Sweet Auburn: The Magazine of the Friends of Mount Auburn Expanding our Educational Outreach | Page 3

Panels from the new Visitors Center exhibit in Story Chapel make use of text and images from three centu- ries, including, below right, an early guide (1844) to Mount Auburn. New Visitors Center Increases Educational Outreach Dramatically Increasing Visitors’ Understanding of Mount Auburn By Stephen H. Anable , Communications Coordinator & Writer M ount Auburn Cemetery has been an outdoor museum—and more—for over a century and a half. Now, with the opening of its new Visitors Center this December, its own history and place in American history will be put into a new, more comprehensive context for the public. The Center, located in Story Chapel just inside the Mount Auburn Street entrance, inaugu- rates a new chapter in Mount Auburn’s commitment to education. Its goal is to educate visitors about the complexity of the landscape and explain why the grounds—the monuments, plantings and roadways— look the way they do. It will help visitors “read” that landscape, learning how and why it has changed over time, demonstrating how Mount Auburn can be explored as a series of “period rooms.” And the Center will track the extraordinary influence Mount Auburn has had on the design of other cemeter- ies and as the “ancestor” of all of the nation’s public parks—including Central Park in New York and the Mall in Washington, D.C. (cont’d) Fall 2007 | 1