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Subject:
From:
Charlie Browne <[log in to unmask]>
Reply To:
Museum discussion list <[log in to unmask]>
Date:
Fri, 26 Apr 2002 14:09:02 -0400
Content-Type:
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Teri,
Our history curator's most popular program is local cemetery interpretation,
including a tour, grave-rubbings, interpretations of gravestone symbolism,
family histories and genealogies, and community history.  It's all hands-on,
and kids and teachers love it.  Every once in a while, she comes up against
a child who describes a recent family death or points out grandpa's nearby
headstone, but with sensitivity, this can be entirely educational.  We've
done very popular community programs - "ghost walks" - in which costumed
interpreters act out the lives of the deceased at their gravesites.   The
idea of a takeaway book is terrific.  Why not illustrate it with rubbings?
You can reach our history curator off-list at [log in to unmask]

Charles C. Browne, Executive Director
The Fairbanks Museum & Planetarium
1302 Main Street
St. Johnsbury  Vermont  05819
802 748 2372 (ph)
802 748 1893 (fax)
fairbanksmuseum.org (Web)

-----Original Message-----
From: Museum discussion list [mailto:[log in to unmask]]On
Behalf Of Teri Pope
Sent: Friday, April 26, 2002 12:44 PM
To: [log in to unmask]
Subject: Hands on activity for cemetery tour.


Greetings to the list,

I am participating in an upcoming community outreach
fair which will showcase educational opportunities for
kids in our area.  I will be representing the school
tour program for Sacramento's Old City Cemetery (ca
1849) which I manage.  (Believe me, the irony of doing
"living history" in a cemetery is NOT lost on me!)

I am trying to devise something that kids can take
with them from our table to go with the tour brochure.
 A coloring sheet came to mind, with either  sketches
and captions of gravestone symbols (fairly neutral,
not-to-religious ones) or of noteworthy gravestones in
our cemetery (Mark Hopkins, or John Sutter, Jr., for
example).

My questions are these:  Would the general public find
these too morbid for children?  And, does anyone have
any other ideas?

Thanks in advance,
Teri Pope
Educational Tours Coordinator
Saxramento Old City Cemetery
[log in to unmask]


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