1,700 Miles Away From Riis Beach

Written By: Arianna Michaud

Hello! I’m Arianna Michaud, the Research and Digital Content Creation intern at Gateway National Recreation Area. I’ve always loved public resources like parks and libraries so I jumped at the opportunity to work with the National Park Service. I work with the Cultural Resources and Interpretation departments of Gateway to draft future social media posts, create internal interactive maps to make accessing cultural resource documentation easier, and research Jacob Riis Park to aid in the future update of the National Register Nomination for the park.

Welcome to a Day in The Life!

 

My setup, featuring my daily caffeine. Today, it was a lavender matcha latte.

My emotional support pile of research materials.

My helper, Bug the cat, in her spot beside my computer.

 

An average week usually starts with a meeting with my supervisor. We catch up a bit and talk about the week ahead. I’ve found that this helps me start with a solid plan of what I want to accomplish for the week. From there, it really depends on the project that needs working on. For the Riis research I often make a trip to my university’s library either for a book or printing- I prefer to highlight and write comments on dense academic papers.

Working remotely makes my position at ACE pretty unique. Unlike a lot of other ACE interns, I’ve only been in the field for 1/12th of my internship. Despite being so far from everyone else, I love working with the Park Service. Everyone is so nice to work with and makes me excited for a career in conservation.

New York City

On my second week with the park, I got to visit New York (for the first time ever!) and spent the whole week doing in person research. I got to explore the Gateway museum collections for any relevant materials, spent two days at the New York Public Library and went to Stonewall and the African Burial Ground with my supervisor.

 

On the weekend, taking a boat tour to see Lady Liberty

Hand painted signs in the Gateway museum collections (it’s kind of creepy down there!)

Hand painted signs in the Gateway museum collections (it’s kind of creepy down there!)

 

I haven’t engaged with a lot of LGBTQ+ history in my formal education, so it’s fascinating for me to learn about the history of Bay 1 of Riis Beach as a historically gay beach. I think it’s essential to preserve history for underrepresented groups like this and I can’t wait to do more of it in the future.

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