Are you interested in learning
more about historic preservation?
Getting involved? Here are 23 things you can do:
1.
Email us and we'll help you get connected paul@ptvermont.org
We're lucky to have hundreds of groups and organizations working
to protect and use historic buildings in communities throughout
Vermont.
2. Visit one of
Vermont's historic downtowns. Shop at locally-owned stores
-- they are part of the reason why our communities are unique
and vibrant places!
3. Have lunch or dinner
at a restaurant in an historic building. Pick one where
chefs use Vermont-produced food. Check out the Vermont
Fresh Network website for a great start.
4. Visit to a place
where historic was made. Vermont has a great collection of
historic
sites and museums
that are open to the public.
5. Visit your local
library. Chances are, it's located in an historic
building. If you are really curious, find answers to your
questions about Vermont history at the new Vermont
History Center in Barre.
6. Attend a live
performance or a movie at an historic theater.
7. Attend Vermont's
annual Historic Preservation Conference to be held in May.
Email Connie Bryant at
the Preservation Trust office to be put on the mailing list to
received more information.
8. Want to keep current
on historic preservation activity in Vermont? Email Meg
Campbell to sign up for our monthly electronic
newsletter.
9. Want hands-on
training? Take a course at the Preservation
Education Institute.
10. Interested in a
career in historic preservation? Enter the Graduate
Program in Historic Preservation at the University of Vermont.
11. Do you have kids or
young friends? Try some of these for starters....
-
Show your kids the building where
you went to school, where your parents went to school, or
where you got married. Take them to visit former
family properties. Tell them stories of growing up in
Vermont.
-
Have breakfast at an authentic
Vermont diner.
-
Visit the Lake
Champlain Maritime Museum and learn about Vermont's
underwater historic preserves and much more.
-
Take a ride on the
railroad! Check out the Green
Mountain Flyer for more details.
-
Visit a historic
museum like the Fairbanks
Museum in St. Johnsbury
-
Visit Shelburne
Farms in Shelburne for a great day in a beautiful
historic setting.
-
Take your kids on an
outing to a local Vermont
country store to spend their allowance. They'll
have fun, get something pretty neat and support a
locally-owned business, most likely in a historic building
in a village or town center.
-
Connect your kids to
Vermont's past by visiting that old
cemetery you drive by all the time. Teach them
about the early civic leaders in Vermont, then look around
your town for their houses or town buildings. Visit
your local
historical society for more information. Invite
them to consider how these folks would feel about their town
if they were alive today.
12. See how some community
organizations have rehabilitated historic buildings for
affordable housing.
13. Take a walk in one
of Vermont's villages. Vermont
Walks, Villages and Countryside is available from
Vermont Life Magazine. The book includes walks and was
published by the Preservation Trust of Vermont and Vermont Life.
14. Tour Vermont's
Scenic Byways. You'll discover historic farms and
barns, village historic districts, country cemeteries, and
covered bridges. Be sure to shop at every village store
and buy Vermont-made products.
15. Overnight in an Historic
Hotel or Bed & Breakfast.
16. Get married at the Grand
Isle Lake House.
17. Join the National
Trust for Historic Preservation.
18. What to learn more
about historic preservation? Check out the National
Trust's booklist.
19. Help some of the
statewide organizations that are working hard to protect the
character of Vermont.
20. In most Vermont
communities, worship services are still held in historic
buildings. These churches, synagogues, and other places of
worship need support. Show your support.
21. Take a
trip to a local farm and buy some of their products -- chances
are, they are farming on a bit of Vermont history. Check out the
farmers who are a part of the Vermont
Fresh Network
22. Think
twice about shopping at a "big box" store such as
Wal-Mart. Check out the Home
Town Advantage, a newsletter put together by the Institute
for Local Self-Reliance to learn how sprawl presents a tangible
threat to historic downtowns all across the country.
23. Make a contribution
to the Preservation Trust of Vermont today.