HISTORY IN THE NATIONAL
PARK SERVICE
THEMES &
CONCEPTS

Indian Lodge At Medicine Creek, Kansas-Sketched By J. Howland
Harper's Weekly October 16-26, 1867
Acknowledgements
This
booklet is the product of a joint effort between the National Park
Service, the Organization of American Historians, the American Historical
Association, and the National Coordinating Committee for the Promotion
of History. Special thanks are due to the participants responsible
for conceptualizing and writing the revised thematic framework and
to Barbara Little of the National Park Service for providing guidance
and examples for using the new framework.
Park
History Program
National Park Service
Department of the Interior
1849 C Street NW, Room NC 400
Washington, DC 20240
For
other publications and information relating to the Park
History Program of the National Park Service visit our web page at http://www.nps.gov/history/history.
Contents
Preamble
Overview of the Revised Thematic Framework
The Revised Thematic Framework
Using the Revised Thematic Framework
Participants in the Working Group on the Revision of the National
Park Service Thematic Framework
Preamble
Over
half of the units within the National Park Service (NPS) are cultural
sites commemorating America's multi-faceted history. The NPS preserves
these cultural resources÷which include historic buildings, structures,
landscapes and archaeological sites, as tangible evidence of the
past÷and strives to ensure that associated educational programming
conveys an accurate and comprehensive view of history. The service
also administers the National Historic Landmarks Program to recognize
nationally significant cultural resources outside the park service.
A conceptual tool for evaluating the significance of cultural resources
within or outside the NPS is the service's "thematic framework"
for history and prehistory. The framework is an outline of major
themes and concepts that help us to conceptualize American history.
It is used to help identify cultural resources that embody America's
past and to describe and analyze the multiple layers of history
encapsulated within each resource.
The
first NPS thematic framework, adopted in 1936, consisted of several
broad themes in American history. It was conceived in terms of the
"stages of American progress" and focused mainly on the achievements
of military and political figures. Revisions in 1970 and 1987 applied
more detail in chronological and topical approaches and greatly
expanded the number of themes and subthemes. However, the basic
conceptualization of the past remained the same.
Thus,
the 1987 framework did not adequately reflect how new scholarship
has dramatically changed the way we look at the past. In the introduction
to The New American History (1991), historian Eric Foner described
this transformation:
In
the course of the past twenty years, American history has been remade.
Inspired initially by the social movements of the 1960s and 1970s÷which
shattered the "consensus" vision that had dominated historical writing÷and
influenced by new methods borrowed from other disciplines, American
historians redefined the very nature of historical study.
That
remaking of American's past has expanded the boundaries of historical
inquiry to encompass not only great men and events but also ordinary
people and everyday life. Public Law 101-628, Section 1209 (1991)
directed the NPS to revise the 1987 thematic framework to incorporate
these new approaches to examining and understanding America's past.
This resulted in a gathering of academic scholars and NPS professionals
in Washington, DC, June 18-20, 1993, to discuss the strengths and
weaknesses of the old framework and to develop a rough draft of
a revised framework. The meeting, cosponsored by the Organization
of American Historians and the National Coordinating Committee for
the Promotion of History, and supported by the American Historical
Association, resulted in a completely rethought, revised thematic
framework. Through eight concepts that encompass the multi-faceted
and interrelated nature of human experience, the revised thematic
framework reflects a more interdisciplinary, less compartmentalized
approach to American history.
The
revised thematic framework is a significant departure from the thematic
outlines previously used by the National Park Service. It, however,
better serves the National Park Service and other interested parties
in evaluating historic properties, in assessing how well American
history is represented in existing park system units and other protected
areas, and in enhancing park interpretive programs to provide a
fuller understanding of the Nation's past.
Overview
of the Revised Thematic Framework
The
revised framework will guide the NPS, working independently and
with its partners in the private and public sectors, in:
ð
evaluating the significance of resources for listing in the National
Register of Historic Places, for designation as National Historic
Landmarks, or for potential addition to the National Park System;
ð
assessing how well the themes are currently represented in existing
units of the National Park System and in other recognized areas;
and,
ð
expanding and enhancing the interpretive programs at existing units
of the National Park System to provide a fuller understanding of
our nation's past.
The
use of the framework need not be limited to the federal level, however,
for the conceptualization it provides can equally inform preservation
and interpretation at local, state, and regional levels.
The
framework's themes are represented in the following diagram. They
embrace prehistory to the modern period and a multiplicity of human
experiences. The diagram reflects how scholarship is dramatically
changing the way we look at the past, reconstructing it as integrated,
diverse, complex, human experience. Each segment in the diagram
represents a significant aspect of the human experience. The reality
of the interrelationships is reflected in the overlapping circles.
The
framework draws upon the work of scholars across disciplines to
provide a structure for capturing the complexity and meaning of
human experience and for understanding that past in coherent, integrated
ways. For purposes of organization, the following outline, like
the diagram, provides eight seemingly discrete categories, but they
are not meant to be mutually exclusive. Cutting across and connecting
the eight categories are three historical building blocks: people,
time, and place.
People
The centrality
of people may seem obvious but should not be taken for granted.
In their work, recent scholars have emphasized that people are the
primary agents of change and must be the focus when we try to recapture
the past. The framework also recognizes the variety of people who
have populated our past. In every category of the outline, consideration
of the variables of race, ethnicity, class, and gender will help
us better grasp the full range of human experience. This approach
does not mean forsaking the whole and breaking up our past into
small unrelated pieces, but rather recognizing how the whole has
been shaped by our varied histories.
Time
Time is central to both prehistory and history, not simply as a
mechanism to locate or isolate events in history, but also as the
focus of our concern with process and change over time. The emphasis
is not only on "what happened" but also on "how and why," on the
transformations that turn the past into the present.
There
is no assumption of progress or inevitability in interpreting these
transformations. Instead, the emphasis is on the tension between
change and continuity and on understanding why and how particular
choices were made. There is no fixed periodization scheme in this
new framework. While the committee of scholars who worked on this
revision recognizes that there are moments of significant change
in our past, it has not proved valuable to break the past up into
rigid segments of time that often ignore or obscure the complexity
of historical change.
Place
The outline
that follows was developed to address issues of national significance,
yet it recognizes that region, community, and other dimensions of
place are relevant. This framework acknowledges the richness of
local and regional experiences and recognizes difference in place÷particularly
regional difference÷as an important factor in a fuller understanding
of both the origins of national change and the impact of national
trends and events.
Because
place is the concrete context in which our history unfolds, a richer
reconstruction of the past must include local and regional experience
to help build appreciation for our national experience.
People,
time, and place reach across all eight themes and contribute to
the interconnections among the themes. One example that can be used
to illustrate this interconnectedness is a Southern plantation dating
from the 1830s. A quick survey suggests that the significance of
this site cuts across every category of the outline. The move of
a planter, his family, and his sizable household of slaves from
Tidewater Virginia to land purchased from the Choctaws in Alabama
would fall obviously under "Peopling Places," but the economic imperatives
and agricultural develop- ments that triggered the move and the
adaptation of the plantation system to the new environment would
fit under "Developing the American Economy," "Expanding Science
and Technology," and "Transforming the Environment." While the lives
of the plantation's white and black, male and female inhabitants
fall under "Peopling Places" and "Creating Social Institutions and
Movements," the design and construction of the distinctive "big
house" and other plantation architecture illustrates the theme of
"Expressing Cultural Values." The transfer of the planter's political
power from Virginia to Alabama and the role of the planter class
in antebellum Alabama falls under "Shaping the Political Landscape."
Finally, the planter's dependence on the cotton economy and his
influential role in international trade on the eve of the Civil
War tie directly into "Developing the American Economy" and "Changing
Role of the U.S. in the World." The outline suggests that users
think broadly, not narrowly, that they look beyond traditional categories
of historical significance in an effort to recapture the larger
meaning and depth of past experience.
This
conceptualization assists the National Park Service in deepening
and broadening its identification and interpretation of sites. It
suggests fresh opportunities to assess the significance of sites
from new perspectives and at regional and local as well as national
levels.
The
framework rests on the assumption that, just as our understanding
of the past has been reshaped in recent decades, so it will continue
to evolve in the future. It should not be viewed as a final document
or definitive statement. It is a part of an ongoing effort to ensure
that the preservation and interpretation of our nation's historic
and prehistoric resources continue to be informed by the best scholarship
available.
The Revised Thematic Framework
I.
Peopling Places
This
theme examines human population movement and change through prehistoric
and historic times. It also looks at family formation, at different
concepts of gender, family, and sexual division of labor, and at
how they have been expressed in the American past. While patterns
of daily life÷birth, marriage, childrearing÷are often taken for
granted, they have a profound influence on public life.
Life
in America began with migrations many thousands of years ago. Centuries
of migrations and encounters have resulted in diverse forms of individual
and group interaction, from peaceful accommodation to warfare and
extermination through exposure to new diseases.
Communities,
too, have evolved according to cultural norms, historical circumstances,
and environmental contingencies. The nature of communities is varied,
dynamic, and complex. Ethnic homelands are a special type of community
that existed before incorporation into the political entity known
as the United States. For example, many Indian sites, such as Canyon
de Chelly National Monument in Arizona, are on tribal lands occupied
by Indians for centuries. Similarly, Hispanic communities, such
as those represented by San Antonio Missions National Historical
Park, had their origins in Spanish and Mexican history. Distinctive
and important regional patterns join together to create microcosms
of America's history and to form the "national experience."
Topics
that help define this theme include:
1. family
and the life cycle
2. health, nutrition, and disease
3. migration from outside and within
4. community and neighborhood
5. ethnic homelands
6. encounters, conflicts, and colonization
II. Creating Social Institutions and Movements
This
theme focuses upon the diverse formal and informal structures such
as schools or voluntary associations through which people express
values and live their lives. Americans generate temporary movements
and create enduring institutions in order to define, sustain, or
reform these values. Why people organize to transform their institutions
is as important to understand as how they choose to do so. Thus,
both the diverse motivations people act on and the strategies they
employ are critical concerns of social history.
Sites
such as Women's Rights National Historical Park in Seneca Falls,
New York, and the Eugene V. Debs National Historic Landmark in Indiana
illustrate the diversity and changeable nature of social institutions.
Hancock Shaker Village, a National Historic Landmark, and Touro
Synagogue, a National Historic Site, reflect religious diversity.
This category will also encompass temporary movements that influenced
American history but did not produce permanent institutions.
Topics
that help define this theme include:
1. clubs and organizations
2. reform movements
3. religious institutions
4. recreational activities
III.
Expressing Cultural Values
This
theme covers expressions of culture÷people's beliefs about themselves
and the world they inhabit. For example, Boston African American
Historic Site reflects the role of ordinary Americans and the diversity
of the American cultural landscape. Ivy Green, the birthplace of
Helen Keller in Alabama, and the rural Kentucky Pine Mountain Settlement
School illustrate educational currents. Walnut Street Theater in
Pennsylvania, Louis Armstrong's house in New York City, the Chautauqua
Historic District in New York, and the Cincinnati Music Hall÷all
National Historic Landmarks÷reflect diverse aspects of the performing
arts.
This
theme also encompasses the ways that people communicate their moral
and aesthetic values. The gardens and studio in New Hampshire of
Augustus Saint-Gaudens, one of America's most eminent sculptors,
and Connemara, the farm in North Carolina of the noted poet Carl
Sandburg, both National Historic Sites, illustrate this theme.
Topics
that help define this theme include:
1. educational and intellectual currents
2. visual and performing arts
3. literature
4. mass media
5. architecture, landscape architecture, and urban design
6. popular and traditional culture
IV.
Shaping the Political Landscape
This theme encompasses tribal, local, state, and federal political
and governmental institutions that create public policy and those
groups that seek to shape both policies and institutions. Sites
associated with political leaders, theorists, organizations, movements,
campaigns, and grassroots political activities all illustrate aspects
of the political environment. Independence Hall is an example of
democratic aspirations and reflects political ideas.
Places
associated with this theme include battlefields and forts, such
as Saratoga National Historical Park in New York and Fort Sumter
National Monument in South Carolina, as well as sites such as Appomattox
Court House National Historical Park in Virginia that commemorate
watershed events in the life of the nation.
The
political landscape has been shaped by military events and decisions,
by transitory movements and protests, as well as by political parties.
Places associated with leaders in the development of the American
constitutional system such as Abraham Lincoln's home in Illinois
and the birthplace of Martin Luther King, Jr., in Atlanta÷both National
Historic Sites÷embody key aspects of the political landscape.
Topics
that help define this theme include:
1. parties, protests, and movements
2. governmental institutions
3. military institutions and activities
4. political ideas, cultures, and theories
V. Developing the American Economy
This
theme reflects the ways Americans have worked, including slavery,
servitude, and non-wage as well as paid labor. It also reflects
the ways they have materially sustained themselves by the processes
of extraction, agriculture, production, distribution, and consumption
of goods and services.
Vital
aspects of economic history are frequently manifested in regional
centers, for example, ranching on the Great Plains illustrated by
Grant-Kohrs Ranch National Historic Site in Montana. Individual
economic sites, such as Lowell National Historical Park in Massachusetts,
may be distinctive in representing both the lives of workers and
technological innovations.
In
examining the diverse working experiences of the American people,
this theme encompasses the activities of farmers, workers, entrepreneurs,
and managers, as well as the technology around them. It also takes
into account the historical "layering" of economic society, including
class formation and changing standards of living in diverse sectors
of the nation. Knowledge of both the Irish laborer and the banker,
for example, are important in understanding the economy of the 1840s.
Topics
that help define this theme include:
1. extraction and production
2. distribution and consumption
3. transportation and communication
4. workers and work culture
5. labor organizations and protests
6. exchange and trade
7. governmental policies and practices
8. economic theory
VI. Expanding Science and Technology
This
theme focuses on science, which is modern civilization's way of
organizing and conceptualizing knowledge about the world and the
universe beyond. This is done through the physical sciences, the
social sciences, and medicine. Technology is the application of
human ingenuity to modification of the environment in both modern
and traditional cultures. Alibates Flint Quarries National Monument
in Texas reflects pre-Columbian innovations while Edison National
Historic Site in New Jersey reflects technological advancement in
historic times. Technologies can be particular to certain regions
and cultures.
Topics
that help define this theme include:
1. experimentation and invention
2. technological applications
3. scientific thought and theory
4. effects on lifestyle and health
VII.
Transforming the Environment
This
theme examines the variable and changing relationships between people
and their environment, which continuously interact. The environment
is where people live, the place that supports and sustains life.
The American environment today is largely a human artifact, so thoroughly
has human occupation affected all its features. Cuyahoga Valley
National Recreation Area, which includes portions of the Ohio and
Erie Canal, for example, is a cultural landscape that links natural
and human systems, including cities, suburbs, towns, countryside,
forest, wilderness, and water bodies.
This
theme acknowledges that the use and development of the physical
setting is rooted in evolving perceptions and attitudes. Sites such
as John Muir National Historic Site in California and Sagamore Hill
National Historic Site in New York, the home of President Theodore
Roosevelt, reflect the contributions of leading conservationists.
While conservation represents a portion of this theme, the focus
here is on recognizing the interplay between human activity and
the environment as reflected in particular places, such as Hoover
Dam, a National Historic Landmark.
Topics
that help define this theme include:
1. manipulating the environment and its resources
2. adverse consequences and stresses on the environment
3. protecting and preserving the environment
VIII.
Changing Role of the United States in the World Community
This
theme explores diplomacy, trade, cultural exchange, security and
defense, expansionism÷and, at times, imperialism. The interactions
among indigenous peoples, between this nation and native peoples,
and this nation and the world have all contributed to American history.
Additionally, this theme addresses regional variations, since, for
example, in the eighteenth century, the Spanish southwest, French
and Canadian middle west, and British eastern seaboard had different
diplomatic histories.
America
has never existed in isolation. While the United States, especially
in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, has left an imprint on
the world community, other nations and immigrants to the United
States have had a profound influence on the course of American history.
The
emphasis in this category is on people and institutions÷from the
principals who define and formulate diplomatic policy, such as presidents,
secretaries of state, and labor and immigrant leaders, to the private
institutions, such as the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace,
that influence America's diplomatic, cultural, social, and economic
affairs. Monticello, the Virginia home of Thomas Jefferson, a National
Historic Landmark, reflects the diplomatic aspirations of the early
nation.
Topics
that help define this theme include:
1. international relations
2. commerce
3. expansionism and imperialism
4. immigration and emigration policies
USING
THE REVISED THEMATIC FRAMEWORK
Barbara
Little, Ph.D.
National Park Service
HIGHLIGHTS OF THE 1994 REVISION
What
is different about this new framework?
This
revision presents a larger and more integrated view of history.
It emphasizes the process of how to study history but does not identify
what to study. It allows flexibility for identifying appropriate
time periods and region. It stresses the interplay of race, ethnicity,
class, and gender within and among the framework's broadened topics.Indigenous
Americans and their activities are now considered under all themes
rather than under a separate theme.
The
thematic framework is less restrictive as a tool for evaluating
historic sites for National Historic Landmark (NHL) designation
or for addition to the National Park System. Evaluation is a professional
process that involves analysis based on the best of current scholarship.
Such evaluation will continue to be the responsibility of CRM specialists
who blend the requirements of the NHL program or Service's management
policies with the new thematic framework and make their best professional
judgments.
Earlier
versions of the thematic framework provided chronological or topical
"boxes" into which properties could be dropped for comparative purposes
when assessing them for NHL designation or additions to the National
Park System. The new framework, by contrast, invites thoughtful
consideration of larger trends and broader contexts. It should foster
discussion of the fundamental social and economic structures related
to a property. The larger implications and research possibilities
of a place or site can then emerge more readily, and produce better
answers to the question "so what?"
Given
the broad, conceptual nature of the framework, it will often need
to be supplemented, on a case by case basis, by more detailed outlines
as particular topics are addressed. Researchers, planners, interpreters
and others engaged in thematic studies will need to provide logical,
coherent, detailed outlines for their own use. Studies of properties
may be on specific topics-jazz history, for example-but should consider
the holistic framework.
The
revised Thematic Framework makes it easier to incorporate the insights
of social and cultural history, which seeks to tell the stories
of broad social trends and ordinary people. Unique and notable events,
of course, still are included in the framework's goals, but they
are more likely to be placed firmly within the broader contexts
of their time.
When
studied under a single framework, some properties may be appreciated
for only part of their historical significance. Lowell National
Historical Park, for instance, was listed as an NHL in 1977 for
its national significance in industry. The nomination form focused
almost exclusively on the mills, machine shops, and canals and locks
that provided the necessary power source for converting raw cotton
into finished cloth. Yet, such documentation ignored an important
part of the story: that young unmarried women from rural New England
operated the looms and provided the critical skilled labor force
for the textile companies.
How
does the 1994 revision of the Thematic Framework coincide with other
NPS initiatives?
This
revised framework will facilitate the use of current historical
scholarship in research, interpretation, management and planning.
It is integral to the direction of the Report, "Humanities and the
National Parks: Adapting to Change."
The
framework lends itself to the initiative within NPS to connect parks
into historic pathways or corridors in order to emphasize that American
history did not occur as isolated events. The revised Thematic Framework
helps interpret the many layers of history that occurred at a particular
place. The revised thematic framework is useful for conceptualizing
an approach to thematically connecting nationally significant places,
including not only units of the National Park System, but also NHLs,
heritage areas, and state and local parks and museums. "The areas
managed by the NPS are only one part of a national inventory of
special and protected areas managed by innumerable federal, state,
and local agencies and the private sector." [Management Policies,
Chapter 2:1, 1988]
This
framework encourages the expanded representation within the National
Park System of historical themes by including and expanding themes
for which individual parks were not originally specifically designated.
It therefore allows more connections to be made among significant
places and invites the interpretation of a wider variety of themes
to visitors.
The
new thematic framework should be of assistance in addressing the
issue of expanded representation, particularly for long-range planning
and in writing General Management Plans (GMPs) and Comprehensive
Interpretive Plans (CIPs). The thematic framework is used as a tool
for analyzing knowledge about historic resources and for developing
more complete (or holistic) stories about a particular place. The
new framework is broad and is meant to encourage integration of
topics and inclusive historic contexts.
The
Government Performance Results Act (GPRA) requires that parks examine
their missions, purpose, and significance. The thematic framework
can be used as a tool for exploring the breadth of a park's mission,
purpose and significance. Significance may be defined by including
themes not specifically mentioned in a park's enabling legislation.
The NPS is charged with the protection of all significant resources
within park boundaries.
What
is the relationship of the three historical building blocks of people,
place, and time to the themes and topics in this new revision?
In
using the new thematic framework, one should remember that it covers
human history in what is now the United States whether it occurred
10,000 or 50 years ago. "American" refers to both prehistory and
history, to the discoveries of archeology, oral tradition, and documentary
history.
The
new thematic framework makes the lives of the majority of Americans
more visible and, rather than simply categorizing incidents, enhances
our understanding of the connections between people through time
and across space.
The
logo on page 4 is an important visual mnemonic symbolizing the intent
of the revision: it represents interlocking spheres of American
life. The user will find that vision is further enriched by remembering
that the context in which these spheres are suspended is the setting
created by People, Place and Time. Each of these elements is vital
to consider in researching and interpreting the history of the American
people. To tie these elements together, it may be useful to think
about people as active users of a "tool kit" of ideas, perceptions,
skills, and objects in a particular place and time.
People:
"People" provide one of the over-arching contexts within which to
study the past. Issues such as gender and ethnicity are not confined
to any particular place or time or topic in history. Nor are they
the only issues; culture provides continuity and a perspective from
which to view events. Such an approach may help to avoid the "balkanization"
of American history into limited categories, which seems counterproductive
to many historians.
Place:
The relationship of people to place is central to evaluating particular
properties for national significance. Relationship to place permeates
each of the topics and broad spheres of human activity. For example,
the topic of settlement patterns and land use is clearly connected
to many topics concerning the relationship of indigenous peoples
to their ethnic homelands.
Places
give us tangible evidence of past human activities. That evidence
can document major trends in society as a whole and in smaller communities;
it can illuminate things that have not been revealed, or have only
partly been captured, in written documentation; it can fundamentally
shape the kinds of questions we ask about the past; and it can undermine
misconceptions and stereotyped visions of history. For such reasons,
the preservation of places is a fundamental mission of the National
Park System.
Time:
The human actions represented by the interlocking spheres of the
logo develop through time; however, relevant chronological dates
vary greatly and it is cumbersome to attempt to include each possible
relevant time period. Therefore it is most efficient to define time
periods according to whatever study is being undertaken. An obvious
example of variable dates for a similar "event" is the timing of
contact between indigenous people and European explorers or homesteaders.
How
will needs for new theme studies be identified?
The
current revision provides guidance in approaching a topic once it
has been identified. It emphasizes the process of how to study history
but does not identify what to study.
The
topics for theme studies will continue to be identified through
many of the same sources as before: Congressional mandates; planning
needs of the NPS; and the professional judgements by NPS cultural
resource specialists, State Historic Preservation Offices, specially
convened boards or committees of scholars, other federal agencies,
and other sources. The example of the "Earliest Americans" provided
below is a topic identified by a committee of scholars based on
the research interests of their discipline.
How
will potential new park units be judged for suitability?
NPS
planning guidance specifies comparative analysis of potential new
units. An area will be suitable if it represents a theme or type
of resource
"not
already adequately represented in the national park system, [or
protected by another land-managing entity]. ...Adequacy of representation
will be determined on a case-by-case basis by comparing the proposed
addition to other units in the national park system, considering
differences or similarities in the character, quality, quantity,
or combination of resources and opportunities for public enjoyment."
[Management Policies, Chapter 2:4, 1988]
One
method of comparing potential sites is to convene a group of recognized
experts who are well versed in a particular type of resource and
can offer their professional opinion.
What
classification systems are available for organizing the topics and
stories significant in NHLs and NPS units?
The
National Register Information System (NRIS) is available for keyword
searches to aid in researching different themes. The NPS National
Register, History, and Education Program has designed a relational
database to expand that research tool, through listings of parks
assigned to categories based on the National Register's areas of
significance.
USING
THE NEW FRAMEWORK IN INTERPRETATION AND EDUCATION
Interpretive
planning is a vital component of all General Management Plan efforts,
Development Concept Plans, Special Resource Studies, and Statements
for Management as well as Comprehensive Interpretive Plans. One
of the basic principles guiding interpretive planning is that it
is based on current research so that recommendations may be rooted
in solid subject matter expertise [NPS-6, Chapter 3, 1996].
The
new thematic framework is used as a conceptual tool to develop a
knowledge of the resources and therefore to be able to evaluate
what stories there are to be told about a particular NPS unit. Understanding
the holistic and interconnected story of the resource contributes
to the goal of telling compelling stories which represent the greater
meaning or significance of the resources. An interpreter working
with the thematic framework to identify stories will find that the
circles of the framework's logo are a first step, but it is not
necessarily the case that each circle will have a story or even
a component of a story told at a particular park. The framework
is not a cookbook, but an interpreter who works with it will find
a tool there to promote good interpretation.
The
thematic framework may also be helpful as an interpreter evaluates
the stories that are available for telling. The key to successfully
using the framework to organize knowledge of the resources is to
start broadly and then narrow down the stories to the most compelling
ones. The most compelling stories are those whose outcomes promote
visitors' understanding of a park's purpose and significance. These
often are holistic stories that lead the visitor to understanding
a park's mission, purpose and the significance of park resources.
There
are several advantages to using the new framework for interpretation.
One is the encouragement of interdisciplinary dialogue between interpretive
and resource divisions in a park. A second advantage is that using
the framework increases the opportunity to tell integrated, compelling
stories that enrich each park's visitor experience. A third is that
holistic stories may be used to connect significant events and activities
in one park with those in other parks, thereby enriching visitor
experience of the whole park system.
The
thematic framework is one of the tools available to help interpreters
develop stories about people, place, and time. It is a natural companion
to the Compelling Stories workbook. An interpreter can use the thematic
framework as a conceptual tool to identify themes, make tangible-intangible
links, apply Freeman Tilden's principles of interpretation, and
get to the "knowledge of the resources," which is the first part
of the Interpretive Equation: (knowledge of resources + knowledge
of audience) + appropriate technique = Interpretation: an effective
linking between audience and the resource.
USING THE
NEW FRAMEWORK IN INTERPRETATION AND EDUCATION
Interpretive
planning is a vital component of all General Management Plan efforts,
Development Concept Plans, Special Resource Studies, and Statements
for Management as well as Comprehensive Interpretive Plans. One
of the basic principles guiding interpretive planning is that it
is based on current research so that recommendations may be rooted
in solid subject matter expertise [NPS-6, Chapter 3, 1996].
The
new thematic framework is used as a conceptual tool to develop a
knowledge of the resources and therefore to be able to evaluate
what stories there are to be told about a particular NPS unit. Understanding
the holistic and interconnected story of the resource contributes
to the goal of telling compelling stories which represent the greater
meaning or significance of the resources. An interpreter working
with the thematic framework to identify stories will find that the
circles of the framework's logo are a first step, but it is not
necessarily the case that each circle will have a story or even
a component of a story told at a particular park. The framework
is not a cookbook, but an interpreter who works with it will find
a tool there to promote good interpretation.
The
thematic framework may also be helpful as an interpreter evaluates
the stories that are available for telling. The key to successfully
using the framework to organize knowledge of the resources is to
start broadly and then narrow down the stories to the most compelling
ones. The most compelling stories are those whose outcomes promote
visitors' understanding of a park's purpose and significance. These
often are holistic stories that lead the visitor to understanding
a park's mission, purpose and the significance of park resources.
There
are several advantages to using the new framework for interpretation.
One is the encouragement of interdisciplinary dialogue between interpretive
and resource divisions in a park. A second advantage is that using
the framework increases the opportunity to tell integrated, compelling
stories that enrich each park's visitor experience. A third is that
holistic stories may be used to connect significant events and activities
in one park with those in other parks, thereby enriching visitor
experience of the whole park system.
The
thematic framework is one of the tools available to help interpreters
develop stories about people, place, and time. It is a natural companion
to the Compelling Stories workbook. An interpreter can use the thematic
framework as a conceptual tool to identify themes, make tangible-intangible
links, apply Freeman Tilden's principles of interpretation, and
get to the "knowledge of the resources," which is the first part
of the Interpretive Equation: (knowledge of resources + knowledge
of audience) + appropriate technique = Interpretation: an effective
linking between audience and the resource.
EXAMPLES
OF USING THE REVISED FRAMEWORK
Example
1: The Earliest Americans
The
Earliest Americans theme study represents a topic chosen by scholars
who recognize the topic as important within the profession of archeology.
The use of the thematic framework is shaped by scholarly understandings
within a discipline, as this example illustrates.
These
questions represent the way a historian might approach a theme study
or an interpreter might begin developing an interpretive program
or writing a Comprehensive Interpretive Plan.
Earliest
Americans National Historic Landmark Theme Study
Nation-Wide Framework (Draft: 7/95). Research Questions:
Peopling
Places
o Major Issues: Demography, Geography
o Key Questions:
When did people arrive?
Who were they?
Where did they come from?
Where did they move?
How did they live?
Creation
of Social Institutions
o Major Issues: Emerging Cultural Traditions, Cultural Differentiation
o Key Questions:
How are cultural traditions identified?
When and where do they emerge?
How is cultural change identified?
When and where do cultural traditions change?
Expressing
Cultural Values
o Major Issues: Belief Representation
o Key Questions:
What were the belief systems of the Earliest Americans?
What is the evidence for them?
How is the evidence interpreted?
Shaping
the Political Landscape
o Major Issues: Territoriality and Identity, Interaction
o Key Questions:
How did the Earliest Americans organize political life?
What is the evidence for territoriality, identity, and interaction?
Developing
the American Economy
o Major Issues: Extraction and Production, Distribution and Consumption
o Key Questions:
What materials were used?
Where were they found?
How were they modified and distributed?
How were they used and discarded?
Expanding
Science and Technology
o Major Issues: Material Culture and Technology, Technological Organization
o Key Questions:
What was the nature of the Earliest American tool kit?
How was their technology organized?
Transforming
the Environment
o Major Issues: Impacts, Responses
o Key Questions:
What was the impact of people on the environment?
How did environment affect the Earliest Americans?
Changing
Role of the United States in the World Community
o Major Issues: Major Contributions to Knowledge, Comparative Perspectives
o Key Questions:
How have Earliest American archeological studies contributed to
major intellectual developments?
How do Earliest American resources contribute to development of
broad intercontinental comparative perspectives?
Example
2: The Lower Mississippi Delta Heritage Study
The
Lower Mississippi Delta Heritage Study represents the use of the
framework in studying a new area and customizing regional themes
based on the new framework.
At
a brainstorming symposium held in June 1996 experts identified key
stories and some sites which make the Lower Mississippi Delta worthy
of national recognition. The symposium was a first step in a comprehensive
regional heritage study. The themes developed were intended to provide
the context for site identification and analysis.
The
next steps were to be data collection and analysis of integrity
and level of significance. The final step is a report of findings
and recommendations for planning.
The
thematic framework was used to structure discussion of Delta stories
in a series of "expert workgroups." Under the broad, "circle" themes,
important stories were developed and organized within time frames
and according to particular topics. The number of stories came from
participants' knowledge of the area and therefore not every broad
theme or every topic was used; only the stories significant to experts
on the region were identified.
This
example should be read not as a final or comprehensive product,
but as the result of an initial brainstorming symposium.
The
theme "Peopling Places" was ultimately organized into relevant chronological
categories as follows:
Peopling
Places
o Early Inhabitants and Native Americans 3500 BC-AD 1600
o European Exploration and Settlement 1600-1800
o U.S. Western Expansion and Antebellum Period 1800-1860
o Civil War, Reconstruction, Populism 1860-1900
o Process of Change: Progressivism, World Wars I & II
o Great Depression 1900-1950
o Civil Rights Movement, Vietnam, 1950-Present
Within
each of these time periods various topics were identified. Some
of these topics were those specifically suggested in the thematic
framework; some expressed the "People" and "Place" contexts identified
in the first part of the framework; all were identified by workgroup
participants because important stories were connected to them. This
flexibility which is encouraged by the revised framework allows
any important story to be identified.
For
example, participants identified the following themes under the
time period of "Civil War, Reconstruction, Populism 1860-1900:"
Intercultural Relations; Gender Roles; Working Life; and Migration.
Under the topic of migration there are stories such as the first
great migration of African Americans out of the Mississippi River
Delta, the recruitment of Chinese sharecroppers and laborers in
the 1870s, and the immigration to the Delta in the 1880s of many
Sicilian, Jewish, and Lebanese people.
PARTICIPANTS
IN THE WORKING GROUP ON THE REVISION OF THE NATIONAL PARK SERVICE
THEMATIC FRAMEWORK
CONSULTING
SCHOLARS
Dr.
J. Barto Arnold III, Texas Historical Commission
Dr.
Carol Berkin, History Department, Baruch College
Dr. Richard Betts, School of Architecture, University of
Illinois
Dr. David S. Brose, Royal Ontario Museum
Prof. Michael Conzen, Geography Department, University of
Chicago
Dr. Linda De Pauw, History Department, George Washington
University
Dr. Leon Fink, History Department, University of North Carolina
Dr. Brent Glass, Pennsylvania Historical and Museum Commission
Dr. Albert Hurtado, History Department, Arizona State University
Dr. Alan Kraut, History Department, American University
Dr. Earl Lewis, Center for Afroamerican and African Studies,
University of Michigan
Mr. Hugh J. McCauley, Architect
Dr. Don Ritchie, Senate Historical Office
Dr. George Sanchez, History Department, University of California_Los
Angeles
Dr. Philip Scarpino, History Department, Indiana University_Purdue
University at Indianapolis
NATIONAL
PARK SERVICE STAFF
Mr.
Frederick Babb, Denver Service Center
Dr.
Marty Blatt, Lowell National Historical Park
Mr. Warren Brown, Park Planning and Protection
Dr. Robert S. Grumet, Mid-Atlantic Regional Office
Ms. Patricia Henry, History Division
Dr. Antoinette Lee, National Register of Historic Places
Mr. Benjamin Levy, History Division
Mr. Barry Mackintosh, History Division
Mr. Cecil McKithan, Southeast Regional Office
Dr. Dwight T. Pitcaithley, National Capital Region
Dr. Michael Schene, Rocky Mountain Regional Office
Mr. Michael Spratt, Denver Service Center
ADVISORS
TO THE WORKING GROUP
Mr.
Bruce Craig, National Parks and Conservation Association
Dr. Jim Gardner, American Historical Association
OBSERVER
Dr.
Heather Huyck, House Subcommittee on National Parks, Forests,
and Public Lands
PROJECT
DIRECTOR
Dr.
Page Miller, National Coordinating Committee for the Promotion
of History
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