BlogHide Resteemsresteemedphillyhistory (60)in projects • 7 years agoSemester Summary: The Most Talked About PostsAs we boasted last time, the @phillyhistory project was brought to life by 15 students who, along with @phillyhistory, published 297 posts in 15 weeks drawing 872 comments and 10,647 upvotes. Thanks…cheider (51)in philly5151 • 7 years agoA Contingency PlanPlan-b by Nick Youngson CC BY-SA 3.0 Alpha Stock Images The denouement upon us This week ends our crypto-experiment in nonprofit fundraising and adminstration. You’ll find my review of the…cheider (51)in fundraising • 7 years agoThat's a Wrap! #philly5151 Project ReviewA screenshot of a tweet that I'm unable to properly embed into the Steemit text editor. The semester is swiftly coming to a close, and with it ends our crypto-experiment. (If you're just tuning…cheider (51)in socialmedia • 7 years agoEmbedding Digital Strategy: An Organizational Best PracticeIn 2014, the Wyncote Foundation commissioned a report entitled "Like, Link, Share: How Cultural Institutions Are Embracing Digital Technology." The report profiled "40 exceptional organizations that…cheider (51)in detroit • 7 years agoPresent Perfect Public History: The Future of Audience-Centered Cultural OrganizationsCultural Organizations and the 21st-century Identity Crisis As many of the readings and articles written for #explore1918 have addressed, contemporary museums are said to be undergoing an identity…cheider (51)in history • 7 years agoCriteria for Funding a Socially-Responsible Public History Project in PhiladelphiaAt this point in the semester, we have managed to squirrel away a significant amount of money - $3000 STEEM, in fact - to be used to support a jointly-agreed-upon nonprofit venture. Tasked with…cheider (51)in philadelphia • 7 years agoPutting Philadelphia's Own House in Order: Historians and their Responsibility to Urgent Community NeedsFifty years after the Fair Housing Act was passed, housing discrimination is alive and well in Philly, a recent article by Reveal for The Center for Investigative Reporting revealed. Jen Kinney for…cheider (51)in history • 7 years agoReflections on a (Flawed) Vision for a History Center in PhiladelphiaIn 1996, the Atwater Kent Museum and the Historical Society of Pennsylvania, two prominent Philadelphia-area history institutions, set forth a grand vision for The History Center in Philadelphia.…cheider (51)in history • 7 years agoWartime Rationing, Food Aid, and "Civilized" Sickness: The Problem of Pellagra in 1918I most recently wrote about wartime food restrictions under the #explore1918 theme in Everybody's Got to Eat! Cooking like it's 1918. Today I address a more serious side of the issue: the effect of…cheider (51)in history • 7 years agoArts, Culture, and Philanthropy: The Robbed and the RobbersFashionable ladies examine paintings in the 1870s. Source Back in 1892, art exhibitions were not held for the general public. Art galleries were considered suitable only for the better classes…cheider (51)in food • 7 years agoEverybody's Got to Eat! Cooking like it's 1918So far in the #explore1918 series, I've written about how World War I impacted free speech, Eastern European immigrants' cultural pride, literature, and the legality of condoms. Next I'm going to…cheider (51)in money • 7 years ago"Fixing" the Cultural SectorI'm a millennial. I'm one of those mysterious, fickle, and elusive creatures that the nonprofit world spends hours bemoaning, pandering to, and unsuccessfully wooing with direct mailers of…cheider (51)in explore1918 • 7 years agoA Call to Arms of Another Kind: 1918, A Banner Year for the CondomI'm writing about culture for #explore1918 (see my prior entry about Edith Wharton's "propaganda novel"). In honor of Valentine's Day, and in a thematically-compatible spirit as my colleague…cheider (51)in explore1918 • 7 years agoForgotten Works of 1918: Reassessing Edith Wharton's 'The Marne'My past two entries for #explore1918 have dealt with serious political issues: specifically, censorship and sedition in wartime through the lens of the Philadelphia Tageblatt trial; and an odd and…cheider (51)in explore1918 • 7 years agoA Declaration of Independence for the Oppressed: The Mid-European Union at Independence HallA Remarkably-Timed Celebration Although the Great War would not end for another three weeks, and much of the city was laid low with the deadly Spanish influenza epidemic, for some the mood in…cheider (51)in explore1918 • 7 years agoThe Limitations of Free Speech in Wartime: The Philadelphia Tageblatt TrialSeptember of 1918 was a fraught time in Philadelphia. Day after day, newspaper headlines carried a grim mixture of battle updates from the Great War, seemingly endless lists war casualties…cheider (51)in introduceyourself • 7 years agoFull Steem Ahead!Pleased to meet you! Yours truly doing research in Port Penn, Delaware I’m Cynthia Heider, a student in the Public History M.A. program at Temple University in Philadelphia. I’m gearing up to…