PORTFOLIO
Bulloch Hall (Roswell, Georgia)
Designing a Children's Museum Room at Bulloch Hall (Roswell, Georgia) required
creative use of limited space
in order to include
interpretive panels, activity
stations, and period clothing
replicas for dress up. 
Friends of Bulloch and the
National Trust for Historic
Preservation funded the
children's museum room.

Etowah Indian Mounds State Historic Site (Georgia)
ITP recently completed a three year project that provided 11 new interpretive wayside panels for this prehistoric mound site.  Many of the panels feature new illustrations of Indian lifeways, while others illustrate the site using historic photographs.  


Allatoona Battlefield (Red Top Mountain State Park, Georgia)
A new Civil War battlefield at Allatoona Pass (Red Top Mountain State Park) features 22 interpretive panels describing the battle.  Opened in 2007, the battlefield welcomes visitors for the Civil War sesquicentennial.
Little Ocmulgee State Park (Georgia)
Built by the Civilian Conservation Corps, Little O still features many of its original buildings.  In 2008, the visitors center reopened featuring an exhibit about the CCC's work at the park.  The exhibit includes four wayside interpretive panels and a children's trivia hunt game.  The diorama in the canteen area is highlighted by a CCC worker dressed in a reproduction work uniform and old advertising signs from the 1930s and early 1940s.
Nature Interpretive Projects
ITP will also design interpretive panels related to subjects other than history.  Two recent projects have included two wildlife panels for Lake Conestee, SC, and a Longleaf Pine restoration project at Red Top Mountain State Park in Georgia.  
Beyond My Stone (Roswell Presbyterian Cemetery)
Public interpretive programs bring history to life.  For the Roswell Historical Society, Ms. Huddleston created a drama where individuals arise from their graves to tell their story and enlighten listeners about Roswell's past.
Archaeologists "Dig" Indians (Rome Library, Georgia)
Three interpretive panels and a display case full of replicas of Native American artifacts capture the interests of children and adults at the Rome library.  Funded by the Georgia Department of Transportation, this exhibit presents the results of a local archaeological investigation to the public.
ITP developed educational packets about the exhibit and archaeology which are available at the library.