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College of Arts and Sciences Catalog

HISTORIC PRESERVATION

Department of Historic Preservation

Douglas W. Sanford, Chair

Gary Stanton, Career Advisor

Faculty

Distinguished Professor and Hofer Chair of Early American Culture and Historic Preservation

Carter L. Hudgins

Associate Professors

Douglas W. Sanford
Gary W. Stanton

Director, Center for Historic Preservation

Gary W. Stanton

Assistant Professor

Andréa D. Livi Smith

The Historic Preservation Program

Historic Preservation focuses on the maintenance, conservation, advocacy, and interpretation of historic sites and structures and on cultural resource management. Historic Preservation provides opportunities for students to gain a deeper and richer understanding of America’s cultural and ethnic diversity and the ramifications of technological innovation and social change on people’s quality of life.

Mary Washington was one of the first academic institutions in America to establish an undergraduate curriculum in historic preservation and the first to establish an independent Department of Historic Preservation – now one of the largest undergraduate program of its kind in the nation. The department offers an interdisciplinary major that acquaints students with a broad range of activities, methods, and theoretical perspectives. Students in the program may emphasize historic architecture, architectural conservation, folklore, archaeology, preservation planning, material culture, or history museums in their coursework.
Historic Preservation majors explore the theoretical, ethical, and philosophical issues that surround preservation practice. The acquisition of research and analytical skills is stressed and substantial fieldwork, laboratory, or research assignments are woven into most courses. The academic program of the department is strongly enhanced by the research and public education programs of the UMW Center for Historic Preservation.

The historic preservation program benefits by the location of the University in Fredericksburg, a city with an exceptionally rich history. Intellectual and professional skills are developed through intensive, hands-on involvement in preservation activities in the area, and opportunities exist for similar experience abroad. Students design and fabricate museum exhibits, carry out archaeology projects, conduct architectural surveys, and prepare diagnostic reports for local historic sites, structures and districts. Students interact with the local and University community through the activities of the student-organized Preservation Club. Special financial assistance is available for historic preservation students through a number of scholarships which are described within the Department’s website: www.umw.edu/cas/historicpreservation/default.php

Requirements for the Historic Preservation Major

Thirty-nine (39) credits including Historic Preservation 101, 102, 200, 205, 206, 207, 209, 305, 320, and 405; three credits from among 461, 462, 463, 464, 466, or 469; six credits from among 208, 302, 303, 308, 309, 310, 325, 345, 360, 361, 467, 470, 471, 491, and Geography 250. Historic Preservation 499 is strongly recommended but does not count toward requirements for the major.

Historic Preservation Course Offerings

101 – The American Heritage (3)

Survey of America’s architectural, cultural, and historical resources; analysis of the historic, social, economic, political, and environmental forces from both “the Old World” and “the New World” which have shaped them.

102 – Preserving Historic America (3)

Survey of the history of historic preservation and the practice of historic preservation with emphasis on the legislation, policies, and methodologies that form our present national, state, and local preservation system.

200 – introduction to museum studies (3)

Survey of the history, philosophy, and management of history museums, including curatorship and public interpretation.

205 – Documentation and Fieldwork (3)

Prerequisites: Historic Preservation 101. Methods of documentation and analysis of historic sites and structures through historical research, measured drawings and photographs.

206 – Introduction to American Folklore (3)

General survey of the forms of folklore found in the United States in the twentieth century along with the methodologies and theoretical perspectives used in the analysis of folk forms.

207 – American Archaeology (3)

Introduction to field and laboratory methods and interpretive issues of North American archaeology, with emphasis on historical archaeology.

208 – Introduction to Conservation (3)

Overview of conservation as a specialized professional discipline, including the field’s history, ethics, and common practices for documentation, stabilization, analysis, and treatment.

209 – Planning History and Practice (3)

Introduction to the theories, methods and practical applications involved in the field of planning at the state and local level.

302 – Preservation Law (3)

Prerequisite: Historic Preservation 102.
Examination of the development and application of preservation law and policy in the United States, through the analysis of case law, legislation, and private techniques.

303 – Archives and Society (3)

Examination of the theory and practice of archival work, including the preservation, organization, and cataloging of manuscript collections.

305 – American Building (3)

Prerequisites: Historic Preservation 205. Intensive overview of the evolution of American building from early dwellings and towns to the glass and steel towers that dominate post-modern skylines. Special emphasis is given to building materials, technologies, and the development of structural systems.

308 – Cultural Resource Management (3)

Prerequisite: Historic Preservation 102. Examination of how historic preservation services are provided in legal and contractual contexts within the public sector. Topics include resource assessment, organizational management, proposals and budgets, and ethics.

309 – Preservation and Land Use (3)

Prerequisites: Historic Preservation 102. Survey of current land use issues and the impact on cultural resources.

310 – The Decorative Arts (3)

Survey of the styles and uses of furniture and other decorative arts in America from the 17th century to the present, with emphasis on object research.

312 – Landscape Preservation (3)

Prerequisite: Historic Preservation 102. Examination of European landscape precedents, influential landscape architects and landscape preservation issues today.

320 – American Forms and Values (3)

Interpretation and analysis of material culture in pre-industrial and modern American societies, with emphasis on research perspectives and methods.

325 – Vernacular Architecture in America (3)

Prerequisite: Historic Preservation 205. A seminar in the research models, methods and theoretical approaches used to study commonplace architecture in the United States.

345 – Computer Applications in Historic Preservation (3)

Prerequisite: Historic Preservation 205. Introduction to the major applications of computer technology in Historic Preservation, including development of database structures, documentation using vector drawings, and the employment of geographic information systems for spatial analysis. Through projects that are specific to the practice of historic preservation students gain new means of documenting, interpreting and analyzing cultural resources.

360 – International Preservation (3)

Prerequisite: Historic Preservation 102. Examination of the origins and programs of major international preservation organizations such as UNESCO, ICOMOS and ICCROM and a survey of international preservation practice and projects in countries around the globe.

361 – Historic Preservation Administration (3)

Prerequisite: Historic Preservation 102. Introduces basic principles of the administration and management of cultural resources in the United States. Throughout the semester, students participate in group discussions with leaders of historic preservation organizations at the national, state, regional and local levels.

405 – Survey and Preservation Planning (3)

Prerequisites: Historic Preservation 209 and 305. An intensive survey and research-based study of preservation planning, with emphasis on the identification and analysis of sites and structures in their geographical, historical, and socio-economic contexts.

461 – Laboratory in building forensics (3)

Prerequisite: Historic Preservation 305. Examination of the fundamental principles of architectural conservation related to the effects of time, gravity, humidity, temperature and light on building materials. Fieldwork monitoring and analysis of deterioration in historic buildings, including masonry, wood, metal and coatings.

462 – Laboratory Methods in Archaeology (3)

Prerequisite: Historic Preservation 207. Laboratory procedures for the processing, identifi- cation, analysis, and conservation of artifacts, with emphasis on quantitative analysis and collections management.

463 – Laboratory in Museum Design and Interpretation (3)

Prerequisite: Historic Preservation 200 or permission of instructor. Examination of the principles of museum exhibit design and interpretation, including participation in exhibit preparation.

464 – Laboratory in Public Folklore and Cultural Conservation (3)

Prerequisite: Historic Preservation 206. Intensive examination of the philosophy, practice, and ethics of public programs in folk art, folklore, and cultural conservation programs.

466 – Laboratory in Archaeological Materials Science (3)

Prerequisite: Historic Preservation 208. Introduction to the chemistry, processing, and properties of the main materials encountered by archaeologists, conservators, and museum curators, such as glass, ceramics, and metals.

467 – Field Methods in Archaeology (4)

Prerequisites: Historic Preservation 207 or permission of the instructor. Fieldwork-intensive introduction to the techniques for sampling, excavating, recording, and interpreting archaeological sites. Summer only.

469 – Laboratory in Preservation Planning (3)

Prerequisite: Historic Preservation 405. This
laboratory course expands on the methods and information learned in HISP 405 by providing students with practical experience in preservation planning at the local level.

470 – Historic Preservation in Scotland (3)

Introduces students to the historic resources and to the public and private systems for historic preservation in Scotland. Participants investigate the principal Scottish preservation organizations, methodologies, and standards. Participants conduct an intensive fieldwork project in the historic town of Cromarty. The course is conducted jointly by the University of Mary Washington and the Robert Gordon University, Aberdeen, Scotland. Summer only.

471 – Special Studies in Historic Preservation (3)

Seminar on a topic in historic preservation.

491 – Individual Study in Historic Preservation (Credits variable)

Prerequisite: permission of the instructor. Intensive individual investigation of a significant research problem under the direction of a faculty member.

499 – Internship in Historic Preservation (Credits variable)

Prerequisites: Historic Preservation 101, 102, additional course work in Historic Preservation appropriate for the internship, and permission of the instructor. Field experience with a preservation- related institution or group outside the University. Does not meet major requirements.

 

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