|
Name:
|
Spencer R. Crew
|
Month: |
February 2004
|
Schools: |
Brown, B.A., 1971
Rutgers: M.A. 1973, Ph.D. 1979
|
Organization: |
National Underground Railroad Freedom Center
|
Title: |
Executive Director and CEO
|
Spencer R. Crew spends his life making history accessible. Currently serving as the Executive Director and Chief Executive Officer of
the National Underground Railroad Freedom Center in Cincinnati, Ohio, he is building a museum from the ground up. The center, scheduled
to open later this year, "will show the pro-active way African-Americans sought freedom and the way people united in support of the
belief that freedom was important to preserve for everyone." Dr. Crew made a name for himself as a curator at the Smithsonian's
National Museum of American History in Washington, D.C. His 1987 exhibition Field to Factory documented the migration of southern
blacks to northern cities in the years during and after World War I and sparked a national discussion on the impact of migration and
race. In 1994, he was named director of the museum, becoming the youngest and the first African-American director of a major
Smithsonian museum. Dr. Crew also developed the Smithsonian's popular permanent exhibition on American presidents and oversaw the
preservation of the flag that inspired Francis Scott Key to write The Star-Spangled Banner. Among his publications are, Field to
Factory: Afro-American Migration 1915 - 1940 (1987), Black Life in Secondary Cities: A Comparative Analysis of the Black Communities
of Camden and Elizabeth, N.J. 1860 - 1920 (1993), and the co-authoring of, The American Presidency: A Glorious Burden (2002).
Dr. Crew is an active member of the academic and cultural communities, serving on many boards that work to generate enthusiasm for
history among the general public. He is the Chair of the National Council for History Education and on the Board of the National
Trust for Historic Preservation. He has published extensively in the areas of African American History and Public History.
He joined the staff of NMAH in 1981, as a historian. Dr. Crew became a curator in the museum's Division of Community Life in 1987,
and was named chair of the Department of Social and Cultural History in 1991. He served as the museum's acting deputy director from
1991 to 1992.
Before his tenure at the Smithsonian, Dr. Crew was assistant professor of African American History and American History at the
University of Maryland Baltimore County. Crew graduated from Brown University in 1971, and holds a master's degree (1973) and a
doctorate (1979) from Rutgers University. In 2003 he was inducted to the Rutgers Hall of Distinguished Alumni.
Spencer Crew is married to Sandra Prioleau Crew, and is the parent of Alika Crew, a Brown University graduate who is in Dental
School at the University of Pennsylvania and Adom Crew, a student at Brown University.
|