Johnson County Historical Society
COUNTY MUSEUM
Executive Director Margaret Weiting
Report from Cornell College Students Regarding Virtual Exhibit Project
Presentation to the Johnson County Board of Supervisors
December 2006
Johnson County Historical Society Executive Director Margaret Weiting
expressed her strong appreciation for the support of the Board of
Supervisors. She said that the Historical Society had the opportunity
recently to establish a home base off of I-80, across the street from
the Marriott Hotel. She said it is one thing to have a building, but
what is really important is what they do with it. She said they see
this building as a place where history comes alive for Johnson County,
for visitors, and for tourists. In this space they can educate and
interpret the over-arching themes of the community. The key focus of
the museum is that it is a County museum where the stories of the
community can be told. She said that already North Liberty, River
Junction, Lone Tree and Tiffin are exploring their stories and putting
together an exhibit. These will become part of a permanent display.
The funding from the Board of Supervisors significantly provides the
resources that the Society can do operationally. Weiting said that the
wonderful thing about having space is the opportunities that present
themselves. In these past weeks, they have had the privilege of
collaborating with University of Iowa Museum Studies students who worked
on a veterans project doing exhibits and programming. This morning she
shared work that Cornell College students are doing in public memory and
public history. She said that the same thing is happening. The
critical thing about learning local history is that development of a
sense of place and connectedness, and this cannot be more important than
with young people. She introduced Kate O’Brian, Alex Birdsall and Kelly
Hughes, the Cornell students who will share their project with the
Board.
O’Brian explained that part of the class assignment was to do a
mini-internship with a local museum and then create a virtual exhibit
online with the goal of having it linked to that museum’s website. They
worked with the Johnson County Historical Society and decided to do a
virtual exhibit of the Poor Farm and the Asylum. The goal of the
exhibit is to provide information, encourage the public to visit, and to
provide a history of this kind of treatment in Iowa. Birdsall said they
had toured the sites, and had done research in the Johnson County
archives. They also took pictures and did some information gathering
for this exhibit. Hughes said that they did an interview with Don
Robinson who did a photography project about the Poor Farm and Asylum.
The subjects they will be touching on are advancements in health care,
history, restoration and preservation.