Hey hey everyone-
Here in Oklahoma we frequently have Main Street organizations act as the applying host organization. I would say on average, 1 or 2 of the 5-6 sites per tour are MS organizations. For our current tour of Hometown Teams (wrapping up in a few month) we have 2 out of 6 hosting organizations that are MS. In our next tour (The Way We Worked in 2017) 1 out of the 5 is a MS organization. These organizations often know their individual communities really well, and have the resources to pull people together. Main Street organizations also work well as a central body for communication and collaboration. It is nice to hear Louisiana is using them as a resource as well. 

Best regards,
Caroline Lowery


Caroline Lowery
Program Officer
Oklahoma Humanities Council
405-235-0280


On Tue, Aug 18, 2015 at 12:28 PM, Harsh, Carol <[log in to unmask]> wrote:

Hi all,

 

Last week I attended a Program Planning meeting for Hometown Teams in Louisiana.  Brian invited Ray Scriber, Director of Louisiana Main Street, to talk to the group about building strong partnerships in their communities.  It was fabulous! 

 

I’m curious about two things:

1)      How many of you partner with your state Main Street organizations?

2)      How many of your MoMS host communities involve local Main Street organizations in their planning?

 

So many communities these days seem to be divided, sometimes along race lines or struggling to find ways to include new immigrant groups, etc.  Are the Main Street programs in your states strong? Could they be instrumental in providing some training for MoMS host communities about ways to build strong partnerships?

 

Just thinking about how MoMS can continue to make a strong impact in the host communiteis.  Would love to hear your ideas!

 

Best,


Carol

 

Carol G. Harsh

Director, Museum on Main Street and Special Projects

Smithsonian Institution, SITES

P.O. Box 37012 MRC 941

Washington, D.C. 20013-7012

 

Deliveries

470 L’Enfant Plaza, SW

Suite 7103

Washington, D.C. 20024

 

Tel: 202-633-5333

Fax: 202-633-5344

www.museumonmainstreet.org