Humanities Truck Community Archive

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2019 "Celebrate Petworth" Festival
“Celebrate Petworth” is an annual free neighborhood festival organized by and for the residents of Petworth and surrounding neighborhoods, celebrating the creativity, diversity, culture, people and quality of life of the neighborhood through storytelling, live entertainment, fare from local restaurants, clinics, contests, crafts, and more. This collection features interviews and images from the 2019 "Celebrate Petworth" Festival.
2021 "Celebrate Petworth" Festival
“Celebrate Petworth” is an annual free neighborhood festival organized by and for the residents of Petworth and surrounding neighborhoods, celebrating the creativity, diversity, culture, people and quality of life of the neighborhood through storytelling, live entertainment, fare from local restaurants, clinics, contests, crafts, and more. This collection features interviews and images from the 2021 "Celebrate Petworth" Festival on September 25, 2021, in addition to interviews with Petworth residents collected prior to the event.
2023 Chinatown Community Festival
Chinatown Community Festival on Saturday June 3rd, 2023.
Adams Morgan Day 2018
To celebrate the festival anniversary, DC Public Library has also collaborated with Smithsonian Anacostia Community Museum and American University to highlight the history of the neighborhood through exhibitions, activities and performances. “We will strive to honor the decades of creativity, activism and diversity of Adams Morgan that continue to shape the community today,” said Washingtoniana librarian Michele Casto of DCPL. The Humanities Truck presented an exhibit about Adams Morgan using content from Smithsonian Anacostia Community Museum’s “A Right to the City” exhibition and historic photos of Adams Morgan from the Nancy Shia Collection at DCPL. This collection contains photos taken from the event.
Adams Morgan Day 2019
Adams Morgan Day is DC's longest running neighborhood festival, organized to celebrate Adams Morgan's eclectic history, culture, local artists, businesses, and residents, Together with the DC Public Library and Humanities Truck fellow Benjamin Stokes, the Humanities Truck featured the Smithsonian Anacostia Community Museum’s “A Right to the City” exhibit, hosted local music in the DCPL Performance Tent, and shared oral histories from the DC Storytelling System. This collection features photos taken at the event.
Adams Morgan Day 2020
How could a truck spur digital experiences, especially during a pandemic? Humanities Truck project fellow Benjamin Stokes explored this concept during Adams Morgan Day on September 18, 2020. Adams Morgan Day is the longest-running neighborhood festival in DC. Stokes noted that things would be different, both for the pandemic and the immediacy of the protests around the murder of George Floyd. Stokes and project partners chose a hybrid approach that combined physical media (prints, signs, fliers, and video) with three kinds of digital interactivity: (1) mural hunt game; (2) trivia map activity; and (3) audio tour. The “Mural, Mural, on the Wall” game was a scavenger hunt-style game that guides players physically around the neighborhood, showcasing the murals and protest art along their path. Participating in the game automatically enrolled players in a raffle where the winner won a shirt designed by a local artist. (The prior year we had tested the raffle as a driver of activity, but this year it would be secondary.) Collection contains photos from the event.
Adams Morgan Day 2021
The Humanities Truck participated in the 2021 “Adams Morgan Day” Festival, which focuses on the neighborhood of Adams Morgan and its culture, diversity, and history. The Truck displayed a photo exhibit from local photographer Nancy Shia, titled “Adams Morgan, Once and Now: Human Need or Developers Greed?” utilizing 45 years of photo documentation that explores themes of gentrification, human need, and community change over time in the neighborhood of Adams Morgan in Washington, DC. Oral history interviews were conducted to gauge festival-goers' relationship to Adams Morgan, meaningful spaces in the neighborhood, and how those spaces may have changed over time. This collection features photos and oral history interviews from the event. https://humanitiestruck.com/allexhibits/adams-morgan-once-and-now/
American University 1968-1969: Year of Protest, Year of Reform
Student journalists for The Eagle named the American University academic year 1968-1969 a year of protest and reform. Campus drinking laws loosened. Students created a new experimental, interdisciplinary course called University and Revolution. AU’s ninth president, George Williams, was inaugurated. Members of AU’s campus fought for university reform through the Tripartite committee and student-led groups such as OASATAU, a New AU, and Students for a Democratic Society (SDS). Throughout the year, AU students took an increasing interest in local, national, and international events. Beginning with Orientation and Registration and ending with Commencement, the exhibit highlights campus life and major events during the academic year. The Humanities Truck interviewed alumni coming back to campus for the Class of 1969 50 year reunion. This collection contains photos and interviews from the Class of 1969 50 year reunion and exhibit.
American University: An Activist Tradition
At American University, students are among the most politically engaged in the nation. This engagement can be traced to its beginnings, when women worked towards social reform and shaped the identity of the university with their own beliefs and ideals. On April 30, 2019, American University Public History Master's students Sean O'Malley, Kaylee Redard, and Katherine McCauley took the Humanities Truck to the American University quad to present American University: An Activist Tradition, an exhibit that traces the political engagement of women at the university and highlight the holdings in the University Archives. The students worked with community partner and American University archivist Leslie Nellis to research and design the exhibit for their Spring 2019 Practicum class under the guidance of Professor Malgorzata Rymsza-Pawlowska. This collection contains photos from the event.
American University Class of 1968: 1968 Retrospective
As part of the Golden Eagles Reunion, the Humanities Truck partnered with the American University archives to present the Class of 1968 exhibit on the AU quad Friday, October 19th, 2018. Archivists Leslie Nellis and Austin Arminio collaborated with Graduate Fellow Maren Orchard and Humanities Truck Director Dan Kerr to create the exhibit. In addition to numerous captioned photos, a slideshow of nostalgic photographs played while an infamous speech by Hubert Humphrey sounded throughout the grounds. This collection contains photos, exhibit information, and oral histories from the event.
Art All Night
The Humanities Truck made appearance at Art All Night 2019 in Tenleytown at Citizen Heights Church. In partnership with the DC Punk Archive in DC Public Library’s Special Collections and community curators, Marc Minsker and Ray Barker, the Humanities Truck displayed an exhibit using flyers and newspaper articles to explore the history of punk music in DC, specifically at Fort Reno Concerts. This collection includes photos from the event.
Art All Night Mount Pleasant 2023
The Humanities Truck participated in Art All Night 2023 at Mount Pleasant on Friday September 29th. This collection includes photographs of prompt cards from the Humanities Truck interactives, as well as photographs taken by Humanities Truck Director Dan Kerr and Community Associate Angie Whitehurst.
"Artists are the Gatekeepers of Truth", Paul Robeson Celebration
On April 9. 2022, at the corner of Georgia Ave and Kansas Ave, the Humanities Truck parked and partnered with with several community partners to host "Artists are the Gatekeepers of Truth: Paul Robeson's 124th Birthday Celebration" with special guest Uzikee Nelson to celebrate black art, community, and culture
AU Scholars Exhibition
On April 13, 2019 on the American University Quad, two classes from the AU Scholars Program presented the culmination of their semester-long research projects. Displayed inside the truck, students in Dan Kerr's class put together an exhibit about the history of the Community for Creative Nonviolence in DC. On the outside the truck, students from Martyn Oliver's class presented their exhibit on religious minorities in DC.
AUnion: Let's Strike!
Photos and a video taken at the AUnion: Let's Strike! event held at American University by the students in Anna Kaplan's Introduction to Public History undergraduate course.
A Blue Note on Repair: The Truth About Reparations
A Blue Note on Repair: The Truth About Reparations is a one woman show by Dr. Karen Wilson-Ama'Echefu, PhD (Dr. K, Singer, Storyteller, and Scholar) which explores five core elements of reparation as defined by the United Nations High Commission on Human Rights through song, story and dance with Dancer Choreographer, Yolanda "Yogui" Ackles and Musician, Brian Farrow (Fiddle). Event was held July 30, 2022 at the Katzen Arts Center. Collection contains photos from the event.

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