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History: Public History

Public History

What is Public History?

Public history is an umbrella term that describes the many and diverse ways in which history is put to work in the world.  In this sense, it is history that is applied to real-world issues. In fact, applied history was a term used synonymously and interchangeably with public history for a number of years.

How is Public History Practiced?

Archives - refers to a repository that holds permanently valuable records—such as letters, reports, accounts, minute books, draft and final manuscripts, and photographs—of people, businesses, and government. These records are kept because they have continuing value in creating agency and to other potential users. They are the documentary evidence of past events. They are the facts we use to interpret and understand history.

Museums - responsible for assembling, cataloging, managing, and presenting/displaying artistic, historic, or cultural collections. These records are displayed because they have continuing value in remembering culturally significant events or movements.

Historic Preservation - the protection, rehabilitation, restoration, and appropriate adaptive reuse of historic properties significant in American history, architecture, archaeology, engineering, or culture.

Browzine Public History Journals

Foundational Books

Resources