澳门六合彩开奖结果走势图

澳门六合彩开奖结果走势图 Historians Receive National Parks Funding to Collect Women鈥檚 Stories

Addressing Gap in Women鈥檚 History and Role in Parks

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Native potter.
Among the women who will be featured in the collection of biographies by 澳门六合彩开奖结果走势图 historians is Nampeyo (seen here decorating pottery), a noted Tewa Hopi potter of the Hano pueblo in northeastern Arizona. Arizona, ca. 1903. Photograph (Library of Congress)

Two University of California, Davis, historians have received funding from the National Park Service to address the educational gap in U.S. women鈥檚 history and role in the nation鈥檚 national parks. Professors Ellen 贬补谤迟颈驳补苍-翱鈥机辞苍苍辞谤 and Lisa Materson will craft 80 biographies of women involved in national parks in the western region of the United States, and, in a longer article, connect those women鈥檚 lives to the ongoing struggle for voting rights.

The park service gave grants totaling $460,000 through its  initiative after a survey they distributed early this year indicated most American adults say they wish they were taught more about women in U.S. history.

Lisa Materson and Ellen Hartigan-O'Connor
Professors Lisa Materson and Ellen Hartigan O'Connor are collaborating on a project that will record the histories of women in national parks. (澳门六合彩开奖结果走势图)

鈥淢any people visit the national parks to appreciate the beauty of the region. We will offer the public a richer, more complete picture of the social and political life that sustains them,鈥 said 贬补谤迟颈驳补苍-翱鈥机辞苍苍辞谤.

Project commemorates the 19th Amendment

The two faculty, who have collaborated for more than a decade on multiple projects, will work together on the project, which commemorates the 19th Amendment and supports inclusion of women鈥檚 stories in park and regional education and media programs. The region covered includes parks in Oregon, California, Nevada, Idaho, Hawaii, Guam and American Samoa. The 19th Amendment to the Constitution was ratified 100 years ago. It stated that the right of citizens to vote 鈥渟hall not be denied or abridged 鈥 on account of sex.鈥 Notably, in the U.S. colonies of Guam and American Samoa, included in this project, both women and men are denied the right to vote for president, and they do not have a voting representative in Congress, Materson said.

Their work will highlight the centrality of women to the creation and development of national parks and connect the parks to the broader history of women in the United States and its Pacific colonies. Their research will uncover the seldom-discussed naturalists, activists, domestic laborers, and artists whose efforts created and maintained the parks.

HOW THE PROGRAM WORKS

In the Pacific West, the regional Cultural Resources Program and five individual parks received grants.

The regional grant will supplement the work of park staff by collaborating with scholars of women鈥檚 history led by 贬补谤迟颈驳补苍-翱鈥机辞苍苍辞谤 and Materson. The project team will develop biographies of women associated with every park in the region, as well as an essay that will link the history and legacy of the suffrage movement to other themes in women鈥檚 history that are represented in the region鈥檚 parks.

, who serves as associate dean for graduate students and postdoctoral scholars, and co-edited The Oxford Handbook of American Women鈥檚 and Gender History, published in 2018. They also served as project advisors to the California Museum鈥檚 newly launched 鈥淲omen Inspire鈥 exhibit. They are specialists in women鈥檚 and gender history.

They received $23,400, which will enable them to support a team of graduate student researchers to help carry out the project. Materson, additionally, will incorporate project work into her winter graduate seminar on public history.

鈥淭his is a fantastic opportunity for faculty, students and park historians to work collaboratively in the field,鈥 Materson said.

The park service report, , found that 64 percent of respondents say they wish they were taught more about women in U.S. history, and 60 percent say they would get a C or lower grade if they were tested on the subject. The survey also found that a majority of respondents believe it is 鈥渆xtremely鈥 or 鈥渧ery鈥 important for national parks, monuments and historic sites to connect people to history (74 percent), in addition to preserving public lands for future generations (81 percent) and connecting children to nature and the outdoors (77 percent). 

The park service project was launched in 2019 鈥 with leadership gifts from  and others 鈥 to mark the hundredth anniversary of the ratification of the 19th Amendment. The grants will help connect people with stories of women's contributions to history through physical and digital park exhibits, guided walks, talks and special events, videos, podcasts, and webinars.

Media Resources

Karen Nikos-Rose, News and Media Relations, 530-219-5472, kmnikos@ucdavis.edu

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