Commemoration and Protest: The Use of Heritage Trails to Connect Women's History with Historic Sites
Degree type
Graduate group
Discipline
Subject
Architecture
Historic Preservation and Conservation
Women's History
Funder
Grant number
License
Copyright date
Distributor
Related resources
Author
Contributor
Abstract
Women's heritage trails employ the theme of women’s history to link historic sites across cities or entire states. As shifts in preservation practice have begun to promote greater diversity in the interpretation of historic sites, these trails serve as educational tools and initiatives for heritage tourism that create networks of women’s history sites. The trails also serve as public commemorations of women’s roles in American history and as protests against the absence of women in the interpretation at historic sites. Through case studies in Boston, New Jersey, Maryland, and upstate New York, this thesis considers the motives and goals of women’s heritage trails within a broader movement to include the histories of diverse populations at heritage sites.