Tag Archives: DC

A Clever, Adjustable Book Cradle at the Folger Library

Rare book nerds, this post is for you. During a recent research visit to the Folger Shakespeare Library in Washington, DC, I came across an ingenious book cradle designed in-house by the paper conservators. It’s a simple yet sophisticated solution for supporting large or heavy bound volumes without stressing their spines—especially helpful for researchers working with oversized books in the reading room.

At first glance, it looks like a typical cradle, but it’s fully adjustable. Two triangular supports, covered in blue buckram cloth, can be moved farther apart or adjusted to change the angle, accommodating the size and shape of the book. Weights help stabilize the book on the cradle, while a brown felt mat underneath provides friction to prevent the supports from sliding.

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Bridging the Gap: Tackling Visitor Awareness & Digital Programming

Ask any museum professional about barriers to participation, and you’re likely to hear about time, cost, or location. But two recent studies suggest the real obstacles may be more subtle—and more solvable. Whether your museum operates online, outdoors, or in a traditional building, one persistent challenge remains: many potential visitors don’t know what you offer or don’t believe it’s for them.


Non-Visitors Aren’t Uninterested—They’re Unaware or Uncertain

Wilcox et al. studied visitation patterns at two urban National Park Service sites in Washington, DC: Rock Creek Park and the C&O Canal. They surveyed both visitors and non-visitors during the pandemic and found that the most common constraint for non-visitors wasn’t disinterest—it was lack of awareness. Many simply didn’t know what the parks offered, where they were located, or whether they were open to the public.

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DC Historic House Museums host Biennial Symposium

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Working in historic house museums often can often seem like an isolated job but not in the nation’s capital, where there is the Historic House Museum Consortium of Washington, DC, an active association of forty sites that mutually support and promote each other.  Every two years they also host a half-day symposium that attracts about one hundred museum guides, docents, and interpreters.  This year it was held on September 17 at the impressive George Washington Masonic Memorial in Alexandria, Virginia and I joined Dr. George McDaniel of Drayton Hall and Rebecca Martin of the National Archives to talk about various aspects of tours and the visitor experience:

  • George laid out that the visitor experience is much more than the tour and extends to the visitors’ planning, arrival, and departure. He emphasized the importance of little things, such as the directional signage, staff hospitality, and the condition of grounds and restrooms can have on visitors’ attitudes even before the tour starts
  • In “Before You Get Engaged:  Advice for Lovers of History and Historic Sites,” a light-hearted perspective on visitor engagement, I discussed three issues to consider before getting engaged with visitors:  don’t marry a stranger (know your audience), don’t share everything you know about a site on a tour (keep it mysterious), and let them know what you care about (keep your passion alive).
  • Becky closed the session with Continue reading