Spencer Crew has worked in public
history institutions for more than twenty-five years.
He served as president of the National Underground
Railroad Freedom Center for six years and worked
at the National Museum of American History, Smithsonian
Institution for twenty years. Nine of those years
he served as the director of NMAH. At each of those
institutions he sought to make history accessible
to the public through innovative and inclusive exhibitions
and public programs.
His
most important exhibition was the ground breaking
“Field to Factory: Afro-American Migration
1915 – 1940” which generated a
national discussion about migration, race, and creating
historical exhibitions. He also co-curated “The
American Presidency A Glorious Burden” which
is one of the Smithsonian’s most popular exhibitions.
The National Underground Railroad Freedom Center
has attracted worldwide attention because of the
quality of its presentations and focus on race,
interracial cooperation, and issues of contemporary
slavery.
Crew
has published extensively in the areas of African
American and Public History. Among his publications
are Field to Factory: Afro-American Migration
1915 - 1940 (1987), and Black Life in Secondary
Cities: A Comparative Analysis of the Black Communities
of Camden and Elizabeth, N.J. 1860 - 1920 (1993).
He co-authored The American Presidency: A Glorious
Burden (2002) and Unchained Memories: Readings
From The Slave Narratives (2002).
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 Past Chair of
the National Council for History Education and serves
on the Board of the National Trust for Historic
Preservation as well as the Nominating Board of
the Organization of American Historians.
He graduated from Brown University
and holds a master's degree and a doctorate from
Rutgers University. In 2003 he was inducted into
the Rutgers Hall of Distinguished Alumni.