Will Interpret for Food

About the industry and understanding of History, and one man's attempt to find his place in it.

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Previous Posts

2013

An Introduction to Google SketchUp  August 30

National Trust Re-Post! August 26

Thoughts about Mills March 12

Blogging for other Bloggers March 11

An Interview with Meagan and Laura, Preservation Professionals. Pt. 2. January 19

An Interview with Meagan and Laura, Preservation Professionals. Pt. 1 January 9

2012

GIS, General Lee, and the Future of Historical Cartography December 6.

Winter is Coming: A Seasonal Worker's Tale December 1

An Interview with William Fowler, Professor of History November 16

Dead White Protestant Males and Digital Media August 29
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About Aaron M. Dougherty

willinterpretforfood
Plymouth, MA, United States
Aaron is a 2010 graduate of Eastern Michigan University's Master's program in History, with an undergraduate degree in History and Writing. Since 2010, he's worked as a writer, researcher, and historical interpreter for several museums and historical societies in the greater Boston area. Writing this blog is MOSTLY for fun.
View my complete profile

Blogroll

Alliance Views:
The blog of the Boston Preservation Alliance

A Pilgrim's Lot:
From the only Pilgrim interpreter who's actually English.

Boston 1775:
The American Revolution in Massachusetts, by J. L. Bell

ExhibitingNew York:
Historic/ Artistic wonders of New York

Historic Boston
Historic redevelopment in Beantown.

History of Massachusetts:
The title says it all

Murder by Gaslight:
Grim and ghastly in 19th century America

Night Train to Detroit:
Metro Detroit History; there's more than you think!

Something Old, Something New:
Museums and public history from a fellow professional

The Riven Word:
Strangely dressed men using old tools. The blog of Plimoth Plantation's Interpretive Artisans department

They Knew they were Pilgrims:
The 17th Century adventures of Plimoth Plantation's Pilgrim interpreters

Blog Archive

  • ▼  2013 (15)
    • ▼  November (1)
      • Spider-Brain
    • ►  August (3)
    • ►  July (1)
    • ►  June (1)
    • ►  May (1)
    • ►  March (4)
    • ►  February (2)
    • ►  January (2)
  • ►  2012 (20)
    • ►  December (3)
    • ►  November (5)
    • ►  October (1)
    • ►  September (7)
    • ►  August (4)

Labels

17th Century (1) 19th Century (5) 2008 Financial Crisis (1) 20th Century (1) Abraham Lincoln (1) Art (1) Atlantic City (1) Battle of Bunker Hill (1) Battle of Gettysburg (1) Cape Cod (1) College (1) Digital Media (1) Digital Preservation (1) Exhibit Development (1) Fifteenth Century (1) Founding Fathers (1) GIS (1) Grant-Writing (1) Graveyards (1) Great Atlantic Hurricane (1944) (1) Historic Preservation (4) History Professor (1) Hurricane Sandy (1) Internet (2) Internships (2) Interpretation (5) Interview (3) Introduction (1) Living History (3) Medieval Spain (1) Mercy Brown (1) Millerites (1) Mills (1) Museums (2) Musings (4) New Jersey (1) New York (1) Northeastern University (1) Panic of 1873 (1) Plymouth (1) Plymouth MA (1) Preservation (1) Research (1) Resumes (1) Rhode Island (1) Sarah Josepha Hale (1) Science (1) SketchUp (1) Thanksgiving (1) The Industry (2) The Job Search (4) The Pipe-Dream (2) U-Boat (1) Updates (6) Vampire (1) Wild West (2) William Fowler (1) World War I (1)

Resources

Archive.org
Historical collections in a digital form.

Beyond Academe
A site to educate historians about jobs outside of academe.

Boston Public Library:
Large list of electronic sources from the BPL's online collection.

Chronicling America:
Historic American newspapers, 1836-1922.

Google Books:
EBooks in the public domain.

The History List:
Historical events in your area.

History News Network:
Current events in a historical perspective.

H-Net:
Humanities and Social Sciences, dedicated to developing the educational potential of the internet.

Library of Congress:
LOC digital collections.

Massachusetts Historical Society:
Documents and conversation on the history of the Massachusetts Bay Colony.

Mass History
Online museum that digitally preserves material relating to the state of Massachusetts.

The National Council on Public History
Encouraging engagement between history practitioners and the public.

The Ultimate History Project
Academic historians writing for the general public.

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