Personified: Fort Smith Museum collects, preserves, shares history

Fort Smith Museum collects, preserves, shares history

Caroline Speir Executive Director Fort Smith Museum of History
Caroline Speir Executive Director Fort Smith Museum of History

Caroline Speir

Executive Director

Pardi Gras

Who: Fort Smith Museum of History

What: Cocktails, Cajun cuisine, buy-in parties, live auction, dancing

When: 6-11 p.m. Feb. 22

Where: Fort Smith Convention Center

Tickets: $125 or $1,000 for a table for eight

Information: (479) 783-7941 or fortsmithmuseum.org

Fort Smith Museum of History

Tell us about your organization:

• Mission: The mission of the Fort Smith Museum of History is to collect, preserve and share the history and culture of Fort Smith and the surrounding region.

• Services provided: The Fort Smith Museum of History serves approximately 20,000 visitors annually. That number does not include outreach, community exhibitions and relations, school visits, website and social media visits, traditional media, telephone and email inquiries, and public research requests, totaling an estimated 300,000 annually. We offer programs directed toward Fort Smith history and regional and state history for children, in conjunction with curriculum-based projects and tours.

• Service area: Sebastian, Crawford and Franklin in Arkansas and Sequoyah and Leflore in Oklahoma

How is your organization's mission unique? The Fort Smith Museum of History has been in continuous operation since 1910, started by a group of women who wanted to preserve our area's history. They worked diligently to preserve the Commissary building belonging to the second Fort Smith -- which is where the "Commissary Museum" began, the forerunner to the current Fort Smith Museum of History. We have been a nonprofit since our founding in December of 1910. We currently house approximately 40,000 artifacts, all relating to the stories, people, places, events, businesses and eras of Fort Smith history. The larger mission is to educate and share this history with the public.

Why do you work for a nonprofit organization? Do you have a personal connection to the mission? If so, what is it?

I didn't intentionally seek out a nonprofit. It was more that an opportunity was available in my field, and it happened to be with a nonprofit.

I do have a personal connection to the museum's mission. My grandfather was mayor of Fort Smith when the city was in talks to restore "Parker's Gallows." He appointed the restoration committee during his tenure as mayor. It would be after his death before the Fort Smith National Historic Site would open to the public. His daughter, my aunt, would spend 10 years as an executive director at FSMH. I suppose it's a full-circle thing. It's been fun to feel like a part of my love for the museum and its mission is simply carrying on a family and friend tradition.

What part of your job fills the most of your time? Listening. It's an invaluable tool. It opens up worlds.

What have you learned on the job that you didn't expect? How difficult it is to convince people that their part of their history in their place in time is so important to share -- that it is worthy. The events of the past are made up of acts that propel the stories we eventually learn.

What challenges face your organization? Foremost, funding. As a 501(c)3 we rely on our members, donors, grants and fundraisers for support.

Are there volunteer opportunities in your organization? What are they?

Yes. We have a great group of volunteers who present programs for school children and adult groups. We have opportunities available that range from general maintenance to archival collections to soda jerk for those interested -- and we'd love to have you!

What upcoming fundraisers and/or other events does your organization have planned?

Embodiment: A Retrospective of Historically Black Fort Smith at 1 p.m. Feb. 2 at Bastion Gallery; Trivia Night, 6-8 p.m. Feb. 13; and Pardi Gras, 6-11 p.m. Feb. 22.

NAN Profiles on 01/26/2020

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