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    Gettysburg National Military Park Museum and Visitor Center

    Gettysburg Address

    Project Group

    Gettysburg National Military Park Museum and Visitor Center

    Client

    Gettysburg Foundation

    Date

    March 2008

    Location

    Gettysburg National Military Park, Gettysburg, PA

    Exhibition Design

    Gallagher & Associates

    More Images

    Demo Video

    Tags

    Storytelling, Touch, Installations

    Playlists

    • Narrative storytelling
    • Interactive installations
    • Enhanced artifacts

    Abraham Lincoln’s famous words are interpreted for visitors, and can be examined in detail, on two large touch screens showcasing the Gettysburg Address.

    One speech, ten sentences, 272 words—a visitor can easily spend more time here than the 2–3 minutes it took Lincoln to read the address. Visitors can zoom into every detail of Lincoln’s handwritten manuscript, every word is transcribed for easy reading in the context of the document, and each passage is interpreted to elaborate the meaning of those famous words and help visitors understand the historical context of Lincoln’s speech.

    Press & Awards

    HOW, Interactive Design Awards, Merit, Kiosks, 2009
    “New Museum Guides Visitors Through Gettysburg,” Associated Press, Martha Raffaele, April 23, 2008

    Interactive touches—both high- and low-tech—are scattered throughout the museum...Visitors can touch a replica of slave shackles and find out for themselves how heavily a soldier’s backpack weighed him down. Using touch-screen computers, they can learn how to recognize bugle calls, decode signal corps flag messages, and locate battlefield monuments.

    “Center Designed to Put Gettysburg into Perspective,” Baltimore Sun, Edward Gunts, April 14, 2008

    The visitor center has been designed to immerse visitors in the Gettysburg story by exposing them to the National Park Service’s extensive collection of war objects, artifacts and archival materials, as well as interactive exhibits and displays that will prepare them to tour the areas where the fighting took place.

    “At Last, a Gettysburg Redress,” Washington Post, Philip Kennicott, April 14, 2008

    The historical galleries next to the theaters are very much in line with the contemporary trend toward media-dense exhibits, filled with shorter films in mini-theaters, all carefully structured to draw the viewer through ‘a narrative’ presentation of the war, its causes and its aftermath.

    “Reinforcing History,” Philadelphia Enquirer, Amy Worden, April 13, 2008

    In another area, visitors can tap computer stations to see whether their ancestors fought here and follow troop movements on a touch screen.

    Credits

    Designer
    Martin Linde
    Motion Designer
    Martin Linde
    Technology Director
    Thomas Wester
    Developer
    Matt Arnold
    Producer
    Jennifer Guibord
    Production Artist
    Christen Hubbard
    Production Assistants
    Erica Dillon, Shane Farrell
    Quality Assurance
    Erica Dillon
    © 2013 Second Story, Inc.

    Project Group

    • Project Overview
    • A Country Divided
    • A Day in the Life
    • Armies at Gettysburg Battle Maps
    • Before and After Gettysburg: Civil War Battle Maps
    • Faces of Gettysburg
    • Gettysburg Address
    • Gettysburg Foundation Donor Recognition
    • Gettysburg Ticketing Screens
    • Monuments at Gettysburg: Stories in Stone
    • Signal Flags