Teaches American social and environmental history and has a special interest in public history
and historic preservation.
Professor Weyeneth teaches graduate courses in the theory and practice of historic preservation,
the Charleston Field School, and historical research methods; his undergraduate courses include
the Historian’s Craft, U.S. history surveys, and senior seminars in social and environmental
history. As a practicing public historian he has undertaken a diverse range of projects:
landscape histories of Honolulu’s historic urban parks, community studies in Washington State,
evaluation of Cold War sites in South Carolina, a history of historic preservation in Charleston,
an analysis of efforts to commemorate the modern civil rights movement throughout the United States,
and reflections on the current vogue for the present to apologize for past injustices. He is the
author of Historic Preservation for a Living City: Historic Charleston Foundation, 1947-1997 (2000),
a book that looks frankly at the politics of preservation and race in one southern city, and
Kapi’olani Park: A History (2002), a history of Honolulu’s “Central Park,” from its royal origins
through its on-going preservation and restoration efforts. The circumstances under which the
latter was published are described in “The Risks of Professionalizing Local History: The Campaign
to Suppress My Book”
http://www.ncph.org/OnlineNewsletters/NCPH_Fall_03_NL.pdf.
Current Activities:
Over the last few years my research has explored the challenges of doing public history in
communities with historical secrets, as well as the opportunities for remembering chapters of
the past that are controversial. I am turning now to a study of what I call "the architecture
of racial segregation." We know much about segregation as a political, legal, and social
institution but relatively little about it as a spatial system. In looking at this story of
space and race, I hope to learn how segregation shaped the American built environment between
1880 and 1960 and to understand more fully the experience of segregation, particularly from
the perspective of the everyday life of African Americans. I am also asking an historic
preservation question: shouldn’t we begin thinking about preserving these kinds of places to
better comprehend this troubling but important period of American history?
To see Professor Weyeneth's page, click here.
http://www.cas.sc.edu/hist/faculty/RobertWeyeneth.html