Last updated: September 8, 2020
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National History Academy Inspires Students Nationwide

Journey Through Hallowed Ground National Heritage Area
The Academy was conceived to address the educational crisis laid out in a recent report by the National Assessment of Educational Progress, which showed that only 18% of high school seniors have a proficiency in and understanding of American history and a mere 23% were proficient in civics. The Journey, extending from Gettysburg, Pennsylvania to Charlottesville, Virginia, offers the perfect outdoor classroom to learn history and civics with its twelve National Parks, nine presidential sites, 30 historic Main Street Communities, dozens of Civil War battlefields, and over 100 sites related to the fight for Civil Rights.

Journey Through Hallowed Ground National Heritage Area
Evenings featured an online speaker series of ten prominent government officials, historians, and authors visiting with students about the country’s history and the challenges the country faces today. National Park Service Acting Director David Vela, a 30-year career veteran of the National Park Service who retired at the end of August, spoke about “Preserving and Presenting American History at America’s National Parks.” Author and Historian, Gretchen Sorin spoke about her most recent book Driving While Black - African American Travel and the Road to Civil Rights. Elijah Heyward III spoke about the creation of the International African American History Museum in his talk “Building the International African American Museum.” Acting Director Spencer Crew of the Smithsonian’s National Museum of African-American Museum of History and Culture spoke about his biography of Justice Thurgood Marshall, and The Honorable Tom Ridge, First U.S. Secretary of Homeland Security, gave a presentation on “Leadership in Times of National Trauma.”

Journey Through Hallowed Ground National Heritage Area
The Journey intends to expand its offerings of online programs in the coming year, and hopes it will be able to resume its residential Academy in the summer of 2021. Interested high school and middle school students can apply online for National History Academy’s future sessions, beginning on November 1.
Recordings of the important talks and lectures are on the Academy’s Facebook page. The lectures and live-streamed site visits are available to watch here,
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