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Historic Preservation at UH

Past and Present
Historic Preservation has been offered as an academic discipline at the University of Hawai‘i since 1986. Five years earlier, a number of interested individuals and organizations, coordinated by Historic Hawai‘i Foundation, requested that the College of Arts and Humanities provide local training in preservation education. The University approached well-known historic preservationist William J. Murtagh to develop a new Graduate Program in Historic Preservation at the University of Hawai‘i’s main campus at Manoa, in Honolulu.

Dr. Murtagh was the first Keeper of the National Register of Historic Places, Vice-President of the National Trust for Historic Preservation, and had been director of historic preservation programs at the University of Maryland and Columbia University. Through the Department of American Studies, he initially offered an introductory course in Historic Preservation. Subsequently, Dr. Murtagh developed a Preservation Field School, held each summer in Hawai‘i. He was also instrumental in creation of the Pacific Preservation Consortium, an “umbrella” organization at the University for the development and coordination of historic preservation efforts, with a special emphasis on the Pacific area nations.

The Historic Preservation program has counted among its faculty and lecturers a number of distinguished visiting professors, including Dr. Barnes Riznik, Retired Director of Grove Farm Homestead and Waioli Mission Houses on the Island of Kaua‘i. Robert Giebner, University of Arizona Department of Architecture, and Blair Reeves, formerly with the University of Florida and originator of the Nantucket Summer Institute, both taught a summer documentation course.They were building on many years of previous historic recording work in Hawai`i, dating back to Historic American Buildings Survey (HABS) projects in the 1960s, supervised in part by HABS founder Charles Peterson. Another distinguished visiting professor was Hiroshi Daifuku, a former UNESCO Program Director in Cultural Heritage.

The current Director of the Historic Preservation Program is Dr. William R. Chapman, an Oxford and Columbia-trained anthropologist and preservationist with wide experience in international preservation. Professor Chapman is responsible for academic instruction in historic preservation, the development of new courses and inter-departmental coordination.

The Historic Preservation Program is a member of the National Trust for Historic Preservation and the National Council for Preservation Education. Its faculty and staff are also active members of a number of other local, national and international preservation organizations.

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Multi-Cultural and International Focus
The University of Hawai‘i is committed to the recognition of the cultures and values of indigenous peoples, especially native Hawaiians. This commitment is manifested in course offerings throughout the University. The Department of American Studies, through its historic preservation and other courses, attempts to keep issues of cultural identity and the recognition of traditional cultural properties at the forefront of discussions and instruction.

Further, the University prides itself on its strong international orientation and the wide range of peoples and cultures reflected in its faculty and student body, departments and courses. This is strongly evident in the historic preservation program, including the summer Field School, which attracts students and faculty from around the world. Countries represented include Indonesia, Cambodia, Taiwan, China, Korea, the Philippines, Australia, New Zealand, Micronesia, and several European nations. The program’s courses mirror this international orientation and give special emphasis to problems and examples of universal concern.

The Manoa Campus
UH ManoaThe University of Hawai‘i at Manoa is the major comprehensive campus of the statewide system and a center for research, as well as undergraduate and graduate education. It began in 1907 as the original campus of a land-grant college of agriculture and mechanical arts, the College of Hawai‘i.  Today, 20,000-plus students are enrolled on campus or via distance delivery, pursuing bachelor’s degrees in 87 fields of study, master’s degrees in 87, doctorates in 53, first professional degrees in architecture,law and medicine, and a number of certificates. The University of Hawai‘i at Manoa is accredited by the Accrediting Commission for Senior Colleges and Universities of the Western Association of Schools and Colleges. Students may transfer credits to other American or foreign universities on the same basis as course credits are transferred by other American universities.

Cooperating Institutions
The Historic Preservation Program has developed a close working relationship with the East-West Center, an organization established by the U.S. Government in 1960 to promote cultural and technical exchange among peoples of the Asia-Pacific region. It is located adjacent to the campus of the University of Hawai`i at Manoa. Now a non-profit institute with an international board of governors, it provides a neutral meeting ground where people with a wide range of perspectives exchange views on topics of contemporary significance, including historic preservation and cultural resource management.

Some 2,000 scholars, government and business leaders, educators, journalists and other professionals annually work with the Center’s staff on major Asia-Pacific issues. Current programs focus on environmental issues, the Pacific Islands, and culture, including architecture and archaeological heritage.

Cooperative working relationships are maintained with other relevant academic institutions and programs, government agencies and non-profit community organizations involved in preservation-related activities. These include the Hawai‘i State Historic Preservation Division, Hawai`i State Archives, local units of the National Park Service, Friends of ‘Iolani Palace, Hawaiian Historical Society, Bernice Pauahi Bishop Museum, Mission Houses Museum, Queen Emma Summer Palace, Judiciary History Center, Historic Hawai‘i Foundation, and three neighborhood community preservation organizations, Malama o Manoa, Friends for `Ewa, and Friends of Waipahu Cultural Garden Park.

Apply to the Program
Applicants for admission to the Historic Preservation Program should possess an academic or employment background in preservation-related disciplines or a demonstrate a strong interest and motivation to pursue such studies. There are no specific prerequisites, other than possession of an undergraduate degree.

All prospective Historic Preservation Graduate Certificate students must apply for classified admission to the UH Graduate Division. To apply online, visit University of Hawaii Online Admission Application and follow the onscreen instructions or download an application.

The deadline for Fall admission is March 1; the deadline for Spring admission is September 1.

If you are a current UHM graduate student who wishes to pursue a graduate certificate concurrently, download the Concurrent Graduate Certificate Application Form and submit to the Graduate Division Admission office.

Prospective certificate students and concurrent students should send directly to the Historic Preservation Program:

  1. The Graduate Program Supplemental information form.
  2. A Statement of Objectives form.

Applicants are required to mail directly to the Graduate Division-Admission Office an official transcript from each university attended.

GRE scores and two letters of recommendation for Historic Preservation Graduate Certificate applicants are not required.

Please be aware that financial aid is not provided for students doing the Historic Preservation Graduate Certificate Program only.