Niya Bates
Niya Bates, Director of African American History and Getting Word Oral History Project at Monticello, Charlottesville, Virginia
Niya Bates, Director of African American History and Getting Word Oral History Project at Monticello, Charlottesville, Virginia
Emily Hotaling Eig, Founder and CEO of EHT Traceries, Inc. Architectural Historian and Historic Preservation Specialist, Washington, D.C.
Nathaniel C. Guest, Esq., Executive Director and Founder, Colebrookdale Railroad Preservation Trust
Boyertown, PA
Steve T. Phan, Historian and Park Ranger
Mark A. Rodman, Executive Director, Michigan Historic Preservation Network, Lansing, Michigan
Tersh Boasberg, Community Icon, Washington, DC
Juliet Cutler, Interpretive Planner and Exhibit Developer, Atlanta, Georgia
On the Erasure of History
by Luis Hoyos, Expert Member ACHP
As we celebrate Hispanic Heritage Month, we must ensure historic preservation helps tell the story of all Americans. An important historic site to Latinos is Roosevelt High School in East Los Angeles, California. It is one of the five high schools that participated in the 1968 Blowouts–when young Latinos rose up to protest bad schools.
Laurel Bartlett, PhD Candidate in the Planning, Design, and Built Environment Program, Clemson, South Carolina
Ignacio (Nash) R. Camacho, Traditional Navigator