On September 8, Hard Histories practitioners and their colleagues gathered at Baltimore’s Reginald F. Lewis Museum for a series of roundtable conversations. Here, we bring you the third of those exchanges, one that centered on how the practice of hard histories research changes our landscapes — the museum walls, the house interpretation, and a cemetery turned parking lot — and promote change.
Listen in as Savannah Wood of Afro Charities, Inc. leads a discussion on "Changing Landscapes" roundtable with David Armenti of the Maryland Center for History and Culture, Lori Beth Finkelstein of the Homewood Museum, and Elgin Klugh of the Laurel Cemetery Memorial Project and Coppin State University.
Next week, our list in this series: Changing Leaders.
— MSJ