National Collaborative for Women's History Sites
The National Collaborative for Women's History Sites (NCWHS) is a nonprofit US membership organization that aims to promote the preservation and interpretation of women's history through museums and historic sites. The NCWHS mission is to help ensure "the preservation and interpretation of sites and locales that bear witness to women's participation in American life and to make women's contributions to history visible so that all women's experience and potential are fully valued."[1] The organization produces publications (Revealing Women's History: Best Practices at Historic Sites, and Women's History: Sites and Resources); hosts workshops and webinars; offers panels at professional conferences, encourages the development of heritage trails; and creates and shares resources aimed to help public historians better incorporate women's history into historic sites. These programs are often developed in partnership with other history organizations, including the National Park Service, the National Women’s History Project, the Organization of American Historians and other preservation agencies and history membership organizations as well as a range of historic sites to expand and support the venues and ways in which women's history is shared with public audiences.[2]
The NCWHS was created in October 2001 by representatives of more than twenty historical sites linked to American women and some twenty others from organizations devoted to preserving women's history; noting that only about 4% of the nation's historic sites interpreted topics in women's history, the founding members aimed to support the efforts of small local groups working to expand the presence of women's history in their own communities by helping form networks and by serving as a clearinghouse for information and resources.[3] Today the membership includes curators, interpreters, managers, history consultants, faculty members, students and a range of other history professionals as well as museums and historic sites and members of the general public. The organization is governed by a board of directors, chaired by Heather Huyck. The NCWHS is headquartered at the Evanston History Center in Evanston, Illinois.
Notes
- NCWHS. "Mission Statement".
- On the NPS, see, e.g., Androff, Blake. "Secretary Salazar to Deliver Remarks at Women's History Forum". press release. US Department of Interior. Retrieved January 3, 2013. On the NWHP, see Elam, Pam (7 April 2010). "Celebrate the 100th Anniversary of Woman Suffrage". Young Feminists (blog). Retrieved January 3, 2013.
- Stevens, Allison (December 11, 2003). "Historians Working to Place Women's Sites on the Map". WeNews. Retrieved January 2, 2013.
External links
Further reading
- Heather A. Huyck, Women's History: Sites and Resources (University of Illinois Press, 2010).
- Polly Welts Kaufman, National Parks And the Woman's Voice: A History (University of New Mexico Press, 2006), xxii.
- Edward T. Linenthal, "The National Park Service and Civic Engagement," Vol 28 No 1 The Public Historian (Winter 2006), 123-29.
- Linda Witt, "National Collaborative for Women's History Sites Celebrates First Anniversary," Organization of American Historians Newsletter (November 2002), 9.
- Anne Whisnant, et al., Imperiled Promise: The State of History in the National Park Service (Organization of American Historians, 2011), 66.