Sweet Auburn: The Magazine of the Friends of Mount Auburn Expanding our Educational Outreach | Page 4

(Left and below) During the past several months, classes from a number of schools visited the Cemetery, including the Atrium School in Wa- tertown and the Shady Hill School, Haggerty School and Dragonfly Afterschool Program, all from Cambridge. Photos by Jennifer Johnston The new Center includes a reception desk manned with staff or docents and offering interpretive materials and publications for sale, a nine-minute introductory video, freestanding and mounted display panels, and a resource table. The exhibits were designed by the PRD Group of Chantilly, VA, which has worked with the United States Botanic Garden, the Smithsonian American Art Museum, the Texas State History Museum, and other important cul- tural organizations. The Center can “dramatically increase visitors’ under- standing of Mount Auburn,” says Director of Education & Visitor Services Bree Harvey. “Opening the Visitors Center is the next big step in continuing to expand our educa- tional outreach to ‘students’ of all ages, from children in school to adults who are lifelong learners. For years we and others have known that Mount Auburn is an ideal setting for experiential learning; the Visitors Center will help all visitors learn more and gain a greater appreciation of what is here.” Janet Heywood, former Vice Presi- dent of Interpretive Programs and the principal instigator for the Center, says, “It’s very exciting to finally have a wide array of educational displays and mate- rials available in Story Chapel for the Cemetery’s many visitors. It’s gratify- ing to think that we are continuing the desires of the founders to create a ‘place for the living’ to ‘teach the lessons of history.’” Janet worked with President Bill Clendaniel to make the Center a reality, writing grants, doing research, organizing roundtables with visiting scholars, and selecting and working with the exhibit designers. Bree emphasizes that while we hope the Center’s materi- als will be informative and interesting, “Janet always said that its success would be measured by how much it en- courages people to go outside and explore the landscape in new ways. The heart of the exhibit is not in Story Chapel; it’s out on the grounds.” 2 | Sweet Auburn The Friends has offered the public a variety of programs for decades, but the Center’s exhib- its knit much of this knowl- edge together, explaining how the Cemetery developed—and how it reflects changing views about death, commemoration, religion, nature, community, and individualism. The Center is the product of a great deal of work by staff and two separate advisory commit- tees of outside experts from the museum and public history worlds. Funding for the project came from major planning and implementation grants from the National Endowment for the Humanities (NEH), and additional grants from the Massachusetts Foundation for the Humanities, and the Anthony J. and Mildred D. Ruggiero Memorial Trust. To ready Story Chapel for its additional duties and “increased traffic,” a handicapped-accessible rest room and air-condi- tioning were added. All of the Center’s display panels and new furniture—resource table, reception desk, and storage cabinets—were meticulously designed by PRD to complement Story Chapel’s historic interior. Some of the furniture is designed to move, allowing the area where the exhibit is housed to be used for seating, if necessary, for the funerals and memorial services that will continue to be held in Story Chapel. (The Visitors Center will be closed when services take place.) The Center’s display panels discuss how changes in taste changed the Mount Au- burn landscape. For example, iron fencing was used to delineate family lots only to be replaced by granite curbing which itself was eventually removed. The panels detail how monuments were fashioned from marble, granite and other materi- als, and describe their evolving styles and symbolism. The exhibit discusses how the Cemetery acquired land during the late-19th and early-20th century when formally trained urban planners, landscape designers and architects replaced the gifted pioneers who had filled those roles early in the Cemetery’s history. Bree points out