Mount Vernon Symposium, Nov. 14-15

There’s an upcoming symposium at Mount Vernon– Please contact Sean Thomas if interested:
For more than six years, George Washington’s Mount Vernon has hosted a symposium series on selective topics from George Washington’s Presidency to George Washington & the Constitution.  This year’s symposium held on November 14th and 15th will focus on historic preservation at Mount Vernon.  This is normally a ticket-based event that sells out quickly.  With the opening of The Fred W. Smith National Library for the Study of George Washington, we are able to expand this event, free of charge, to your faculty and students who would like to attend.  Through the new technology of the Library, we are able to stream what is happening in the Auditorium to our Library meeting rooms.  Students and faculty will not only be able to watch the symposium, but will be able to interact with the speakers and panelists through Twitter and other messaging software.  They will also get the opportunity to interact personally with members of Mount Vernon’s Historic Preservation team.
Attached is a brochure and schedule of this year’s symposium.  The schedule features lectures and panel discussions by our Mount Vernon staff as well as…
Dr. Carl Lounsbury, Senior Architectural Historian at the Colonial Williamsburg Foundation where he has been employed since 1982. He is the author of several award-winning books and co-editor of the recently published The Chesapeake House. Besides consulting work for a variety of museums, he teaches architectural history at the College of William and Mary.  Lounsbury received his B.A. degree from the University of North Carolina and earned an M.A. and PhD at George Washington University.
Carter L. Hudgins, Director of the Graduate Program in Historic Preservation jointly sponsored by Clemson University and the College of Charleston. Trained as an historian and archaeologist, he received his PhD in early American history from the College of William and Mary. Hudgins has served as executive director of Historic Charleston Foundation, and as the Hofer Distinguished Professor of Early American Culture and Historic Preservation at the University of Mary Washington.
George W. McDaniel has served as executive director of Drayton Hall since 1989, a historic site of the National Trust for Historic Preservation.  An Atlanta native, he holds a B.A. from Sewanee, an M.A.T. in history from Brown University, and a PhD in history from Duke University. At Drayton Hall, he has been deeply engaged in “whole place preservation,” that is, the convergence of historic preservation and environmental conservation.
Dr. Scott Casper, dean of the College of Arts, Humanities, and Social Sciences and Professor of History at the University of Maryland, Baltimore County. He is the author of Sarah Johnson’s Mount Vernon: The Forgotten History of an American Shrine (2008), among other books and essays. Since 2000 he has taught in Mount Vernon’s summer institutes for K-12 teachers, and he was an organizer of the George Washington Teacher Ambassador Program in Nevada (2010-2013).
This Library event is being offered to you and your students free of charge.  It will not include tickets to the Estate.  If your group wishes to purchase tickets to the Estate, they are being offered at the discounted price of $8/person.  The brochure also details special events and meals that are also not included for this Library event.
To RSVP and reserve your spots, please contact me directly through the information provided below.  I can also answer any questions you may have about the event.  Thank you very much for your consideration and we hope you will be open to join us in November for the symposium.
Sean Thomas, MA, MPA
Director of Leadership Programs
The Fred W. Smith National Library for the Study of George Washington
P.O. Box 3600
Mount Vernon, VA 22121
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About docampbell

Doug is a historian and educator with more than a decade of experience teaching Western, World, US, and European history at colleges and universities in Virginia and Maryland. His scholarship focuses on national identity, education, and historical memory in Austria during the era of the World Wars, and includes work at the US Archives, the US Library of Congress, the Austrian National Library, and the Austrian State Archive. He has taught at NOVA since 2006 and has been the Historic Preservation Program Head since 2012.