Town Hall
At Town Hall we do the business of the Commons: politics, admin, and paying our dues to the community
This is the Commons
The Commons: a very Massachusetts place where cows once grazed communal gras. The Commons: those aspects of life and the world we own or use in common, resources we must all steward. Knowledge and experience are almost as precious as the air we breathe, and here we can share and steward them. Though it’s now open, the Commons isn’t “done” — it will never be done. It will be alive only so long as we work on it together.
The Mass History Commons is envisioned to be the online and year-round counterpart of the annual Massachusetts history conference: a place to network, ask, learn, share, explore, be amazed, get some ideas, laugh, and commiserate. Please explore. And please, also, participate. This will only work if many people bring their little bit of knowledge to it so we can all profit. We emphasize: don’t reinvent the wheel, bring what’s already happening, what you are doing and using.
At the Public Square, which we imagine to be a cafe, you will find all items interactive: Conversations on the Commons, other virtual meetings, webinars, and lectures (we will host yours if you’d like), and the listserv.
In the Library, you will find all things information: curated lists of online resources about any aspect of our incredibly varied field (yes, the Commons will welcome your additions! we have a form for that …), our media archive with Conversations and Webinars, news, and who knows what else in the future.
The Directory is a database of history organizations, institutions, businesses, and services that make up our field. Imagine being able to say, “I need a fife band,” .. and be able to find one, or “I would love to talk to someone about third grade curricula,” and there ya go, not one but three people who have indicated that they are willing to do just that. We can build all of that, together, just fill out the forms…You will even be able to edit your own profile once it’s there.
All those profiles are linked to the Map — where we can explore what’s where, what kind of history is nearby. Again, this will be as strong as the number that sign up. We hope e hope the Map and Directory will be used extensively by the public.
Finally, at Town Hall, right here, you will find the office and admin stuff, as well as politics (that is, advocacy for public history), and also how to join the team!
The Commons team
Sponsors
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Contact
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News
Help us save our history.
The Massachusetts history community is in peril. On top of a long-standing lack of resources available to this sector and a decline in public interest in history, the COVID-19 epidemic has forced the closure of many organizations across the Commonwealth. As we head...
History Funding from Local Cultural Councils
PUBLICK OCCURRENCES -- November 5, 2020 Conversations on the Commons invites you to: History Funding from Local Cultural Councils: Talking through and workshopping LCC grant applications November 6, 2020, 1:00 p.m. - 2:30 p.m. A Conversation with Ymelda Laxton,...
Archiving Your Gigabytes: Preserving COVID-19 and other digital collections
PUBLICK OCCURRENCES -- October 5, 2020 Conversations on the Commons invites you to: Archiving Your Gigabytes: Preserving COVID-19 and other digital collections October 9, 2020, 1:00pm – 2:30pm A Conversation with Veronica Martzahl, Digital Records Archivist at the...
Civics, Politics, and History Organizations: History as neutral ground? (11 September 2020)
Women’s Suffrage, the Census, Black Lives Matter, the Election: How do you engage the question of politics in your organization? Engaging audiences without being partisan? How do board members feel about these issues? Where do we draw the line between history and the current political moment? How do we create/encourage conversations that transcend the ruts of what passes for contemporary political dialogue?