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Annual - MOMCC Fall 2016 final... · Annual MOMCC/Mountain Plains ... will be available from Ericka for an additional $19.00 at the workshop if you do not have one. ... Meet in hotel

Dec 03, 2018

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Page 1: Annual - MOMCC Fall 2016 final... · Annual MOMCC/Mountain Plains ... will be available from Ericka for an additional $19.00 at the workshop if you do not have one. ... Meet in hotel
Page 2: Annual - MOMCC Fall 2016 final... · Annual MOMCC/Mountain Plains ... will be available from Ericka for an additional $19.00 at the workshop if you do not have one. ... Meet in hotel

Annual MOMCC/Mountain Plains ALHFAM

Fall Conference

November 3-5, 2016

Embassy Suites Hotel & Conference Center

Olathe, Kansas

MOMCC and Mountain Plains are regional affiliates of

Many Americans “crossed the wide Missouri” looking for some

kind of freedom. Join us as we explore how and why these

people sought that freedom or new life, and the ways that we as

historic sites and museums can tell these stories.

Page 3: Annual - MOMCC Fall 2016 final... · Annual MOMCC/Mountain Plains ... will be available from Ericka for an additional $19.00 at the workshop if you do not have one. ... Meet in hotel

LODGING & CONFERENCE HEADQUARTERS

Reservations MUST be made by OCTOBER 3 to receive the conference rate.

Embassy Suites Olathe, Hotel & Conference Center

10401 S. Ridgeview Road, Olathe, KS 66061, Phone: (913) 353-9280 for information and reservations and ask for the

MOMCC or MMC rate. You may also make reservations by visiting www.kansascityolathe.embassysuites.com and using

the group code MMC.

Up to four people per room- includes a full,

hot breakfast from the breakfast buffet along

with wi-fi, fitness room, pool, and business

office access.

$129

+ tax

Directions:

Embassy Suites Olathe is conveniently located just off I-435, near I-35 and KS-10

Page 4: Annual - MOMCC Fall 2016 final... · Annual MOMCC/Mountain Plains ... will be available from Ericka for an additional $19.00 at the workshop if you do not have one. ... Meet in hotel

Conference at a Glance

THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 3

Breakfast included in Embassy Suites room reservation

All Day Workshops & Tours

Pursuing the Frontiers of Freedom bus tour

Men’s 19th Century Overalls

A Bit Whiffie on the Lee Side: Historic

Chuckwagon Food and Cooking Techniques

Half Day Workshops

Living History and the Great War: Making the

Human Connection (AM)

Goats & Harnessing Goats for Draft Work (PM)

Coach rides & Tours at Mahaffie Hist Site (PM)

First-Timers Reception – 6:30PM

Opening Reception – 7:00-9:00PM Shawnee Town 1929

Hospitality Room – 9:30PM

Stop in for socializing and networking!

FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 4

Breakfast included in Embassy Suites room reservation

Vendor Area Open- 9:00AM - 5:00PM

Welcome/Town Hall – 8:00-8:45AM

Concurrent Sessions – 9:00-10:15AM

Toys and Games: Childhood Popular Culture in

the Industrial Era

Creating Lesson Plans Using the Teaching with

Historic Places Format

Rediscover Freedom's Pathway: Shawnee

County Historical Society's Heritage Education

Programming

Break – 10:15-10:30AM

Concurrent Sessions – 10:30AM-11:45PM

Planning Before Placing: What Goes Where and

Why

Meeting the Challenge: A Roundtable on

Presenting Slavery to the Public

Policies, Practices and People: Assessment

Programs that Can Help Your Organization

Make Improvements

LUNCH/MEETING & KEYNOTE– 12:00-1:30PM

Concurrent Sessions – 1:45-3:00 PM

History for Rent

Native Neighbors—A Different Approach to

Presenting Native Cultures

Make Your Kitchen Right-How to Put Your

Historical Foot Forward (19th Century)

Break – 3:00-3:15PM

Concurrent Sessions – 3:15-4:30PM

Sharing Authority on Social Media: Engaging

the Public in Interpreting History

Bringing Hands-On History to You: A Case

Study

Pressed, Printed, Painted or Blown?

Resource Groups- 4:30PM

Interpretation/Music/Art/Material Culture

Leadership/Supervision

Agriculture/Gardens/Food

Cash Bar – 6:00PM

Dinner, Dance & Silent Auction– 7:00PM

Hospitality room to follow!

SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 5

Breakfast included in Embassy Suites room reservation

Vendor Area Open 9:00AM-12:00PM

Concurrent Sessions – 9:00-10:15AM

Connecting Across Borders

When Museums Grant Freedom in Experience,

Students Supply Energy and Effort

Make Your Kitchen Right-How to Put Your

Historical Foot Forward (20th Century)

Break – 10:15-10:30AM

Concurrent Sessions – 10:30-11:45AM

Race in the Rural Midwest from Separatism

through Civil Rights

Once Upon a Time at Olde Timey

Town: Storytelling at Historic Sites

Fifty-Six Million Words and A Lot of Questions

CLOSING REMARKS – 11:45AM-12:00PM

Page 5: Annual - MOMCC Fall 2016 final... · Annual MOMCC/Mountain Plains ... will be available from Ericka for an additional $19.00 at the workshop if you do not have one. ... Meet in hotel

Thursday, November 3

All Day Workshops

Men’s 19th

Century Overalls Time: 9:00am - 4:00pm

Location: Mahaffie Stagecoach Stop and Farm

Instructor: Ericka Mason

Maximum Participants: 10

Cost: $35, includes box lunch

Working from Past Patterns #910 One Piece Apron Front Overalls pattern, spend the

day cutting out and assembling a pair of overalls with Ericka Mason of The Good

Soldier and formerly, the Henry Ford Museum/Greenfield Village and Conner Prairie

Interactive History Park. Several sewing machines will be available – bring your own

if you wish. Discover more of the history behind this garment, and if you don’t finish

your overalls, you should be well along with the project by the end of the day. Patterns

will be available from Ericka for an additional $19.00 at the workshop if you do not

have one. Bring your own fabric and notions, but Ericka will contact registered

participants in advance to discuss fabric choices. Meet in hotel lobby to carpool to

Mahaffie (5-10 minute drive south on Ridgeview) at 8:45am.

Pursuing the Frontiers of Freedom Bus Tour presented by Freedom’s Frontier National Heritage Area

Time: 8:00am - 4:30pm

Guide: Bill Fischer, Historian at Fort Scott NHS

Minimum Participants: 15; Maximum Participants: 23

Cost: $45, includes box lunch

The Kansas/Missouri border is arguably the Lexington and Concord

of the Civil War: find out why! Join Bill Fischer, historian for Fort

Scott National Historic Site on this tour of Border War/Civil War

historic sites on the Kansas/Missouri Border that includes the John

Brown Cabin State Historic Site, Mine Creek Battlefield State

Historic Site, Fort Scott National Historic Site, and Island Mound (MO) State Historic Site. A special highlight: the

Robert A Brown House – a relatively untouched, privately-owned Missouri plantation home which retains its original

cabins for enslaved workers is the final stop. A box lunch at 12:45 on the

bus is included so participants can keep up with this fast-paced adventure.

Bus departs Embassy Suites at 8am and returns at approximately 4:30pm.

A Bit Whiffie on the Lee Side:

Historic Chuckwagon Food & Cooking Techniques Time: 9:00am - 4:00pm

Location: Mahaffie Stagecoach Stop and Farm

Host: Susan Gordy, Chris Gordy, Rick Musselman

Cost: $35, includes lunch

Maximum Participants: 12

It's time to study foods made on the trail! Join Rick Musselman, and Chris

and Susan Gordy for a fun and historic cooking adventure. With 70 years of combined historic foodways experience, they

will use Mahaffie Historic Site’s reproduction chuckwagon and gear for the workshop. Participants will learn about the

history of the food used on the open trail and will help with a variety of period chuckwagon cooking techniques. There

will be an emphasis on oral histories of the subject gathered from the Library of Congress focusing on the period from

1870 to 1900. Participants will enjoy their chuck wagon fare for lunch and dessert. Meet in hotel lobby to carpool to

Mahaffie (5-10 minute drive south on Ridgeview) at 8:45am.

Page 6: Annual - MOMCC Fall 2016 final... · Annual MOMCC/Mountain Plains ... will be available from Ericka for an additional $19.00 at the workshop if you do not have one. ... Meet in hotel

Half Day Workshops

Living History and the Great War:

Making the Human Connection Time: 8:00am - 12:00pm

Location: National World War I Museum – Kansas City

Host: Charlie Pautler, Shawnee Town 1929

Cost: $25 includes admission to the museum

The Great War centennial is upon us! At the National WWI Museum,

participants will receive classroom instruction on the life of the soldier,

including the identification and interpretation of material culture and how

to present it in a museum setting. Taught by two experts on WWI history

and interpretation from Fort Leavenworth. Self-guided museum tours

follow. Lunch on your own (the museum has a café.) Transportation on

your own - meet in the Embassy Suites lobby at 7am to carpool or

caravan.

Goats! Time: 1:00pm - 3:00pm

Location: Mahaffie Stagecoach Stop & Farm

Instructor: Mary Talbott, Mahaffie Stagecoach Stop & Farm

Maximum Participants: 12

Cost: $15

Mahaffie Volunteer Mary Talbott will present Goats 101: A history of goats

in America, an overview of goat breeds, their care, and harnessing for draft

use. After a short indoor presentation, adjourn to the farm goat pen and learn

how to work with our goats. From haltering to harnessing, this will be a

hands-on workshop! Meet in hotel lobby at 12:45pm to carpool to Mahaffie

(5-10 minute drive south on Ridgeview.)

Visit Mahaffie Stagecoach Stop and Farm Time: 1:00pm - 4:00pm

Visit Mahaffie Stagecoach Stop and Farm Historic Site in the afternoon for a complimentary stagecoach ride and site tour.

Interpreters will share stories of the Mahaffie family and their farm, located on the important Santa Fe Trail trade route

(today’s Kansas City Road.) The site is a 5 to 10 minute drive south of the hotel on Ridgeview Road.

Thursday Evening, November 3

Opening Reception at Shawnee Town 1929

Shawnee Town 1929 is located 2 miles from Embassy Suites. Transportation by carpool and Olathe Parks & Recreation

Department shuttlebus. Directions at registration table. First shuttle run departs Embassy Suites at 6pm.

6:30-7:00PM First Timer’s Reception We invite all first timers to the conference are invited to attend this

reception at Shawnee Town 1929 to meet the MOMCC Board of

Directors and learn more about the organization.

7:00-9:00PM Opening Reception Thursday's opening reception takes place at nearby Shawnee Town

1929. Experience a 1920s truck farm and supporting town that

supplied food all over the Midwest! Enjoy period music and heavy

hors' d'oeuvres along with lively interpretation by lantern light to the

1920's farm and town.

Page 7: Annual - MOMCC Fall 2016 final... · Annual MOMCC/Mountain Plains ... will be available from Ericka for an additional $19.00 at the workshop if you do not have one. ... Meet in hotel

Friday, November 4

All sessions, meetings, and other activities take place within conference rooms at the Embassy Suites.

8:00-8:45AM Welcoming Remarks

9:00 Vendor Area Open

9:00-10:15 AM Concurrent Sessions

Toys and Games: Childhood Popular Culture in the

Industrial Era Presenter: Christian G. Carron, The Children’s Museum

of Indianapolis

Children have played with handmade toys, dolls and

games in the pre-industrialized cultures of all places and

time periods. But as American society moved away from

isolated agrarian maker communities to a nationwide

network of manufacturers and consumers, toys became

easy to mass-produce and distribute, creating a unifying

national popular culture. Corn husk dolls and whittled

whistles were replaced by Frozen Charlottes, cast iron

soldiers, and board games that were sold from coast to

coast. Using examples from the collection of the world’s

largest children’s museum, Carron will discuss how

interpretation of these toys today can help visitors

understand America’s changing views toward the

concept of childhood, education, gender roles, racial

inequality, occupations, family values, and the influence

of wars and politics on the everyday lives of children.

Creating Lesson Plans Using the Teaching with

Historic Places Format

Presenters: Liz Hobson, Freedom’s Frontier, Maureen

Donegan, Olathe (KS) School District

Travel with us as we cross the borders of Freedom’s

Frontier National Heritage Area in Kansas and Missouri

to visit places that have shaped our past and continue to

influence our future. Using the Teaching with Historic

Places format, the presenters will discuss the process

used in developing lesson plans utilizing primary and

secondary sources specific to chosen places to promote

historical thinking and literacy skills. Selected sites

reflect themes related to the Missouri-Kansas Border

War, shaping the frontier, and the enduring struggle for

freedom.

Rediscover Freedom's Pathway: Shawnee County

Historical Society's Heritage Education

Programming

Presenter: Melinda Abitz, Historic Ritchie House

The Historic Ritchie House and the Cox

Communications Heritage Education Center in Topeka,

Kansas, is a unique resource available to visitors for

conveying awareness of the rich Kansas history which

defines our community and state.

Along with public tours, school field trips are available

to area schools. Students discover the history that has

covered a 100-year span involving the struggles against

slavery in the 1850's, the beginnings of the Civil Rights

movement in the 1950's and how the struggles and issues

over the meaning of freedom were played out in the

chambers of the Kansas Capitol that ultimately affected

our state and nation.

The partnership of all three sites and the development of

coordinating lesson plans connecting to a larger story

will be discussed. A simulated Underground Railroad

Escape will also be reenacted as an example of the type

of experience which is offered to school youth.

10:15-10:30AM Break

10:30-11:45AM Concurrent Sessions

Planning Before Placing: What Goes Where and

Why

Presenter: Shannon Hsu, Shawnee Town 1929

Furnishing reports are guiding documents for furnishing

historic interiors. They contain key information for

building an exhibit that is historically accurate, detail

oriented and provides context for future decision

making. In this session we will explore the key elements

of a working furnishing report, using the Farmhouse at

Shawnee Town 1929 as a case study. We will discuss

the process of developing the report, its implementation

and the strengths and weaknesses of this type of report.

Meeting the Challenge: A Roundtable on Presenting

Slavery to the Public

Presenters : Sarah Bader-King, Wornall/Majors House,

Kristen Epps, University of Central Arkansas, Leah

Palmer, public historian

This roundtable discussion will center on the challenges

of interpreting slavery for the public in the 21st century.

Interpreting slavery is one of the most difficult

components of this profession, since many visitors cling

to deeply-held (and often erroneous) myths about the

black experience. Despite the work of both public and

academic historians in telling this story, their exciting

research and new interpretations have not trickled into

American public consciousness. The roundtable will

address such questions as: how can sites help their

Page 8: Annual - MOMCC Fall 2016 final... · Annual MOMCC/Mountain Plains ... will be available from Ericka for an additional $19.00 at the workshop if you do not have one. ... Meet in hotel

visitors challenge pre-conceived notions about slavery

and emancipation? How can we structure a visitor

experience that provides the experience of enslaved

people in a seamless way--that does not cordon off such

topics into “black issues” or “white issues”--but instead

looks at slavery as an American story? How, logistically,

can museums approach such a complicated topic and

train staff and volunteers to handle it with sensitivity?

How do you effectively incorporate slavery into the

larger story that you are telling at your historic site?

Policies, Practices and People: Assessment Programs

that Can Help Your Organization Make

Improvements

Presenter: Cherie Cook, American Association for State

and Local History

The lack of funding and paid/unpaid staff can keep a

local history organization in a rut for years. Assessment

programs provide structure for prioritizing and tracking

your organization’s efforts to improve programming,

collections care, governance, long term planning and

other areas of daily operations. Join us to hear about the

StEPs and Visitors Count! programs offered by the

American Association for State and Local History and

how two organizations are using these programs to

assess their policies, practices, and visitor experience.

12:00-1:30PM Lunch/Meeting

Keynote Speaker:

Dr. Kristen Epps – Univ of Central Arkansas

Flights to Freedom: The Underground Railroad on the

Kansas-Missouri Border

The Kansas-Missouri line was a central site for slave

escapes in the years prior to the Civil War. Whether

crossing over the icy Missouri River, getting assistance

from abolitionist allies, or finding other means, these

enslaved men, women, and children capitalized on the

political and social upheaval of the sectional conflict.

Hearing their stories helps us better understand the

important role that slave agency played in the downfall

of this coercive institution.

1:45-3:00PM Concurrent Sessions

Native Neighbors—A Different Approach to

Presenting Native Cultures Presenter: Deb Barker, Franklin County Historical

Society, Bill Fischer, Fort Scott National Historic Site

In 2014, an idea was born to interpret the era of the

Permanent Indian Frontier (1830-1870) in Ottawa,

Kansas. Instead of a pow-wow or lectures or exhibits,

the plan was developed to create a Native Fair for the

Emigrant Tribes that had lived in the area before the

state was formed. Now the concept is moving to an

FFNHA partner, Ft. Scott NHS, where it is a part of the

NPS Centennial Celebration. You’ll learn the goals, the

methods, the pitfalls and the networking that made these

events occur and win a “Leadership in History” award

from the American Association for State and Local

History.

History For Rent: Generating a Revenue Stream for

Museums Through Rentals Presenters: Shawn Bruce, Shawnee Town 1929;

Lorna Daganaar, Mahaffie Historic Site

Because of budget cuts and a desire to raise funds

through non-traditional funding sources, museums

and historic sites have turned to rentals as a way to

increase their revenues. Rental coordinators from

Shawnee Town 1929 and Mahaffie Stagecoach Stop and

Farm will discuss their rental operations; what they are,

how they work, and the pieces and parts needed to make

a successful venture for both the museum and the

customer.

Make Your Kitchen Right - How to Put Your Best

Historical Foot Forward, Part 1: mid-19th

Century

Presenter: Kay Cynova, Stuhr Museum

One of two sessions, the first examines preparation for

cooking in a mid-nineteenth century setting and how to

disguise or represent ingredients and supplies in a way

that does not impose or at least minimizes a modern

impact. Participants will have the opportunity to discuss

some of their most vexing period kitchen image issues,

how best to keep modern items out of the picture and

how to recreate period packaging without breaking the

bank. Many examples will be on hand and master copies

of some of the packaging will be available.

3:00-3:15PM Break

Sponsored by Mt. Plains ALHFAM

3:15-4:30PM Concurrent Sessions

Sharing Authority on Social Media: Engaging the

Public in Interpreting History

Presenter: Julie McPike, Freedom’s Frontier NHA

In 2013, Freedom’s Frontier National Heritage Area and

the Watkins Museum of History teamed up with

community partners to engage the public in interpreting

history through the medium of Twitter. This project

trended nationally on Twitter, garnered regional and

national press, won state and national awards, and taught

dozens of citizens how to engage with primary sources

to interpret history in a new way.

Pressed, Printed, Painted or Blown?

Presenter: Brian Hackett, Northern KY State University

A variety of utensils, glass, and ceramic objects covered

the table when one sat down to a meal in the nineteenth

century. Using original examples of these items, along

Page 9: Annual - MOMCC Fall 2016 final... · Annual MOMCC/Mountain Plains ... will be available from Ericka for an additional $19.00 at the workshop if you do not have one. ... Meet in hotel

with archaeological evidence from sites in Ohio, learn

how to identify and understand a wide variety of

tablewares from pressed glass to transferware. Bring an

object (or good picture of the same) you’d like help

identifying. Be ready to share ideas for finding

expendable, contemporary substitutes for some of these

items for use in active living history programs.

Bringing Hands-On History to You: A Case Study

Presenter: Dean Hardman, Jackson’s Mill

As most the staff of museum/historic sites know,

stagnation is one of the quickest ways to irrelevance. In

this age of continual change, it is vital that we strive to

maintain our relevance to current and new audiences. A

previous session discussed the infusion of S.T.E.M. into

Jackson’s Mill’s educational outreach program (History

Hitting the Road). This presentation will analyze the

status of this effort. It will also examine our current

educational programs (both on-site and off) and how we

have packaged what we do on-site for our outreach

program while remaining true to our mission and

historical accuracy, without making it prohibitive to

provide those educational opportunities to off-site

audiences. I will discuss the pros and cons of our

efforts, and examine how these meet with our current

operational status and mission statement. Specific

examples of programming throughout the year will be

employed as points of analysis. I hope to stimulate

lively discussion, consideration, (and perhaps) some

healthy debate.

4:30PM Resource Group Sessions Interpretation/Music/Art/Material Culture

Leadership/Supervision

Agriculture/Gardens/Food

6:00PM Cash Bar

7:00-10:00PM Dinner, Dance &

Silent Auction

Don’t forget to bring your silent auction donations!

Our theme for the Friday evening dinner and dance is a

“Freedom Ball.” What does Freedom mean to your site,

or to you. An Oregon Trail pioneer? A Civil War

soldier? Lady Columbia? Captain America? It’s your

call. Prizes awarded for most patriotic, most original,

best eighteenth century attire, best nineteenth century

attire and best twentieth century attire. Mid-nineteenth

century music provided

by the Gum Springs

Serenaders with a called

dance and silent auction

following the dinner at

Embassy Suites.

Saturday, November 5 All sessions, meetings, and other activities take place

within conference rooms at the Embassy Suites.

9:00AM-12:00PM Vendor Area Open

9:00AM-10:15AM Concurrent Sessions

Connecting Across Borders

Presenter: Carol S. Bohl, independent researcher and

Deborah Barker, Franklin County Historical Society

Freedom’s Frontier National Heritage Area partners

strive to share stories of the quest for freedom while

respecting often contentious perspectives. Deb Barker,

Franklin County, KS historian, will share how she

discovered abolitionist connections with her personal

story and that of her county at an Ohio Underground

Railroad convention in 2015. Carol Bohl, independent

researcher, will share how she uncovered stories of

enslaved Missourians who sought freedom in Page

County, Iowa during and after the Civil War.

When Museums Grant Freedom in Experience,

Students Supply Energy and Effort

Presenter: Lynsay Flory, North Dakota State University;

Joyce Thierer, Emporia State University; Torie Jones,

North Dakota State University; Typhanie Schafer,

Middle Tennessee State University

This session will cover the benefits of various kinds of

student involvement in museums. It will focus on

college involvement through museum internships and

field schools, as well as recruiting younger students

through project-based programming, which can lead to

future participation. The importance of granting students

freedom while working within these organizations’

structures will be emphasized. Current and past

successful programs including benefits to museums will

be highlighted.

Make Your Kitchen Right - How to Put Your Best

Historical Foot Forward, Part 2: early 20th

century

Presenter: Kay Cynova, Stuhr Museum

The second of two sessions, this one examining

preparation for cooking in an early 20th century setting

and how to disguise or represent ingredients and supplies

in a way that does not impose or at least minimizes a

modern impact. Participants will have the opportunity to

discuss some of their most vexing period kitchen image

issues, how best to keep modern items out of the picture

and how to recreate period packaging without breaking

the bank. Many examples will be on hand and master

copies of some of the packaging will be available.

Page 10: Annual - MOMCC Fall 2016 final... · Annual MOMCC/Mountain Plains ... will be available from Ericka for an additional $19.00 at the workshop if you do not have one. ... Meet in hotel

2017 MOMCC Spring Conference

10:30-11:45AM Concurrent Sessions

Race in the Rural Midwest from Separatism through

Civil Rights

Presenter: Dr. Debra Reid, Eastern Illinois University

This session addresses the topic of race in rural America,

with a focus on the formation and maturation of

separatist communities in different regions of the

Midwest and Mountain Plains from the antebellum era to

the present. The session will conclude with a discussion

about how to interpret this difficult history and why it

matters.

Once Upon a Time at Olde Timey

Town: Storytelling at Historic Sites

Presenter: Mary Schmidt, St. Cloud (MN) Technical &

Community College

“Happily Ever After” can happen when storytellers and

historic sites work together! Storytelling can sometimes

reach audiences in a way other interpretive methods do

not. This session will explore some guidelines when

hosting a storytelling event or storyteller. Information

from regional and national tellers will be shared. Come

ready to share your experiences, suggestions and

questions.

Fifty-Six Million Words and A Lot of Questions

Presenter: Todd Price, Historic Wagner Farm

As a museum professional, what would you do if you

found out that a one of a kind collection is about to be

sold and scattered to the winds? In 2014, this is exactly

what happened to Todd Price when he was told about the

impending sale of the J.C. Allen photography collection.

While you may never have heard of the Allen collection

you have likely seen some of the images. In total, there

are about 56,000 pictures and glass plates that span over

100 years of rural life and agriculture from across the

country. In this session, Todd will talk about going

against Getty Images and questions from museum ethics

to contracts and copyrights that were hurdles to the deal.

If a picture is worth a thousand words this could be a big

book!

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MOMCC 2016 Fall Conference Registration Form

Please complete all relevant sections of this form

(an electronic version is at MOMCC.org). Make checks

payable to MOMCC or charge with a Visa or MasterCard.

Mail with your payment to: Ed Crabb

3606 Belshaw Rd.

Lowell, Indiana 46356

Early registration deadline is October 21. Please note:

MOMCC cannot guarantee placement in workshops for

registrations received after October 21.

Name:

Position/Title:

Site/Organization:

Address:

City: ST Zip

Phone:

Email:

I require vegetarian meals

I am a first time MOMCC conference participant

I am a vendor

I will bring an item for the auction

Conference Registration

A. Full Conference Registration: *includes: Thursday reception & auction, Friday & Saturday

sessions, lunch, breaks & banquet

MOMCC, ALHFAM, MtPlns, or

FFNHA member postmark pre 10/21 $95

MOMCC, ALHFAM, MtPlns, or

FFNHA member postmark after 10/21 $125

Non-member $110

Postmarked before October 21

Non-member $145

Postmarked after October 21

TOTAL – A $

B. Conference A La Carte

Vendor fee per table $20

*number of tables ____

Friday Sessions ONLY (member) $95

Friday Sessions ONLY (non-member) $105

Saturday Sessions ONLY (member) $65

Saturday Sessions ONLY (non-member) $75

Friday Lunch ONLY $30

Friday Dinner ONLY $50

TOTAL – B $

C. Half Day Workshops: Thursday, November 3

_____Living History and the Great War: Making the

Human Connection (AM) $25

Goats 101 (PM) $10

TOTAL – C $

D. Full Day Workshops: Thursday, November 3

*Indicates lunch included

Pursuing the Frontiers of Freedom* $45

Men’s 19th Century Overalls* $35

_____A Bit Whiffie on the Lee Side: Historic

Chuckwagon Food and Cooking Techniques* $35

TOTAL – D $

E. Membership Renewal

Individual $30

Household $35

Institutional $50

GRAND TOTAL A-E $

Concurrent Sessions: Fri. & Sat., November 4 &5

(Please mark the sessions you plan to attend.).

Toys and Games: Childhood Popular Culture …

Creating Lesson Plans…

Rediscover Freedom's Pathway…

Planning Before Placing…

Meeting the Challenge: … Presenting Slavery…

Policies, Practices and People: Assessment…

Native Neighbors…

History for Rent…

___Make Your Kitchen Right pt 1…

Sharing Authority on Social Media…

Pressed, printed, painted or blown?

___Bringing Hands-On History to You…

___Connecting Across Borders…

___When Museums Grant Freedom…

___Make Your Kitchen Right pt 2…

Race in the Rural Midwest…

Once Upon a Time… Storytelling…

Fifty-Six Million Words…

General Keynote Session: Fri., November 4

Dr. Kristen Epps, University of Central Arkansas

PAYMENT INFORMATION

Check (payable to MOMCC) Visa MasterCard

Expiration Date

Card #

Signature

Print Name below as it appears on Card: