Proceedings of the 2011 ALHFAM Conference and Annual Meeting, Vol. 34
Growing Living History In Good Times & Bad ~~ Weston, West Virginia
Preface: Growing Living History in Good Times & Bad
Keynote: The Storytelling Advantage, Adam Booth.
Growing Living History with Agricultural History
Finding the Pitchfork in the Haystack:
Adding Agricultural History to Your Local History Story, Lynne Belluscio
Designing a Research Plan to Incorporate Agricultural History into Your Local Story, Debra A. Reid
Growing Living History with Collections
Photographs Preservation and Digitization Basics, Lori Hostuttler
Good Times and Bad at the Vaughan Homestead in Hallowell, Maine, Jane Radcliffe and Ron Kley
Growing Living History with Foodways
A Hot Topic: Wood-fired Bake Ovens - A Sharing Experience, Regina D. Albert
Food Safety and the Relevance to Historic Sites, Regina D. Albert
The Triumphs and Tribulations of Fee Based Cooking Programs, Ryan Beckman, Kathleen Wall, Justin Squizzero, Gwen Miner, Pat McMillion
A Personal Recollection of Canning and Preserving, Susan Cain
“And nevermore you’ll toil…” Moonshine in Good Times and Bad, Clarissa Dillon
The Frontier Table: What Foodways Really Were in Western Virginia Before the Civil War, Martha and Richard Hartley
Canning: A Domestic Chore or Community Development Project, Debra A. Reid
Growing Living History with Hands-On Activities and Programming
Exploration of Eighteenth Century Dyes, Karen Clancy
The Best Original Ideas Are Always Borrowed From Somebody Else; The Success of the Ukrainian Cultural Heritage Village’s Children’s Pioneer Fun Day, Arnold Grandt
Rope and Knots, Ronald Westphal
Growing Living History with Historical Research
Thomas Chapman: Colonial Farmer Turned Soldier, Michael Baker
Searching for Amelia Simmons: Hot Leads and Dead Ends in My Search for the Author of the First American Cookbook, Pamela Cooley
Growing Living History with Interpretation
Taking a Balanced Approach to Interpretation: Lincoln Boyhood National Memorial as a Case Study, Mike Capps
They Weren’t Always at War: Finding and Presenting the Human Drama in Every Day Life, Joey Madia
Some Things are too Important to Ever Forget: Interpreting the Impact of Coal Mining (Anthracite and Bituminous) on America’s History, Richard N. Pawling
Autobiography of a Dust Bowl Refugee, Susan Reckseidler
The Sites Homestead – Engaging Six Senses in Historic Interpretation, Kaila St. Louis
Growing Living History with Livestock
Assessing and Assuring Animal Welfare using Critical Control Points: A Guide for Living History Farms, Barbara Corson
Loved Too Much: Managing Visitor Perceptions of Livestock, Jon Keuster
Precious Cargo On Board: Driver’s License Needed? Pete Watson, Joyce Henry, Rhys Simmons, Fred Kiger
Growing Living History with Site Building and Rebuilding
Fort New Salem: Nowhere But Up, Becky Nesbitt
From Below the Ground Up: Colonial Williamsburg’s Soil Building Effort, Wayne Randolph and Ed Schultz
Growing Living History with Staff and Volunteers
Like Finding a Needle in a Haystack: Historic Farmers, Charles LeCount
Many Hands Make Light Work. Integrating 4-H into the Museum Setting, Todd Price
Training and Using Youth Interpreters Effectively, Jo Ruggiero