Wilson Library to host teaching institute

The Woodrow Wilson Presidential Library and Museum today announced it will host a one-week institute for Virginia history teachers from Monday, July 11, until Friday, July 15.

The summer institute is the second of three annual week-long sessions in a professional development curriculum entitled “American History in International Context” that the Presidential Library is holding in conjunction with Bedford County Public Schools. Dr. Lawrence Goodheart, Professor of History at the University of Connecticut, and Dr. Edward T. O’Donnell, Associate Professor of History at the College of the Holy Cross, will speak at the Institute. Teachers from Alleghany, Bath, Bedford, Craig, Giles, Highland, and Pulaski County Public Schools are participating.

On Monday, the teachers will begin their week-long program of presentations, discussions, and workshops. Besides presentations by Dr. Goodheart and Dr. O’Donnell, there will be workshops led by Dalton Ford of Waynesboro Public Schools, Sandra Trenholm, Director of Collections at the Gilder Lehrman Institute of American History in New York, local historian Lucinda Cooke, and Susan Lendermon of the Woodrow Wilson Presidential Library. Teachers will attend sessions about research techniques, teaching with primary sources and material culture, and using technology to meet Virginia’s Standards of Learning (SOL’s). On Friday, the participants will give presentations on lesson plan projects they prepared throughout the week on topics related to the institute.

The program is designed to improve the teachers’ knowledge and appreciation of American history by focusing on significant connections in America’s past and introducing them to available resources and new pedagogical practices. During this second year, the teachers are examining international issues and trends that shaped 19th-century American history and the development of the United States as a world power.

The program is made possible by a Teaching American History grant from the U.S. Department of Education. Bedford County Public Schools received the grant in partnership with the Presidential Library and Alleghany, Bath, Craig, Giles, Highland, and Pulaski County Public Schools.

The teachers participated in one-day preparatory sessions at the Presidential Library last fall and this spring. Later this month, the teachers will continue the program through a historic site visit to Gettysburg. They will return to the Presidential Library for one-day sessions this fall and next spring, and participate in a final summer institute in 2012.

Wilson Library appoints new chair, board members

The Woodrow Wilson Presidential Library Foundation today announced that its Board of Trustees has elected Charlottesville pediatrician Michael Dickens as its new Chair and appointed six new Board members: Dr. Richard L. M. Coleman of Staunton; Dr. Gordon A. Haaland of Lancaster County, Virginia; Judge Stephen H. Helvin of Charlottesville; Dr. Edward G. Lengel of Charlottesville; L. Gray Marion, Jr., of Charleston, West Virginia; and Richard Robbins Pancake of Staunton and Washington, D.C. All began their terms on July 1. Dr. Dickens succeeds Dr. A. Stanley Link, Jr., who remains on the Board as Immediate Past Chair. William Walker of Staunton was named Vice Chair of the Board. The six new Trustees replaced retiring Board members Dr. A. Tracy Aitcheson, Jr., of Waynesboro, Morgan Peyton of Charlottesville, and Harry J. Warthen, III, of Manakin-Sabot.

Dr. Michael D. Dickens has served on Foundation’s Board of Trustees since 2007 and as Vice Chair since 2010. He graduated with honors from Princeton University and received his M.D. from Columbia University. He did his residency at the University of Virginia, served two years active duty in the Navy, and retired as a Lieutenant Commander. Dr. Dickens’ avocation is American presidential history, and he is the author of From the Papers of RADM Cary Grayson, MC: The Role of a President’s Physician in a Time of Crisis, an extensive two-part article about President Wilson’s physician published in 2007 in the The Grog Ration, a journal of the Navy’s Bureau of Medicine and Surgery. He resides in Charlottesville.

Dr. Richard L. M. Coleman is a retired physician. He has previously served six terms on the Board, including service as Chair of the Board’s Board Resources Committee. His most recent term expired last year. Dr. Coleman is a graduate of Princeton and the University of Virginia Medical School. He resides in Staunton.

Dr. Gordon A. Haaland is a former President of the University of New Hampshire and President of Gettysburg College. As a social psychologist and leader in higher education, Dr. Haaland has published numerous papers in his field and has served on numerous boards and commissions. He resides in Lancaster County, Virginia, and Maine.

Judge Stephen H. Helvin is a retired Virginia District judge. He attended Hampden Sydney College and T.C. Williams School of Law at the University of Richmond and has taught courses at the University of Virginia School of Law. Judge Helvin remains active in the Virginia judiciary on a part-time basis. He resides in Charlottesville.

Dr. Edward G. Lengel is a University of Virginia Professor of History and Editor of the Papers of George Washington. He is the author of To Conquer Hell: The Meuse-Argonne, 1918 about World War I’s last battle, which involved 1.2 million American troops and still stands as the largest battle in American history. Dr. Lengel was the Presidential Library’s Annual Luncheon speaker in 2010, co-led the WWPL’s tour of World War I battlefields and cemeteries in 2010, and advised the WWPL on its new World War I trench exhibit. He resides in Charlottesville.

L. Gray Marion, Jr., has been the Chief Executive Officer of Independent Insurance Agents of West Virginia, Inc., since 1987. He was previously Associate Curator of Exhibitions with the Southeastern Center for Contemporary Art in Winston-Salem, North Carolina, and with the John Glenn for President campaign in 1983-84 and the Gerald Baliles for Governor campaign in Virginia in 1985. He resides in Charleston, West Virginia.

Richard Robbins Pancake recently retired from work as a trade and government affairs counsel, largely with Agilent Technologies and Hewlett Packard Corporation. He is the son of Colonel Frank R. Pancake, a former leader of the Woodrow Wilson Birthplace Foundation. He received his bachelor’s and law degrees from the University of Virginia. He resides in Washington, D.C., and Staunton.

Wilson Library acquires Signal Corps photographs

The Woodrow Wilson Presidential Library and Museum announced today that, with the assistance of Sen. Mark Warner it recently acquired a collection of 120 Signal Corps photographs from President Wilson’s trip to Europe for the Paris Peace Conference following World War I.

Many of the photographs are of President Wilson. Barbara Rohmann of Fairfax County, Virginia, donated the collection, which is now a part of the WWPL’s archival collection and will eventually be added to the on-line Wilson eLibrary. The photographs belonged to Ms. Rohmann’s grandfather, Howard Talbott MacFall, Sr., who, while stationed at Fort Myer, Virginia, during World War I, was selected to accompany President Wilson’s Peace Commission to Europe.

The Presidential Library learned about Ms. Rohmann’s photographs from Senator Mark Warner’s office, which she contacted to help her find a suitable repository for the collection. Senator Warner put her in touch with the Presidential Library. Peggy Dillard, the Presidential Library’s Director of Library and Archives, contacted Ms. Rohmann and drove to Northern Virginia to meet with her and pick up the photographs, which were stored in a vintage cigar box.

Don W. Wilson, the president and CEO of the WWPL, said, “These photographs are valuable additions to our collection and, as the centennial of President Wilson’s administration and World War I approaches, they will help us educate the public about President Wilson and the war. We appreciate Ms. Rohmann’s generosity and the confidence she and Senator Warner showed in us.”

“It is really remarkable that such valuable and previously unknown historical photos were stored for years in a cigar box, and it certainly was our pleasure to work with Mrs. Rohmann and direct her to the resources of the Wilson Presidential Library in Staunton,” Sen. Warner said.

The Woodrow Wilson Presidential Library and Museum is open 360 days a year for guests from around the world to tour the President’s Birthplace, the historic gardens, and the Woodrow Wilson Museum, including the President’s 1919 Pierce-Arrow limousine and the new World War I trench exhibit.

The Presidential Library also sponsors educational programming for thousands of schoolchildren each year and hosts teachers’ institutes and a variety of other educational symposia. In addition, the Presidential Library attracts top-flight speakers, including Scott Berg, Larry Sabato, Cokie Roberts, Bill Schneider, Robert Samuelson, John Milton Cooper, and Edward Lengel.

For more information, visit the WWPL’s website at www.woodrowwilson.org.

Wilson Library, OLLI, team up for class on WWI

The Woodrow Wilson Presidential Library and Museum is pleased to partner with the Osher Lifelong Learning Institute at the University of Virginia to present America, Woodrow Wilson, and World War I,”a five-meeting class beginning in February at the Presidential Library.

The class will be taught by World War I scholar William Walker, who will argue that World War I was the most significant event of the 20th century. An in-depth guided tour of the WWPL’s new World War I trench exhibit, will be a special feature of the course.

The class is one of eleven courses OLLI at UVA will offer in Staunton during the spring session, which begins Feb. 7.

In the World War I course, Walker will discuss how the war dramatically altered the world in which we grew up, continues to affect our lives today, and will remain one of the most influential events for decades to come. The course will cover the full scope of the war, with particular emphasis on the American experience and the struggles of President Wilson, and will include lecture and discussion among the participants.

The class will meet on five consecutive Wednesdays, from Feb. 23 through March 23, and although the course had been filled to its limit of 15 students, Walker agreed to expand capacity due to interest. Another class offered by Mac Warford on the psychology of C. G. Jung also reached capacity and has been expanded.

For more information about and to register for the World War I class and all of the OLLI at UVA classes, see the website at www.olliuva.org.

Wilson Library adds to Board of Trustees

The Woodrow Wilson Presidential Library Foundation on Tuesday announced that six members have joined its Board of Trustees: Mary Lynn Bayliss of Manakin-Sabot, Virginia; Katherine Grayson Wilkins of Washington, D.C.; R. Steven Nichols of Staunton; Hampden H. Smith III of Lexington; Rita M. Smith of Richmond; and William T. Walker Jr. of Staunton. All began three-year terms in July.

Dr. Mary Lynn Bayliss is a graduate of Mount Holyoke College and has a M.A. and Ph.D. from the University of Tennessee. She was assistant professor of English at Virginia Commonwealth University for several years. She has served on the Board of the Women’s Club of Richmond and the Maymont Foundation. Dr. Bayliss previously served four terms on the board. She resides in Manakin-Sabot, Virginia.

Katherine Grayson Wilkins is the granddaughter of Rear Admiral Cary T. Grayson, President Wilson’s physician. She is director of development at Give an Hour, a nonprofit that is dedicated to meeting the mental health needs of the troops and families affected by the ongoing conflicts in Iraq and Afghanistan through counseling to individuals, families, and children. She lives in Washington, D.C., and previously worked at the Washington National Cathedral, where President Wilson is buried.

Dr. R. Steven Nichols is superintendent of the Staunton City Schools. He earned his doctorate from the University of Virginia and has been involved in instruction for almost 40 years, as a teacher and administrator at all grade levels from kindergarten to university graduate schools. Dr. Nichols also holds a degree in American Civil War History and still conducts research into various aspects of that period. He is currently an adjunct faculty member at the University of Virginia in educational law. He resides in Staunton.

Hampden H. Smith, III, is professor emeritus of journalism at Washington and Lee University, where he was department head for 14 years. He was a reporter and editor with Virginia newspapers for 10 years before joining the faculty at Washington and Lee in 1974. He has held three Fulbrights, at Moscow State University, the American University in Bulgaria, and the University of Tirana in Albania. Mr. Smith, who lives in Lexington, previously served on the board from 1999 to 2009.

Rita M. Smith is senior vice president in the Private Bank Trust of Bank of America. She was born and raised in Staunton, where she was a member of First Presbyterian Church, the same church where President Wilson’s father was pastor. She has served on the boards and committees at the Maymont Foundation, Longwood University, the University of Richmond, Lewis Ginter Botanical Gardens, and the Massey Cancer Center. Mrs. Smith, who lives in Richmond, previously served on the WWPL’s board from 2003 to 2009.

William T. Walker Jr. served as associate vice president for public affairs at the College of William and Mary and similar positions at Gettysburg College, Virginia Tech, and the University of Tennessee at Chattanooga. He earned bachelor’s and master’s degrees in English at the University of Virginia and completed his course work for his Ph.D. in English from Tulane University. Mr. Walker is writing a book about World War I and has assisted the Presidential Library with grant applications, the new World War I exhibit, and the upcoming World War I battlefield tour. He lives in Staunton.

The six new Trustees are replacing retiring board members Richard L.M. Coleman, Lawrence Eagleburger, Evarts W. Opie, Jr., James R. Perkins, and Fitz W. M. Woodrow, Jr., and the late Marlene Eagleburger.
 
 

Edited by Chris Graham. Chris can be reached at freepress2@ntelos.net.

Wilson Library to participate in Blue Star program

Edited by Chris Graham
freepress2@ntelos.net
 

The Woodrow Wilson Presidential Library and Museum will participate in the Blue Star Museum program and offer free admission to all active duty military personnel and their families from Memorial Day, May 31, through Labor Day, September 6, 2010.

The Blue Star Museum program is a partnership with the National Endowment for the Arts, Blue Star Families, and more than 600 museums in all 50 states across America. The free admission program is available to active duty military and their immediate family members (military ID holder and five immediate family members), which includes active duty Reserve and active duty National Guard. Read more

Wilson scholar headlines Presidential Library event

The Woodrow Wilson Presidential Library and Museum today announced that Dr. John Milton Cooper Jr., the foremost Woodrow Wilson scholar in the country and author of a new biography about President Wilson, will be the 2009 Annual Luncheon Speaker on Friday, Nov. 13, at noon at the Stonewall Jackson Hotel and Conference Center in Staunton.

 

Dr. Cooper’s new book, Woodrow Wilson: A Biography, was released on Nov. 3. Books will be sold at the event, and Dr. Cooper will be available to sign books after his talk. The luncheon is sponsored by Bankers Insurance and Wharton, Aldhizer and Weaver. Read more