Rebirth

Creating the Museum of the Reconstruction Era and the Future of the House Museum

by Jennifer Whitmer Taylor

Reimagining both the house museum and Reconstruction memory for the twenty-first century


In Rebirth, public historian Jennifer Whitmer Taylor provides a compelling account of how to reenvision the historic house museum. Anchored by oral history interviews with docents and using the Museum of the Reconstruction Era—formerly known as the Woodrow Wilson Family Home—as a case study, Rebirth offers best practices for interpreting issues of contested public memory, such as white supremacy and domestic political terrorism, for twenty-first-century audiences. Taylor challenges readers to contemplate how historic sites interact with and contribute to vital contemporary political conversations. Rebirth is a necessary book for public history practitioners, students of museum studies and historic site interpretation, and those interested in the history and memory of the Reconstruction era.

Table of Contents

Metadata

  • container title
    Rebirth: Creating the Museum of the Reconstruction Era and the Future of the House Museum
  • isbn
    978-1-64336-581-7
  • publisher
    University of South Carolina Press
  • publisher place
    Columbia, SC
  • restrictions
    The text of this book is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial No Derivatives 4.0. International (CC BY- NC- ND 4.0) license: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/
  • rights

    © 2025 by University of South Carolina


    The inclusion of this book in the Open Carolina collection is made possible by the generous funding of the University of South Carolina Libraries.

  • rights holder
    University of South Carolina
  • series title
    Reconstruction Reconsidered
  • doi