Arizona Humanities Council Sharing Cultures. Enriching Communities.
     
Project Grants Book Discussion Cultural Heritage Tourism
Opportunity Grants Speakers Bureau Project Civil Discourse
Grants Funded Literature & Medicine We The People
FAQ Lorraine W. Frank Lecture Prime Time Family Reading
Deadlines Smithsonian Exhibitions Humanities Month

Key Ingredients 2010 Journey Stories 2013 Between Fences 2007

Home

About Us

Support the Council

Calendar

Past Events

Grant Workshops

Newsletter Archive

Publications

Scholars

Media Resources

Press Releases

Private Board

Links

Contact Us

Site Map


THE SMITHSONIAN'S JOURNEY STORIES COMING IN 2013

The Smithsonian's Museum on Main Street program will return once again in 2013 with the statewide tour of the Journey Stories traveling exhibition. AHC will select six rural sites through a competitive process to host Journey Stories for six weeks each, and to develop supplementary programming to tell their local stories that reflect themes in the exhibition. AHC will facilitate local exhibit development and program planning by providing funding, scholarly consultations, packaged programs, and preparatory workshops, along with materials developed by Museum on Main Street.

Journey Stories Exhibition Description from Museum on Main Street (MoMS)

Journey stories – tales of how we and our ancestors came to America – are a central element of our personal heritage. From Native Americans to new American citizens and regardless of our ethnic or racial background, everyone has a story to tell. Our history is filled with stories of people leaving behind everything – families and possessions – to reach a new life in another state, across the continent, or even across an ocean. The reasons behind those decisions are myriad. Many chose to move, searching for something better in a new land. Others had no choice, like enslaved Africans captured and relocated to a strange land and bravely asserting their own cultures, or like Native Americans already here, who were often pushed aside by newcomers. 

Our transportation history is more than boats, buses, cars, wagons, and trucks. The development of transportation technology was largely inspired by the human drive for freedom. The Museum on Main Street exhibition Journey Stories will examine the intersection between modes of travel and Americans’ desire to feel free to move. The story is diverse and focused on immigration, migration, innovation, and freedom. It is accounts of immigrants coming in search of promise in a new country; stories of individuals and families relocating in search of fortune, their own homestead, or employment; the harrowing journeys of Africans and Native Americans forced to move; and, of course, fun and frolic on the open road.

The story of the intersection between transportation and American society is complicated, but it tells us much about who we are – people who see our societal mobility as a means for asserting our individual freedom. Journey Stories will use engaging images with audio and artifacts to tell the individual stories that illustrate the critical roles travel and movement have played in building our diverse American society.

TOP