By Jeff Murphy,
March 19, 2024
WARRENSBURG, MO -- Historic Missouri, a free mobile app and website that provides
users easy access to information about the important places, people, and stories that
are unique to Missouri, has added 11 additional tours funded in part by a Missouri
Humanities large grant of $10,000.
Developed by the faculty and students in the Department of History at the University
of Central Missouri, the Historic Missouri mobile application and website provides
interpretive and curated narrative tours that will help site visitors learn more about
different locations and their history by reading about them and viewing photos of
people and places from the past.
Graduate students in the Master of Arts in History program and undergraduate students
in the Bachelor of Arts/Bachelor of Science program researched, wrote, and uploaded
the content to Historic Missouri for the following tours: Sedalia Missouri Historical Highlights Tour, Historic Pertle Springs Resort Warrensburg Missouri Tour, Chillicothe Missouri Historical Highlights Tour, Missouri’s Little Dixie African American Historical Highlights Tour, Marble Hill Missouri Tour, Concordia and Emma Missouri Historical Tour, Sweet Springs Missouri Tour, Lamar Missouri Historical Tour, Kansas City Missouri’s 18th and Vine Tour, Pleasant Hill Missouri Historical Highlights Tour, and Bolivar Missouri Historical Tour. A list of all of the tours featured on Historic Missouri is linked here.
Historic Missouri Project Director and Professor of History, Dr. Jon Taylor, noted,
“The Missouri Humanities grant more than doubled the number of tours now featured
on Historic Missouri and additional tours will be added by the end of 2024. The Missouri
Humanities grant increased the capacity for graduate and undergraduate students to
engage in scholarly research that was developed for a public audience.”
Taylor praised the critical role that the UCM Office of Sponsored Programs and Research
Integrity played in securing and overseeing the grant.
A UCM Master of Arts in History graduate student, Anna Furney, spoke about the opportunity
to get involved in the project, noting, “The most important thing I learned by working
on the Historic Missouri tours was how to further develop my research skills. Sometimes
it can be hard to find information on a particular historic site due to lack of digitization
or recordkeeping, but I was able to uncover new resources, databases, and helpful
individuals in local historical societies that greatly aided my research. I had never
before worked on a project where the source of information I used was so diversified.
This is very important to honing one’s skills as a historian, and to be able to work
with a variety (or lack thereof) of sources was a great experience for me.”
For more information about Historic Missouri please contact Taylor via email at jtaylor01@ucmo.edu.