History Links | Walking Tour | Museum Workshops | Student Historians | Summer Internships

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The History Center's educational programs use the resources of the past to illuminate the present. Examine national history through a local lens with diaries, photographs, and objects from Tompkins County's past. Search for clues to explain how a plate, a candle mold and a cannon ball could share something in common. Discover the excitement of exploring the past with The History Center in Tompkins County.

For complete listing of program fees, download this schedule.

To plan your visit or for more information contact the Education Department or 607-273-8284 x3.


Eight Square Schoolhouse Living History Program: $200

This day-long Living History program gives fourth graders from public and private schools, and home school groups an opportunity to experience a day at school in 1892. The Eight Square Schoolhouse is the site of program, led by trained schoolteachers using an authentic 1890s curriculum. Students engage in such activities as pen-and-ink penmanship lessons, reading aloud from primers of the day, and outdoor recess with period games. Students are encouraged to dress the part and bring lunches that replicate what their great-great grandparents might have taken to school.

To plan your visit, contact Program Coordinator Carole West or 607-273-8284 ext.3.

Shorter-duration programs for adults are also available, see this schedule for details.




Hands-On History Workshops: $65
Professionally guided, hands-on tours of current exhibitions, behind the scenes
activities, and pre-determined local history subject matter. 1 - 1.5 hours
20 person maximum (not including chaperones at a 1:10 ratio)

Journey to the Past in MY COMMUNITY (1 hour, grades K-2)
This program uses photographs, paintings and a behind the scenes tour of the museum to encourage young minds to explore such questions as “Why are old things important? “How old is old?” “What did my community look like when my grandma was a child?” and “How do neighborhoods change over time?” Second grade lesson includes photographic inquiry into the "Urban, Suburban, Rural" theme as outlined in the NYState Learning Standards.

“Every Object Has a Story” (1 hour, grades 2-4) After an introduction to the role of history museums and the basics of collections care, this program gives students an opportunity to don white gloves and examine eighteenth and nineteenth century objects from the collection for an up close and personal encounter with the past. Students are challenged to find the theme that unites the objects. This is an excellent workshop for afterschool and scout programs!




Geography & Early Settlement (1 hour, grades 3 & 5) Through examination of maps and paintings from The History Center collections, the students will discover the answers to questions about why people choose to live in a given area and how they use the land.

Their Story is Our Story (1-2 hours, grades 6-12)
What can we learn from the people who have come before us? How did national events shape the lives of local people? Use the resources of our Reference Room and Archives to examine the people and events of local history. Prepare for DBQs with original documents from our collections. Our reference assistants will work closely with you and your students to help you discover the treasures of our past.


Customized History Workshop: $175
Professionally designed tour or workshop based on the interests of the group. Can be designed around a particular aspect of the collection or theme in local history.
1 - 1.5 hours; 20 person maximum


Research Groups: $25 per hour plus per student fee
Facilitated introduction to THC’s research holdings and/or facilitated research of one or more specific topics that requires support of Archivist, Educator, and/or Research Assistant(s). In addtion to the group fee, an additional charge per person is also applied:.

  • Primary and secondary school-age students $3 per student
  • College students and Adult groups $5 per person

Please note, Research Groups are considered to be groups of more than 3 persons interested in researching a specific theme or themes. Groups will be scheduled during non-public hours so that the full attention of our Research Assistants and the full resources of our Research Library can be made available.


All museum workshops are designed to meet NYS curriculum standards.
To plan your visit contact the Education Department.



Step Through Time Walking Tours of Downtown Ithaca
GRADE K - 5
Step through Time in downtown Ithaca
Choose the adventure that is best for you!



D.I.Y. TRAVELERS (45mins approx.) $2 per participant
 With materials provided by The History Center, lead your class on a historical walking tour of downtown Ithaca .


GUIDED ADVENTURERS (1 hour) $75 per class
Schedule a historical walking tour led by a guide from The History Center.  This fun and fact-packed tour examines local history, architecture, and culture.  


THE GRAND EXPEDITION (1.5 hours) $210 per class
Schedule a date with a tour leader from The History Center that includes the downtown tour plus 30 minutes of facilitated exploration in The History Center Research Library.  Students will be introduced to the thrill of original historical research as they dig through The History Center’s collections to discover answers to their downtown history questions.  Each student will also receive their own walking tour kit as a souvenir.  (Fee includes up to 20 tour kits.  Additional ktis available for $7.95 each.)


To plan your tour contact the Education Department or 607-273-8284 ext. 3-1




History Links: Examining National History through a Local Lens (classroom loan, grades 7-12)

Designed by The History Center's Education Department in partnership with Ithaca College, Project Look Sharp, and Teachers from the Ithaca City School District, each History Links kit contains photographs, newspaper articles, and other primary source materials that bring local history right to the student’s fingertips. Complete lesson plans, student worksheets, and extension activities, are designed for use in middle and high school classrooms. History Links kits put the tremendous resources of the DeWitt's collections into the hands of area educators, and help students discover that national events have an effect on daily life at home.

Three kits are currently available:

  • "The Great Depression Hits Home" - FDR's work projects and their impact in Tompkins County is explored through photographs and oral history transcripts.
  • "Ithaca Responds to the National Recovery Act" - How did the Federal government gain local support for the guidelines of the NRA? Newspaper articles, letters and logos tell the story.
  • "Passing it On...Ithaca's Southside Community" - The award-winning Ithaca College documentary is the basis for this study of how a local community is formed and how it responds to change across time. An excellent introduction for the study of community, neighborhoods, and citizen action.

For information on how to borrow a kit, or to suggest a future topic, contact the Education Department or 607-273-8284 ext. 3-1.




Student Historians: Bringing Community History to Light

The Student Historians: Bringing Community History to Light invites high school students to use the resources of the past to illuminate the present. Each student researches an object from the museum's collection using the various resources of the archives. Then they write a journalistic article that is published in the Ithaca Journal. Students emerge from the program with a new appreciation for local history and the ability to unearth the hidden story of an historic object. Funding from New York State Council on the Arts supported the development of the program, but its continuing success relies on private donations.

Interested in becoming a Student Historian or sponsoring the Student Historian Initiative? Contact the Education Department or
607-273-8284 ext. 3-1.