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February 2008

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NYHISTLED <[log in to unmask]>
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A LISTSERV list for discussions pertaining to New York State history." <[log in to unmask]>
Date:
Tue, 5 Feb 2008 09:32:11 -0500
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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
NYS MUSEUM ANNOUNCES APPOINTMENT OF CHIEF HISTORIAN

Albany, New York -- 02/04/08 

ALBANY, NY - A native New Yorker and nationally recognized historian,
who has held various leadership positions on the state and national
level for the past 28 years, has been appointed the new chief
historian.

              Robert Weible, the current director of public history at
the State Museum of Pennsylvania, a unit of the Pennsylvania Historical
and Museum Commission (PHMC), will take on his new role as New York
State’s chief curator of history in late March. 

              “Robert is a public historian who has built strong
partnerships throughout his career with diverse community groups,
universities, cultural organizations and local historical societies,”
said Museum Director Dr. Clifford Siegfried.  “His proven leadership
skills will also be important to his internal role at the Museum as we
plan for the renewal of the Museum galleries and the transfer of our
extensive history collection to a new storage facility.”

              Weible will work with Museum management and history staff
to plan and implement movement of the history collections and staff to a
new collections facility. He also will be instrumental in planning for a
new history gallery at the Museum, slated to open in 2010, which is part
of an overall plan to renew the Museum galleries. Weible also will work
with local historians and academic and cultural institutions to increase
the public’s understanding of New York State history and its role in
U.S. history. He will also oversee management of the Museum’s history
collections and help develop content for public programs and teacher
workshops.

Weible was selected following an exhaustive search that began in 2006
as soon as funds became available for the position. Following the budget
crisis of the 90’s the Museum has faced an uphill battle to obtain the
funds necessary to rebuild capacity as several key positions were
vacated due to retirement and other budgetary factors. Kenneth Ames, the
Museum’s last state historian, left in the mid-1990s. Joseph F. Meany
Jr. assumed the role of acting state historian, retiring in 2001. Hugh
Hastings, the first state historian, was appointed in 1895. 

             Born in Queens, Weible grew up in Seaford on Long Island.
He holds a bachelor’s degree in history from Penn State University and
a master’s in history from the University of Rhode Island. In his most
recent position at PHMC, he developed partnerships with professional
organizations, historical societies, universities and others to create
and support public history programs for adult audiences. He also
directed content management for ExplorePAhistory.com, an award-winning
website developed in partnership with PBS and NPR affiliate WITF. The
website is designed to make Pennsylvania and American history more
exciting and accessible to public audiences. It also promotes tourism
and provides teaching resources for K-12 teachers. Previously, Weible
was the acting director of the Pennsylvania State Archives. He also
worked as the chief of the division of history for PHMC from 1989 to
2003, and managed a staff of professional historians, librarians and
educators to provide research, writing and programming for diverse
public audiences. 

              In 1979 he became the first historian at Lowell National
Historical Park in Lowell, Massachusetts, serving there through 1989.
During this time he helped draft the park’s General Management Plan
and develop its major museum and interpretive facilities. Lowell has
since become a model for the development of other national parks and
many state and federal heritage projects.

               Weible was president of the National Council on Public
History from 2005-06, and on the nominating committee for the
Organization of American Historians from 1987-89. He also has served on
various boards and committees for the American Historical Association,
the American Association for State and Local History, the Mid-Atlantic
American Studies Association, the Pennsylvania Historical Association
and others.

               Books he has edited include “The Continuing
Revolution: A History of Lowell, Massachusetts,” “The Popular
Perception of Industrial History (with Francis R. Walsh),” and “The
World of the Industrial Revolution: Comparative and International
Aspects of Industrialization.” He has published articles and reviews
in The Public Historian, The Journal of American History, Pennsylvania
History, Pennsylvania Heritage and elsewhere.

               The New York State Museum is a program of the New York
State Department of Education, the University of the State of New York
and the Office of Cultural Education. Started in 1836, the Museum has
the longest continuously operating state natural history research and
collection survey in the United States.  Located at the Empire State
Plaza on Madison Avenue in Albany, the Museum is open daily from 9:30
a.m. to 5 p.m. except on Thanksgiving, Christmas and New Year's Day.
Admission is free and the Museum is fully accessible. Further
information about programs and events can be obtained by calling (518)
474-5877 or visiting the museum website at www.nysm.nysed.gov.

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