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Training sessions to begin in September
Homewood House
Museum, a National Historic Landmark and the Federal
era home of Charles Carroll Jr. located on the Homewood
campus of the Johns Hopkins University, seeks volunteers to
be trained as museum guides.
Docent training classes will be held from 9:30 a.m. to
12:30 p.m. on Saturdays, Sept. 9, 16, 23, and 30.
Volunteers who complete guide training will be expected to
commit to a minimum of one three-hour shift a month. To
reserve a space or for additional information, contact
Judith Proffitt at Homewood House at (410) 516-5589. For
information about the museum, visit on-line at
www.jhu.edu/historichouses.
Prospective docents should have an interest in
architecture, art or history and a desire to share that
interest with others. Homewood's docents present Homewood
as a Federal country house reflecting the architecture,
ideals and culture of the new nation, and interpret the
early
19th-century lifestyle of a prominent Maryland family to
visitors. Training, provided by museum staff, includes
lectures and readings on the history of Baltimore in the
Federal era, the Carroll family, and Federal style
architecture and decorative arts. New guides will also
learn about museum practices and will be taught techniques
for presenting Homewood House in ways that satisfy visitor
expectations.
Volunteers of Homewood House Museum, one of the
Historic Houses of Johns Hopkins, join the intellectual
life of The Johns Hopkins University, a fascinating
community of art and architecture lovers, history scholars,
educators, and museum supporters. They are invited to
participate in special social events, openings, lectures,
and monthly trips to historic sites and exhibitions. The
2006-2007 travel schedule includes tours of historic houses
in Annapolis (September), a trip to Gracie Mansion in New
York City (October), and visits to Pittsburgh to see
Louis Comfort Tiffany: Artist for the Ages at the
Carnegie Museum of Art (November), and to Philadelphia to
see Tutankhamun and the Golden Age of the Pharaohs
at the Franklin Institute (March). Museum volunteers also
receive a 10 percent discount at the
Homewood House
and Evergreen
House museum shops, are included on the Homewood and
Evergreen mailing lists to receive exhibition and program
publicity, as well as each museum's newsletter, and are
eligible for the staff membership rate at the O'Connor
Recreation Center and partial borrowing privileges at the
Sheridan Libraries.
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