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Pausing
to explain an artifact to his tour group, a docent strains
to make himself heard over the whine of a generator and
the blast of a safety valve popping on a nearby locomotive.
The
locomotive, a Pennsy G5, has not had steam up in over 40
years. What’s going on here? Some kind of mistake?
To
the contrary -- it is but a minor illustration of purposeful
interpretive planning. Such planning at the Railroad Museum
of Pennsylvania takes both tactical and strategic forms.
The great
railroad stations, like Grand Central Terminal, once fabled
in radio as “the crossroads of a million lives” and “the
gigantic stage on which are played a thousand dramas daily” are
no longer the repositories of the human story associated
with movement of people by train. In part, railroad museums
now carry on this responsibility.
Railroads
did more than carry freight and passengers. They affected
and were affected by society. Their fate was inter-twined
with the ebb and flow of progress. It Is the effort to tell
this panorama of stories—of railroad building, technology,
jobs performed, lives affected, a nation served—that we now
refer to as interpretation.
Interpretation
deals with the physical, the economic, the political, and
the social, and it speaks to an array of museum visitors
ranging from the avid railfan to the casual tourist.
Interpretation’s
Many Forms
One aspect of railroading involves
the physical surroundings. Railroad yards were
often cold In winter, hot in summer, noisy, dirty;
certainly not very safe places for casual visitors.
In seeking to recreate this texture of railroad
working environments, a museum cannot in conscience
expose its visitors to all these elements.
But some
well-placed sound does help set the stage, thus we have the
recorded noises of a locomotive building up steam in preparation
for its next run. Sound can come into play in other ways,
too. This is a button-pushing society.
A family
stops next to an early Consolidation locomotive. Several
crates are at trackside awaiting pickup, with a sign saying “Imagine
you are standing in a railroad depot in the year 1907. You
meet a friend, the wife of one of the engineers on this division.
What might this woman have said to you? Push the button to
find out.”
Pushing
the button starts a recording of a woman’s voice, telling
what it was like to have a husband who worked all hours in
all kinds of weather. Often over-looked, women were involved
in many aspects of railroading, and museums need to tell
their story. At the Railroad Museum of Pennsylvania (RMP)
there will be more buttons to push, activating sound tracks
and videos, as well as computer displays.
Similarly
the role of African Americans in railroading was part of
the reality that needs telling. RMP addresses such issues
in various ways.
At the
most elemental level, interpretation involves placing informative
signs by major artifacts, meeting the needs of the mildly
curious. They must be worded succinctly and they should balance
the technical with the broader context.
At
the next level of advancement, docents can staff a locomotive
or a caboose and explain what it did. The most skilled docents
can do this in the first person, while others are effective
In the third person. Museum guided tours allow an interpreter
to introduce comparisons, themes and tell stories.
Even mannequins
can be helpful in visually rounding out a story. A fireman
with a large shovel in hand can convey the labor Involved.
Continued,
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