feels comfortable speaking to groups. This position will assist us with the development of tours and programs that are appropriate for all levels of education, from pre-K to adult groups. No experience in the aviation or aviation history field is required.
 
The salary is $9 per hour. Please send your resume to the College Park Aviation Museum, 1985 Cpl. Frank Scott Drive, College Park, Md. 20740, fax (301) 927-6472, or e-mail jane.welsh@pgparks.com.
 
Part-Time Museum Assistant
Looking for an outgoing and energetic individual to work part-time with the College Park Aviation Museum staff on the upcoming Museum Centennial as well as several centennial related projects – development of the Maryland Aviation Hall of Fame, coordination of the "Centennial of Military Flight" Air Fair program (September), as well as several smaller programs. Must be dependable, outgoing, confident, have good customer service skills and an interest in aviation.
 
The position will average 20 to 25 hours per week and occasional weekend days (1 to 2 per month), and is flexible between 9 a.m. and 5 p.m. Good computer skills, aviation knowledge/background a plus but not required, and the applicant must work well in team environment.
 
The salary is $10 per hour. Send resume or letter of interest to aviationmuseum@pgparks.com.
 
Part-Time Museum Archives Technician
The College Park Aviation Museum is looking for a part-time person to be responsible for overseeing its museum archives and library, responding to public inquiries, working with the public as well as museum staff on programs/projects, scanning and digitizing documents and photos, coordinating our book auction, developing finding aides, accepting book/archival donations, assisting with public programs and staffing the museum.

The position will average 20 to 25 hrs per week and 1 to 2 weekend days per month. Must be interested in working with the public and have excellent customer service skills, experience with computers, and various computer software programs (Access, Excel) as well as museum experience and interest in history.
 
The salary is $9 per hour. For more information or to send a resume contact aviationmusem@pgparks.com.
 
For more information about the College Park Aviation Museum visit http://www.collegeparkaviationmuseum.com/.

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On the Internet

Saint Mother Theodore Guerin's Journal Now Available Online
Saint Mother Theodore Guerin came to the United States from France in 1840 to establish the Sisters of Providence of Saint Mary-of-the-Woods, Ind., a Congregation of women religious.

One of the most cherished pieces of the Congregation’s history was conserved and digitized with the assistance of the Indiana Historical Society’s Historic Document Preservation Program and the Preservation Imaging Lab. Saint Mother Theodore Guerin’s journal, which is written in French, began with her arrival on Oct. 22, 1840. The journal ends shortly before her death on May 14, 1856.

The journal is now available online at http://www.spsmw.org/cgi-bin/site.pl?3208&dwContent_contentID=1446.

It can also be accessed on the Wabash Valley Visions and Voices Web site at http://visions.indstate.edu/sisters.html.


Henry Louis Gates, Jr. The Bondwoman’s Narrative Podcast
This podcast is part of Historians on the Record: Podcasts from the Gilder Lehrman Insititute.

Henry Louis Gates, Jr., Alphonse Fletcher University Professor and Director of the W.E.B. Du Bois Institute of African American History at Harvard University, recalls his thrilling search for the true author of The Bondwoman’s Narrative, and the real-life Civil War Era counterparts to the novel’s cast of characters.

Since 1996, Gilder Lehrman Historians’ Forums have presented dozens of eminent historians discussing their latest books.  Now you can hear these lectures on your computer, iPod, or other portable media player.

To listen to this or other podcasts visit http://gilderlehrman.org/wp/?p=38.


FEMA Collection and Individual Object Eligibility Policy
This Disaster Assistance Policy 9524.6 outlines the criteria by which the Federal Emergency Management Agency determines the eligibility of collections and individual objects, and the eligible work and costs related to the treatment of these collections and individual objects.

For more information visit http://www.fema.gov/government/grant/pa/9524_6.shtm.

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Note from the Editor:

Do you know someone who might want to receive Communique Online? Anyone may join the mailing list by e-mailing col@indianahistory.org.

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Please visit the IHS Local History Services Web site at www.indianahistory.org/LHS.