Interpreting Our HeritageEvery year millions of Americans visit national parks and monuments, state and municipal parks, battlefields, historic houses, and museums. By means of guided walks and talks, tours, exhibits, and signs, visitors experience these areas through a very special kind of communication technique known as interpretation. For fifty years, Freeman Ti... |
Contents
Part II | 93 |
Nothing in Excess | 128 |
The Mystery of Beauty | 139 |
The Priceless | 148 |
Vistas | 180 |
Freeman Tildens Later Interpretive Writings | 196 |
196 | 242 |
Front Cover | 265 |
Other editions - View all
Interpreting Our Heritage: Fourth Edition [Standard Large Print 16 Pt Edition] Freeman Tilden No preview available - 2009 |
Common terms and phrases
Acadia National Park adults archaeologist areas artist become birds Bruce Craig called campfire CHAPTER Colonial Williamsburg Courtesy of National Crater Lake devices edition Emerson environmental essays experience fact feeling field Freeman Tilden give Grand Canyon happy amateur Harpers Ferry historic house human humor idea ideal Image imagination important inscription inspiration inter interest Interpreting Our Heritage John Merriam Lake Manly Leigh Lake living look man’s matter means memory ment merely mind MISSION 66 monuments mountain museum National Park Service National Park System natural beauty naturalist never objects perhaps Photo picture prehistoric preservation pretation preter provocation Ralph Waldo Emerson ranger readers rock sense six principles slides story talks tell thing Thoreau thought tion told trees trip true truth understand whole wilderness wonder word writing wrote