Please Touch

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A01=Jessie Swigger
AAYM
administration
American Association of Youth Museums
archives
audience engagement
Author_Jessie Swigger
Boston Children's Museum
Brooklyn Children's Museum
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childhood development
Children's Museum of Indianapolis
Cold War
Detroit Children's Museum
education
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field trips
Great Depression
Hand to Hand
historic preservation
immigration
institutional history
material culture
Michael Spock
New Museum Idea
newspapers
periodicals
practices
Progressive Era
public schools
reform
save the child
social movements
tactile learning
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women's history
World War I
World War II

Product details

  • ISBN 9781625349095
  • Weight: 340g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 13 Feb 2026
  • Publisher: University of Massachusetts Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
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The Innovation and influence of the first children’s museums in the US

When it opened in 1899, the Brooklyn Children’s Museum greeted visitors with a new experience. Rather than carefully ensconcing artifacts and curios behind protective glass, the staff took the unusual step of moving the objects out of their cases and into the hands of the children, inviting them to “please touch.” Born out of the reformist spirit of the Progressive Era, the museum represented a new kind of institution, one whose primary purpose was not to collect, preserve, and display objects but rather to educate a specific audience. Over the next twenty-five years, three other children’s museums opened with a similar mission and approach: the Boston Children’s Museum (1913), the Detroit Children’s Museum (1917), and The Children’s Museum of Indianapolis (1925).

At a time when most museums were led by men, women played a critical role in overseeing this first wave of children’s museums. As the number of children’s museums grew, women rose to prominence in the museum profession at large, advocating for new ways for institutions to interact with and serve their audiences. By 1965, the children’s museum movement had succeeded in demonstrating rich rewards and had influenced all types of museums and continues to do so to this day.

Drawing on archival materials, newspaper accounts, and the writings of museum workers and professionals, Please Touch carefully chronicles the early histories of these four seminal children’s museums. Jessie Swigger provides thorough institutional histories of each and connects them to broader currents in education, such as the Progressive education movement, and to key events in early- to mid-twentieth-century US history, including immigration, the Great Depression, World Wars I and II, and the Cold War. She also demonstrates how these institutions were fundamentally shaped by women’s leadership, and how they challenged and expanded the definition of museums and pressed museum practices in new directions.

Jessie Swigger is associate professor of history and director of public history at Western Carolina University. She is author of 'History is Bunk': Assembling the Past at Henry Ford's Greenfield Village. Her work has appeared in the Journal of Museum Education, the Journal of the History of Childhood and Youth, and the Journal of the American Studies Association of Texas.

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