Sullivan Brothers Iowa Veterans Museum, Waterloo, IA |
More information about the Sullivan brothers |
We started down on the ground level because it was the location of the oldest things, pioneer life and the Civil War through to 1920s. Even though I had a map, the flow of the museum confused me. Should I go this way or that way around an exhibit? I ended up going in spiraling clover leaf pathway pattern that saw everything in some sort of order but did a lot of backtracking. There were lots of displays and lots of quick brief placards. High tech interactive touch screen display panels as well as old fashioned glass case displays stood only feet apart from each other, each doing their part of telling the story. There was a mock up of a WWI trench line that had a periscope built in with voice overs and combat sounds. The lower level also incorporated the home front and covered supporting military roles for combat troops, rather than just focusing on the rank-and-file soldiers. Along the back end of the museum was an exhibit on manufacturing and industry in the Cedar Valley area.
Upstairs were the exhibits on WWII to modern conflicts. The upstairs was better designed but flowed
Interactive Mock-ups |
We also visited two traveling exhibits, the first of which was on Mail Call. This exhibit highlighted how the military and postal services worked to improve morale, communication, and mental well-being of soldiers and how it changed over the years. It was a Smithsonian exhibit and was very well done, but I think due to space constraints had to be located in two parts on separate floors, which made it difficult for continuity's sake.The other traveling exhibit from the National Holocaust Museum was about Germany's concerns for creating a genetically superior race. It described the popularity of eugenics and policies that lead to euthanasia and other similar practiced in the 1930s-40s Germany. It was expansive and thorough and utterly depressing. It was also unfortunately the final stop on the way through the museum so it left my wife and me with bitter last thoughts before leaving. Since these were travelling exhibits that the museum hosted, I will exclude them from my analysis of the museum as a whole, but felt I needed to mention them because it was part of my experience.
Home front exhibit on the left, Civil War exhibit on the right |
Principle 1: The interpretation should be personal to the audience. Yes, the content was personal to a large extent, particularly by presenting the content in the forms of eyewitness accounts in interactive panels starting with letters. These letters were rewritten on these panels as a legible handwritten type script accompanied by the actual scanned letters. A recording of a voice actor read the letters aloud made it easier to read and would be beneficial to a person who is blind. A visitor could choose to view none, one, several, or all these options at various interpretive interactive panels using a trackball and a 'click' button. I liked those panels because you chose what you wanted to know more about. Upstairs had the addition of recorded experiences of real people recollecting their stories. This made the material less about the conflict, troop movements, and battles, and more about human stories of tragedy, trial, adversity, and humor.
Principle 2: Information is not interpretation. This museum had a lot of information.
Exhibit on the Spanish-American War. A station on learning
how to salute and whom to salute.
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Principle 3: Interpretation is an art, which combines many arts. Since no person was there to make an interpretive presentation, I decided to take some liberty in answering this category. I viewed the exhibits themselves as the interpreters and I decided to view the displays and presentation from an artistic point of view rather than having material explained meaningfully for this principle. The displays were easy to use, well designed, and of high quality, but gave a lot of information that simply did not interpret things for me.
Principle 4: Interpretation is not instruction but provocation. This is a hard one to determine. Was it engaging? Yes. Did it provoke me? A little. To be honest, the traveling exhibit on Eugenics provoked me more than the regular museum. I did not want to rush out and hug a veteran, join the military, join an anti-war movement, or try to do something better. It was all good information, but it did not spur me into action.
Principle 6. Interpretation addressed to children should not be a dilution of presentation to adults. The focus of the activities was children's participation, but a child or an adult could have used the interpretive panels. The information wasn't 'dumbed down' or made sterile by word usage, but utilized a 4th to 6th grade reading level that did not have a lot of technical jargon, acronyms, or any gory images. I think kids would enjoy themselves here.
From a visitor perspective: a suggested direction of flow would have been helpful to understanding in what general order I should go to see everything. It should not be so rigid as to force the direction of people by only providing one way out, like some museums do. Discovering that there could have been an audio tour was a little disappointing, because I may have missed something important about each area. The extra areas of the museum that did not pertain to conflicts or veterans seemed out of place in a veterans museum. The history of the Rath meat packing plant? I'm all for it, but not something I was expecting to see in a veterans museum. A display case on the bone structures of a bird? Why is this here? Did I wander into a different museum? Besides these out of context, yet otherwise fine museum pieces, we both enjoyed our time.
Was it worth the price of admission? Absolutely. We could have arrived earlier and stayed later and really digested every panel and every display case, but there was so much to see we felt we had to try to see it all. So if you get a chance to come to Waterloo and see it, I think it will be worth your while.